this post was submitted on 08 Jul 2023
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The author argues that customers do not actually want chat bots for customer service, contrary to what companies claim. Chat bots can only handle simple, routine queries, but for complicated issues customers want to speak to a human representative. Companies are pushing chat bots to reduce costs and increase profits, without considering the negative impact on customer experience. The author only sees chat bots as useful for customers when used to cancel subscriptions that require contacting customer service, showing how frustrating the current system is. The author believes we should build technology that customers actually want and would appreciate, rather than focusing on bad experiences or defending against them.

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[–] Jho@beehaw.org 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Customer service chatbots are useful for helping someone use natural language to find an answer that already exists in the documentation/FAQ. I imagine this must be useful for a non-zero number of people who find it difficult to troubleshoot issues using an FAQ.

Personally, my first port-of-call is always to go to the documentation/FAQ myself to look for the answer. I will only use a chat service if I cannot find the answer. So having a chatbot trying to suggest me solutions from the documentation is always very disruptive and annoying because it's just forcing me to press "no this doesn't answer my question" enough times until it actually connects me to a human... if I'm lucky.

I think there is value pursuing and researching the technology more. For the benefit of people who aren't like me and struggle troubleshooting issues on their own. It can be useful for helping with routine queries and allows for existing customer service personnel focus on the more complex issues. As it stands at the moment almost every customer service chatbot I have encountered has been a negative experience for me.

[–] wagoner@infosec.pub 2 points 1 year ago

You know, if they just marketed the chatbots as a natural language way to engage with written product documentation ("what does error d80 mean and how do I fix it?") I think that's attractive to customers. It's when they are presented as a replacement for a human and a barrier to getting real answers that they are a real pain.