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Episode 2: Self-Service is the Future of Online Support

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Manage episode 440375325 series 3600980
Content provided by Mathew Patterson and Help Scout. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Mathew Patterson and Help Scout or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

Self-service technology ancient and modern, a German monk, and Shawna explains Gross Margin in this episode of The Supportive Podcast.

For show notes, transcript and further reading: https://www.helpscout.com/resources/supportive-podcast/S1E2/

Mat makes the claim that the future of online support is self-service. More specifically: elf-service driven by customers, delivered by AI and designed, monitored, and crafted by people is the way most customers will be helped, most of the time. Evidence for that claim:

Self-service first is the only practical option for very large companies like Google.

Improved AI tools will make it cost-prohibitive for smaller companies to remain human-service first in some situations.

There’s a long history of new tech not being as good as the system we already have. For example:

There is a pattern of self-service tech being put in place to replace some of what a service person was doing, but leaving the rest for the customer.

ATMs, typing pools, self-service grocery store checkouts.

Implications for support teams:

  • Documentation will be critically important as the source for AI tools.
  • A rebirth for Clippy in AI-powered contextual help.
  • Managing the transition from AI to humans will be vital.
  • Fewer support people per customer, but more complex and sensitive interactions for humans.
  • New support quality assurance processes are needed to manage AI And human work.
  • We need to find new paths to human expertise in support.
  • Support pros need to become customer experience professionals.

Hero(n) of Alexandria invented the first vending machine around AD60

And Shawna explained Gross Margin.

  continue reading

18 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 440375325 series 3600980
Content provided by Mathew Patterson and Help Scout. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Mathew Patterson and Help Scout or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

Self-service technology ancient and modern, a German monk, and Shawna explains Gross Margin in this episode of The Supportive Podcast.

For show notes, transcript and further reading: https://www.helpscout.com/resources/supportive-podcast/S1E2/

Mat makes the claim that the future of online support is self-service. More specifically: elf-service driven by customers, delivered by AI and designed, monitored, and crafted by people is the way most customers will be helped, most of the time. Evidence for that claim:

Self-service first is the only practical option for very large companies like Google.

Improved AI tools will make it cost-prohibitive for smaller companies to remain human-service first in some situations.

There’s a long history of new tech not being as good as the system we already have. For example:

There is a pattern of self-service tech being put in place to replace some of what a service person was doing, but leaving the rest for the customer.

ATMs, typing pools, self-service grocery store checkouts.

Implications for support teams:

  • Documentation will be critically important as the source for AI tools.
  • A rebirth for Clippy in AI-powered contextual help.
  • Managing the transition from AI to humans will be vital.
  • Fewer support people per customer, but more complex and sensitive interactions for humans.
  • New support quality assurance processes are needed to manage AI And human work.
  • We need to find new paths to human expertise in support.
  • Support pros need to become customer experience professionals.

Hero(n) of Alexandria invented the first vending machine around AD60

And Shawna explained Gross Margin.

  continue reading

18 episodes

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