It's true that no-one wakes up on a Saturday morning excited about paying a bill online, renewing their car insurance or settling their credit card account. These interactions with financial services providers are generally out of necessity, and not desire. Within the financial services sector misery reduction during these moments is often more important than increasing customer experience - where tasks can be fulfilled as simply and efficiently as possible.
If we use the example that I’m sure has been playing out on the roads across the UK in the last few weeks - skidding on an icy road and hitting a tree. During the course of sorting this out with an insurance provider, the customer touchpoints are likely to include:
This customer journey is often fragmented, doesn’t maintain any context to the individual customer, and wastes both the customer’s and agent’s time. Set this against increasing customer expectations outside the financial services sector infiltrating all others, and there lies a problem.
The changing customer landscape
Increasing customer expectations outside the financial services sector, from the likes of Amazon, Netflix and Apple means that consumers are looking for a seamless customer journey regardless of sector.
We’re also seeing a huge shift towards voice-based assistants. Whilst today people are using them to check the weather, play music and ask questions, we will see this change rapidly in the very near future, increasing customer engagement, ecommerce and content delivery use cases:
We’re currently at the stage where the channel, from a customer experience perspective, is still in its relative infancy. However, with 80% of insurers having customers who talk about their poor digital experience (IBM Research undertaken in December 2018), this is one solution that is beginning to pique the interest of customers and businesses:
The omnichannel conversational approach
One of the solutions to this increasing problem is engaging with customers via multiple channels and allowing them to switch seamlessly between them – so allowing customers to interact with you whenever and wherever it makes sense for them, whilst still delivering a coherent experience.
The challenge comes in the inevitable conflict between increased communications vs the need to remain efficient and ensuring the cost to serve doesn’t spiral. One answer is to use AI to deliver automated omnichannel communications on a variety of channels.
The Mando Group and Microsoft solution
We’re delivering these solutions for our clients across a range of sectors, including financial services. These all use the Microsoft Cognitive Services framework; a set of off-the-shelf AI-based services, hosted in Azure cloud to allow for responsive scalability, which we can use to enhance and simplify particular parts of the customer journey.
These services provide the ability to understand a message or an image and do something with it, whether that be to provide a response, translate it into another language, or work out if the customer is sad, happy or even confused – we can do all of those things using the platform.
We’re using cognitive services to deliver three key benefits to our clients and their customers: