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Can chatbots join the customer experience dots?

The ways brands engage with their cus­tomers and the means they offer for cus­tomers to con­nect with them have changed rad­i­cal­ly in recent decades. What might once have been a sim­ple sup­port phone line or postal address has become an omnichan­nel cus­tomer expe­ri­ence. Cus­tomers seek­ing sup­port can now be pushed towards live chat, online sup­port forums and, increas­ing­ly, auto­mat­ed solu­tions such as chat­bots.

But is this work­ing? Is the dri­ve towards poten­tial­ly cheap­er forms of cus­tomer sup­port mis­guid­ed, killing the cus­tomer loy­al­ty that can come with the human touch?

When stack­ing the costs and ben­e­fits of chat­bots ver­sus humans up, the appeal of the bots is pret­ty clear: if you can inter­cept sim­ple cus­tomer queries that might not require a human response, you free up more resources to han­dle more dif­fi­cult mat­ters.

Improve retail customer experience

Daniel Bai­ley, of cus­tomer ser­vice soft­ware firm Zen­desk, cites the exam­ple of Dol­lar Shave Club that uses Zendesk’s Answer Bot tool to “sug­gest self-ser­vice arti­cles to mem­bers for sim­ple, repet­i­tive ques­tions such as ‘how do I pause my account?’” He reports that the tool man­ages 12 to 16 per cent of all inquiries that come in.

Tom Kir­by, head of cus­tomer ser­vice at online clean­ing book­ing ser­vice House­keep, says they’ve achieved a 25 per cent reduc­tion in human con­tact time through the use of automa­tion. This allows his team to “focus on where we can tru­ly add val­ue to our user’s expe­ri­ence and main­tain per­son­al­i­sa­tion and indi­vid­ual con­nec­tion with the time saved”. It’s not hard to see why chat­bots can seem like such a valu­able part of the omnichan­nel cus­tomer expe­ri­ence, espe­cial­ly in terms of resource man­age­ment.

Can chatbots achieve true customer satisfaction?

But though that explains their ris­ing pop­u­lar­i­ty, it doesn’t nec­es­sar­i­ly mean chat­bots are all pro­vid­ing pain-free, seam­less expe­ri­ences. A 2018 report by PwC found that 71 per cent of US cus­tomers would choose cus­tomer ser­vice from a human being over that of a chat­bot, while a Dig­i­tas sur­vey found 73 per cent avoid a chat­bot after a sin­gle bad expe­ri­ence.

A chat­bot that can give you the answer you need might be faster than wait­ing to speak to a human agent on the phone. But being direct­ed to a bot that can’t help is only going to aggra­vate any neg­a­tive feel­ings a cus­tomer might have when try­ing to con­tact a cus­tomer ser­vice depart­ment.

Rebec­ca Bark­er, of glob­al brand­ing and design agency Lan­dor, says: “We are get­ting more frus­trat­ed with bots that can’t sense our tone and can’t empathise with our sit­u­a­tion. When the answer isn’t black or white, bots can spit out a world of grey.” If the bot can’t give the cus­tomer a clear answer, or leads them into a con­ver­sa­tion­al dead end, it’s back to the phones or a bricks-and-mor­tar store, feel­ing even less sat­is­fied than in the first place.

A suc­cess­ful omnichan­nel cus­tomer expe­ri­ence requires inte­grat­ing the dif­fer­ent chan­nels, rather than sim­ply fun­nelling cus­tomers towards the least resource-inten­sive chan­nel and hop­ing for the best. Brands should ensure cus­tomers hit­ting frus­tra­tion points with auto­mat­ed tools can be iden­ti­fied and trans­ferred to human agents who are like­ly to be more capa­ble of iden­ti­fy­ing solu­tions to com­plex prob­lems. As Dave Pattman, of con­sul­tan­cy Gob­e­yond Part­ners, puts it: “Chat­bots should not be viewed as a means to avoid speak­ing to cus­tomers.”

Successful omnichannel integrates humans and tech

Tech can come into play in oth­er ways. Bai­ley believes arti­fi­cial intel­li­gence (AI) can itself be used to deter­mine which tools are right for a giv­en cus­tomer with a giv­en prob­lem, rather than tak­ing a one-size-fits-all approach.

“Ulti­mate­ly, if the AI tools detect the cus­tomer is like­ly to respond poor­ly to an inter­ac­tion with a bot, based on pri­or expe­ri­ences, busi­ness­es need to pri­ori­tise rout­ing these indi­vid­u­als through to an agent, who has full vis­i­bil­i­ty of past inter­ac­tions, and can han­dle the sit­u­a­tion del­i­cate­ly and appro­pri­ate­ly,” he says. AI can guide peo­ple into the cor­rect part of your omnichan­nel cus­tomer expe­ri­ence, as well as being one of the chan­nels.

The effi­ca­cy of tech-based cus­tomer ser­vice solu­tions are like­ly to improve. Bark­er points to work that’s being done on voice­bots, a new type of sys­tem that can actu­al­ly “speak” to cus­tomers and will be able to sense tone and adjust how it responds accord­ing­ly.

We are frus­trat­ed with bots that can’t empathise… When the answer isn’t black or white, bots can spit out a world of grey

Then there are “emo­tion­al chat­bots, which pro­duce fac­tu­al­ly coher­ent answers while also infus­ing the con­ver­sa­tion with feel­ings like hap­pi­ness or dis­gust”, attempt­ing to repli­cate the ide­al­ly empa­thet­ic tone of a human agent, she says.

While this might sound off-putting, research from Cor­nell Uni­ver­si­ty in Amer­i­ca shows that 61 per cent of peo­ple pre­ferred the emo­tion­al chat­bot to a neu­tral ver­sion. And gen­er­a­tional atti­tudes affect accep­tance of new kinds of machine assis­tance as younger con­sumers tend to report bet­ter expe­ri­ences with exist­ing chat­bots. There­fore, shift­ing demo­graph­ics might increase the util­i­ty of new tech in cus­tomer jour­neys as much as the improve­ments them­selves do.

Whether every new approach suc­ceeds or not, tech can and will play a cru­cial part in help­ing omnichan­nel cus­tomer expe­ri­ence meet con­sumer expec­ta­tions. But it isn’t always as sim­ple as replac­ing human agents with bots and watch­ing prof­its rise.

An over­all cus­tomer ser­vice approach that suc­ceeds will iden­ti­fy where and when tech­nol­o­gy can be best be applied. The oppor­tu­ni­ty for bet­ter, seam­less and more tai­lored cus­tomer ser­vice is present, but at least in the short term is not so much a case of chat­bot v human as let­ting cus­tomers reach the kind of intel­li­gent assis­tance they require, whether that intel­li­gence is arti­fi­cial or not.