How customer service automation can help your business

Spotler Engage • 4 minute read • 24/06/2020
Chatbots
Featured image

The number of service messages that come in via social media and messaging channels increased significantly over the past years. But how do companies cope with the thousands of messages that are coming in on all kinds of channels and at any time without significantly increasing service costs? For more and more organizations, customer service automation is the answer to the question.

Companies don’t only have to deal with an increased number of messages, but also with increased expectations. Today consumers expect service where and when they want it and as fast as possible. A company that cannot live up to a consumer’s expectations, risks that he will leave immediately. 46% of customers switch to another provider after a bad customer service experience (Accenture). Moreover, he might not leave silently. Complaints about poor service can go viral in no time via social media and cause damage to a company’s reputation.

Today consumers have numerous possibilities to get in touch with companies. In addition to the traditional service line and customer service via e-mail, many companies now offer the possibility to send inquiries via live chat, messenger and social networks. Especially WhatsApp has become extremely popular among consumers so that more and more companies decide to offer service via WhatApp.

Providing fast, personal and high quality service via all these different touchpoints is quite a challenge for many organisations. And this is exactly where automation in customer service can help.

What is customer service automation?

The term customer service automation describes the process of reducing or removing human labour when it comes to assisting customers with their enquiries, needs and wishes. This is achieved by implementing AI technology and chatbots into the customer service processes. Acting as virtual assistants, chatbots are able to perform simple tasks, provide information and initiate processes. Common tasks that chatbots take over from their human colleagues today are:

  • The answering of recurring questions, such as simple questions on products and services with low involvement.
  • Supporting the service agents by suggesting answers that the agent can approve or disapprove.
  • Preparing work for customer service agents, such as asking for missing information like an e-mail address or order number that is necessary to handle the case.
  • Identifying conversations and routing them to the right person within the department or company

Frank Smit, Chief Operating Officer at Spotler Engage, explains the applications of the chatbots of these days as follows:

“You can see a chatbot as virtual customer service employees. The bot ‘reads’ the message, determines the intention of the questioner and ensures a complete set of (customer) details. His job is then about done; the complete set of details are handed over to another employer.”

Importantly, adding automation to customer service does not mean removing the human element completely. The best results are achieved when service agents and virtual assistants are working hand in hand together. You can easily automate routine and predictable tasks but when it comes to complex or ambiguous questions, human-to-human interaction is still important. In order to truly understand customers and respond to their individual needs, we need human empathy, creativity and sensitivity. Alexander de Ruiter, CEO of Spotler Engage emphasizes:

“The bot is there for efficiency; the employee for empathy. Because of this effectiveness, a bot creates a better customer experience.”

What are the consequences of automation in customer service?

Through intelligent automation in customer service, companies can reduce costs, provide better and faster service, and increase customer and employee satisfaction.

Reducing costs with automation

A chatbot can handle thousands of messages at the same time, so there is no need to hire new agents when the volume increases. According to an article by Chatbots Magazine, chatbots can save up to 30% in customer support services. After implementing a chatbot into their service team, a large Dutch e-commerce player managed to even reduce their service costs by 36%.

Better and faster service

Chatbots can retrieve information based on keywords much quicker as their human counterparts. In this way, they can answer simple questions instantly and thus speed up the service process significantly. The Dutch insurance company Unive has set a one hour response rate as target for WhatsApp and other channels. Due to an increase in volumes on all channels, this target was hard to comply with. However since their chatbot was introduced, the average response time has been considerably reduced.

Moreover, virtual assistants never sleep – customers can reach out to them 24/7. With a so called “After hours bot, consumers are thus not limited by traditional service hours anymore. Moreover they receive answers quicker and don’t have to deal with waiting times. Nothing is as frustrating as hearing “You are the third in line, please wait”.

Happier customers and employees

While routine work and recurring requests are automated, customer service agents have more time providing high quality and personal service to customers. As their virtual assistants take over time consuming routine tasks, customer service agents can focus more at the core of their job: Engaging with customers and helping them solve complex issues.

Not surprisingly chatbots also have a positive effect on customer satisfaction. At the Erasmus University in Rotterdam no less then 90% of users are satisfied with the bot.

Curious about all advantages of chatbots? Read our article about the 6 biggest advantages of chatbots for your organisation too!

What to consider before implementing customer service automation?

It is of major importance to determine which parts of customer service are suitable for automation and what should be achieved. What are the goals and what problems and challenges does it solve for your organization? Existing customer service data should be analyzed to get a clear picture where a chatbot would deliver added value and where he shouldn’t be applied.

Organisations also need to decide on who should be responsible for implementing service automation through chatbots. There are basically two options. You can outsource the development to a chatbot vendor or build your own chatbot using a chatbot platform. Innovative chatbot platforms make it possible to build chatbots completely without coding. This opens doors for non-tech people, such as customer service agents, to dive into the world of chatbot development and improve existing processes without the help of IT.

“With your customer service agents you already have people in place that understand how to have conversations with customers. With an easy-to-use platform you can empower employees to automate solutions themselves”, says Frank Smit.

Do you want to know more about the chatbot possibilities for your organisation?

Do you want more information about smart chatbots or are you curious about the solutions of Spotler Engage for your organisation? Request a free demo or contact us via contact-engage@spotler.com or +31 (0)85 210 50 60.

Inspired? Share this message!
Spotler Engage
At Spotler Engage, we have a genuine passion for customer contact, media monitoring and reputation management. We continuously feed ourselves with new knowledge about groundbreaking technologies in these industries. And of course, we love to share this knowledge! Dive into our whitepapers, ebooks, blogs, industry reports and success stories. Are you already hanging on our every word? Hopefully we can share our enthusiasm with you and start a conversation!

Related items

Spotler Engage • 4 minute read • 16/11/2023

Omnichannel, chatbots and monitoring are most important for optimal reachability

Spotler Engage has been a partner for the public domain for more than 10 years. With solutions for web care, messaging...
Read more Arrow right
Spotler Engage • 4 minute read • 21/07/2022

The right balance between chatbots and personal contact

We hear it all the time: service should be good, fast and personal. The bar has been set high. Digitalisation of custome...
Read more Arrow right
Pearl • 9 minute read • 09/02/2021

10 Smart examples of the use of chatbots

A virtual service representative who can handle questions, do prep work, and ease the pressure that’s on customer serv...
Read more Arrow right