New Talkdesk Research Explores Consumer Perceptions of Conversational AI to Help Brands Deliver Better CX

  • Insights from multiple global surveys and consumer focus groups shed light on adoption of self-service tools and offer actionable steps to improve CX through conversational AI

  • The biggest barriers to delivering superior customer experiences are costs (61%) and staffing (57%), which will push more CX leaders to adopt natural language-based chatbots (35%) and voice-based virtual agents (40%) within the next six months

  • Many consumers have suffered frustrating experiences with chatbots and say human agents are more than twice as likely to resolve their issue versus an automated system

  • Despite unsatisfactory experiences with chatbots in the past, nearly two-thirds of consumers are willing to interact with a virtual agent if it means faster issue resolution (64%) highlighting a key opportunity for brands to deliver better CX

Talkdesk, Inc., a global cloud contact center leader for customer-obsessed companies, today released a new Talkdesk Research™ report, “The promise (and pitfalls) of self-service automation in customer service.” As customer experience (CX) teams are challenged to do more with less in today’s economy, the report shows that many CX leaders are adopting artificial intelligence (AI) tools to improve customer support and overall experience (75%).

“AI has recently been catapulted into the spotlight thanks to large language models like GPT-4; but AI and chatbots have long been a core part of CX departments. As these tools become more advanced, they are taking on a bigger role in customer service processes – to varying degrees of success,” said Charanya Kannan, chief product, engineering, and customer officer at Talkdesk. “As today’s economy drives labor and skills shortages that hinder CX, it’s more important than ever that companies not only invest in automated tools, but design these solutions in a way that truly simplifies and streamlines customer experiences – therefore mitigating frustration and driving loyalty.”

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“As today’s economy drives labor and skills shortages that hinder CX, it’s more important than ever that companies not only invest in automated tools, but design these solutions in a way that truly simplifies and streamlines customer experiences – therefore mitigating frustration and driving loyalty.”

Cost-conscious CX Teams Invest in Self-Service Automation Amid Economic Troubles

Following two years of a booming economy, today’s CX teams are tightening budgets and looking for less expensive ways to scale their operations. As a result, many CX leaders are looking to self-service automation through virtual agents and chatbots as a means to continue delivering great CX while reducing operational costs.

  • In today’s economy, the top challenges hindering CX teams’ goals are rising costs (61%), and frontline staffing and skills shortages (57%)
  • In order to contain costs or scale to meet demand with less human agents, many CX leaders are investing in natural language-based chatbots (35%) and voice-based virtual agents (40%) in the next six months

Conversational AI Has Massive Potential When Designed Properly

The future of customer service will hitch on AI-driven self-service tools that simplify customer experiences. Despite AI seeing significant advancement and driving improved CX in recent years, many companies are still missing the mark with their deployments and delivering poor experiences by either using older technology or through inadequate conversational design.

  • Less than one-fifth of consumers report that their most recent customer service interactions included a chatbot (18%) or a voice-based AI assistant (11%). Most consumers still prefer managing customer service situations through live phone conversations (47%) or live chat (31%).
  • While roughly half of consumers are comfortable using AI tools to resolve customer service issues (48%), they find these channels simply aren’t as effective as speaking directly with a live agent. In fact, the report finds human agents are up to 2.7 times more likely to resolve an issue on first contact as compared to an AI system.
  • The good news is that consumers are willing to try again with AI agents, as long as companies are able to improve efficacy. Nearly two-thirds of consumers say they would interact with an AI system if it means they can arrive at a faster resolution (64%).

Realizing AI’s potential in the c will require CX teams to take the following steps:

  1. Optimize new AI tools with good conversational design
  2. Implement a fallback mechanism in virtual agents
  3. Provide a way for customers to opt-out and connect with a human agent
  4. Continuously improve virtual agents through testing and training
  5. Reimagine virtual agents with GPT and large language models

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