Ai Implementation Guide
Ai Implementation Guide
But despite its importance, actually implementing AI is a serious challenge for call centers.
Which is why we’ve created this guide, which has everything you need to feel confident in
understanding, implementing, and harnessing the benefits of AI for your business. You’ll
learn:
And more. This is the action plan you need to stay competitive in the AI world. So let’s dive
in.
Table of contents
● Why get started with AI?
● How to implement AI in business: Top challenges
● How to implement AI successfully: 7 steps
● Getting started with AI: Questions to ask before choosing an AI tool
Why get started with AI?
There are three core reasons why implementing AI is important for your call center: its
benefits, the additional value it brings, and the consequences of not implementing it. Let’s
take a look.
The benefits of AI
The most obvious reason to adopt AI is for its benefits. It saves time, improves the customer
experience, reduces employee turnover, lowers operational costs, and more. Learn more
about these specific benefits in our guide to AI.
The added value of AI
“Added value” is not the same as “benefits.” What we mean by that is, automation has the
benefit of saving you time, but it will only ever do the task you program it to do—nothing
more. It still requires a mind behind it to command the task.
AI, on the other hand, can come up with tasks on its own, perform them, and get better at
them over time. And in some cases, it can do things that humans can’t, like surface insights
from large data sets. That is the added value.
The consequences of not implementing AI
Not implementing AI doesn’t just mean that you won’t experience positive benefits. It has
negative consequences. AI is becoming the standard, just like automation already has. If you
don’t align with where the landscape is headed, you’re going to fall short of your customer,
employee, and technology needs.
Increased prevalence and accessibility, cost reduction, and competitive pressure are among
the top reasons businesses are implementing AI. Data source
How to implement AI in business:
Top challenges
While most call centers understand AI’s ability to improve customer satisfaction, enhance
employee productivity and retention, and ultimately drive revenue, there are just as many
concerns and barriers to implementing it. Here are some of them:
● Understanding how to use it. AI is not only new, but it also has infinitely many use
cases and everyone is coming up with solutions. Decision makers are having a hard
time wrapping their minds around the best way to use it, who to trust, and how much
to invest in it.
● Resistance to change. Implementing AI means changes to infrastructure, processes,
and individual roles and responsibilities. It is not easy to get organization-wide
alignment on
● Talent gaps. Although AI is becoming more accessible to the everyday employee, it
still requires particular skill sets. Leaders need to determine the scenarios for
upskilling, replacing, and bringing on new employees.
This guide aims to help you break down those barriers so you can feel confident in
implementing AI for your call center.
Currently, sales and marketing are the top area in which AI is being used. Data source
3. Set your goals and benchmarks
Once you have your use case and department, you can then determine which KPIs the AI
will be responsible for improving. Identify your baseline metrics so you can clearly see
whether the AI is working and what kind of ROI you’re getting from it.
In this case, the number of conversations handled per day and response speed would be the
quantitative KPI that the AI would be in charge of, while your humans can focus on the
qualitative metrics like appointment set rate, close rate, and customer satisfaction score.
This also may open you up to address new KPIs like employee satisfaction and retention
rates.
5. Assess your IT infrastructure
Make sure your current tech stack can accommodate not just new AI technology, but also
any influxes that may result from better performance. For example, you may have a higher
volume of messaging going back and forth, or your messages might require more
bandwidth if they contain images and video. Now is a good time to conduct an audit of your
tech stack to ensure it is as lean as possible, and then assess its ability to integrate and
scale.
Aligning everyone on the above will reduce resistance and fears, and will make training that
much easier.