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It’s Time to Re-Frame Our Thinking Around Conversational AI...
Contributed article by Stuart Dorman, Chief Innovation Officer, Sabio Group
It's seven years since Amazon launched its Echo smart speaker, introducing us
all to Alexa and taking the virtual assistant mainstream.
Since then, Amazon and Google have shipped over a hundred
million speakers, and it’s estimated that there are now over 100,000 ‘skills’
available for Amazon’s Echo alone.
They represented the first idea of a computer whose entire
interface was based on voice. Up until this point, our primary interactions
with computers were controlled by keyboards, mice and eventually touch – with
everything fed back to us through graphical user interfaces (GUIs).
They are clever pieces of technology – but the most basic
form of computer; a voice browser with microphone and speakers with all
intelligence behind it based on the cloud. Although basic, it was an ingenious
way to capture data to train the machine learning algorithms to improve the
performance of the speech recognition.
On launch, the ambitions of both Amazon and Google’s devices
were absolutely huge. Initial visions were of Star Trek-style ‘all seeing, all
knowing’ computers. Our very own Personal Assistant’s helping to organise our
lives, controlling our homes and giving us access to whatever we wanted.
But in reality, they failed to reach their full potential –
instead being used today to predominantly play music, check the weather, or
turn on the odd compatible lightbulb...
So, what’s stopping us from using them to engage more
widely? And does our experience of home devices impact how brands address the
conversational AI opportunity?
The challenge Amazon and Google had was that they underestimated and
understated the complex relationships and domain expertise that was required
when interacting with brands; brands that were concerned in the likes of
utilities, insurance, travel or any other services that the average
person/household needs.
It was just too complicated – it’s a bit like calling my
bank to book a holiday. The poor person on the other end of the phone wouldn’t
have the knowledge or tools to fulfil my request. The idea that a universal
voice assistant could run our homes and our lives was just too ambitious...
Instead of complexity, we want our brand engagement to be
quick, easy to understand and simple to conduct. If we’re dealing with an
insurance firm, for example, we expect any conversational AI solution to
understand what it is that we’re trying to achieve and offer a self-service
option when it’s the right thing to do.
Any solution should be able to capture why I’m calling, work
out whether my request can be addressed through automation, or connect me with
an advisor when the task needs a human touch. We engage with a bank on
financial matters, or when we have issues with our power or water we turn to a
utility. At no point would we expect an insurance company or a telco company to
help us sort out our holidays...
Technology is no longer a barrier for conversational AI
The good news is that technology no longer needs to be a barrier when it comes
to deploying conversational AI. Speech recognition keeps getting stronger and
stronger, indeed we’re now at the stage where we can synthesise speech to sound
almost indistinguishable from human. And with AI processing power now doubling
every ten weeks, the computing power that’s assigned to training neural nets
and AI engines is becoming more and more accessible.
This is driving both performance increases and cost reductions, enabling
organisations to broaden out their speech AI capabilities and making it
possible for CX teams to capture conversations from voice, video and text –
wherever they take place in the customer journey. Capturing all these
conversations digitally allows brands to unlock new insights and extract value
from the data, particularly in the customer service world where conversational
AIs can now be trained to become real experts in their specific fields or sectors.
Building conversational AI with deep, sector-specific context
Instead of attempting to be a universal assistant, the goal for conversational
AI solutions across customer journeys is for them to become real experts in
their own field. Effective use of intent capture and analysis techniques will
give your AI precise insight into just why your customers are getting in touch.
Speech AI solutions can then be trained in detail, with further content and
expertise added as new customer issues and topics are raised.
This will see conversational AI move beyond the first wave of AI-powered voice
and chatbot solutions. These tended to replace somewhat clunky IVR systems, and
have generally been highly successful with many succeeding in automating
between
30-40% of interactions. However, these solutions have often been standalone
leading to silo-ed customer data that has been hard to integrate with other
parts of the customer journey.
Moving towards a second wave of conversational AI
We expect the second wave of speech AI to be much more far-reaching, embedding
natural language understanding and AI and automation capabilities across a
broader range of applications. Conversational AI and voice recognition will
increasingly be used to support CRM and mobile apps, as well as for contact
centre advisor support where the AI can listen to conversations, advise on
compliance, recommend relevant knowledge articles and give advisors help where
it’s needed.
This kind of real-time guidance, backed up by powerful
analytics tools and capabilities such as sentiment analysis will help
conversational AI deliver consistent, high-quality experiences across extended
customer journeys.
To learn more about conversational AI and how you can
transform your customer journeys with Automation and AI, download
our AI & Automation ebook.
About Sabio Group
Sabio Group is a global digital customer experience (CX)
transformation specialist with major operations in the UK (England and
Scotland), Spain, France, Netherlands, Malaysia, Singapore, South Africa and
India.
The Group, which includes ‘makepositive’, delivers solutions
and services that seamlessly combine digital and human interactions to support
outstanding customer experiences.
Through its own technology, and that of world-class
technology leaders such as Amazon Connect, Avaya, Genesys, Google Cloud, Salesforce,
Twilio and Verint, Sabio helps organisations optimise their customer journeys
by making better decisions across their multiple contact channels.
The Group works with major brands worldwide, including
Aegon, AXA Assistance, BBVA, BGL, Caixabank, DHL, loveholidays, Marks &
Spencer, Rentokil, Essent, GovTech, HomeServe, Saga, Sainsbury’s Argos,
Telefónica and Transcom Worldwide.