Drift hands the lead to a human. Fasrad does the next four steps — answers from your docs, captures the lead, and books the call by morning.
A visitor asks a buying question at 11pm; the agent answers from your docs, captures the lead, and has a calendar invite in their inbox before a rep logs in.
Drift is a good front door. A visitor lands, a bubble pops, the bot collects an email and a use case, then it pages a sales rep or drops the lead in a routing queue. The chat ends; the work behind it doesn't. Someone still has to read the transcript, decide if it's qualified, pick a meeting time, send the recap, and type it all into the CRM. Drift books meetings and notifies reps — it does not write the follow-up or research the account.
Fasrad's embed bubble looks similar on the page, but the agent behind it keeps going after the form. It reads your knowledge from a Drive folder or a datastore you built, answers the pricing or integration question in the visitor's words, captures the lead with the fields you care about, and then — same agent, same session — drafts a personalized follow-up email, checks your Google Calendar for real availability, and writes the contact and the conversation into the CRM. No Zap, no second tool, no handoff.
Where Fasrad pulls ahead:
Drift is built around live human sales chat and routing to reps fast; if that's the only job, it's mature and proven. Fasrad is for the team that wants the conversation to actually finish the task, and to use the same agent across web, email, and Telegram instead of buying a separate tool for each.
These pages cover the adjacent jobs buyers usually compare before choosing an AI agent.
With Drift you typically wire the bot to Zapier to Calendly to your CRM to your email tool, and each hop can drop fields or break. Fasrad is one agent that answers, qualifies, books on its connected calendar, writes the follow-up email, and logs the contact to its own CRM in the same session. Fewer moving parts, one memory, one place to fix things.
Yes, if you give it the material. Point the agent at a Drive folder, a pricing sheet, or a datastore of FAQs and it answers from that. If it isn't confident, it captures the lead and flags the question for you rather than inventing an answer.
Live human-to-human sales chat at scale, deep ABM signals, and conversation-routing rules across large SDR teams are Drift's home turf, and it's a mature product there. Fasrad has no live-rep takeover console or seat-based routing dashboard. If your priority is staffing a real-time human chat floor with intricate routing, Drift is the stronger fit; Fasrad is for letting one agent finish the task end to end.
That's a core difference. The same agent reads its own inbox, triages replies, and can run staggered personalized outreach from a Google Sheet. A website lead and an email reply are handled by one agent with shared memory, not split across separate tools.
You swap one <script> tag for another and re-point the agent at your existing docs and pricing. The honest catch: Drift's saved conversation playbooks and routing rules don't import — you describe what 'qualified' and 'book a demo' mean to Fasrad in plain language instead, which is usually a short afternoon, not a project.
$49/month or $490/year — cancel anytime It's a hosted, no-code platform in public beta — setup is about four minutes, and one agent covers the embed, email, Telegram, and CRM rather than a separate line item for each.