Consumers prefer to interact with voice and chat assistants


Consumers prefer to interact with voice and chat assistants

The Capgemini Research Institute has found that consumers increasingly prefer to interact with bots rather than humans, especially when it comes to researching products, learning about new services or following up on post-purchase customer service queries. According to a study launched today, nearly 70 per cent say they will progressively replace visits to a store or bank with their voice assistant within three years’ time.

The “Smart Talk: How organizations and consumers are embracing voice and chat assistants” report – which surveyed over 12,000 consumers who use voice/chat assistants and 1,000 business executives – was commissioned to understand both consumer and business leaders’ perspectives on conversational interfaces uptake, implementation and satisfaction, building on the 2017 research Capgemini conducted into voice assistants. The new study demonstrates the pace of change over the last 12-24 months: 40 per cent of those now using voice assistants have started doing so in the last year.

Businesses are also seeing the benefits, with many considering conversational assistants to be crucial for customer engagement, and the overall customer experience. Over three-quarters of businesses (76 per cent) said they have realized quantifiable benefits from voice or chat assistant initiatives, and 58% said that those benefits had met or exceeded their expectations. Benefits included a more than 20 per cent reduction in customer service cost and a more than 20 per cent increase of consumers using digital assistants.

However, while the business and user advantages are widely understood, the report found that actual rollout is lagging behind enthusiasm and demand. According to the study’s findings, fewer than 50 per cent of the top 100 players in automotive, consumer products and retail, and banking and insurance have voice assistants, and the same is true of chat.

Consumers display a significant increase in use of voice assistants as their experience improves

A comparison from 2017 to 2019 shows an increase in use of voice assistants by existing consumers for various purposes, including buying products like groceries or home care (an increase from 35 per cent to 53 per cent), customer service interactions post-purchase (an increase from 37 per cent to 52 per cent), and making payments for products or services (an increase from 28 per cent to 48 per cent).

The report also found that consumers have increasingly praised the ability of conversational assistants to provide a better experience. In 2017, 61 per cent of consumers expressed their satisfaction in using a voice-based personal assistant like Google Assistant or Siri on their smartphones; this number rose to 72 per cent in 2019. Moreover, in 2017, 46 per cent of consumers were satisfied with using a voice-based speaker device like Google Home or Amazon Echo, and 44 per cent with a voice and screen-based voice assistant (not phones) like Amazon Echo Show and Amazon Fire TV; these numbers rose to 64 per cent and 57 per cent in 2019, respectively.

Once trust is established, consumers are willing to go to the next level of engagement, including higher levels of personalization, emotional connection, and value. Over two-thirds (68 per cent) of consumers said a voice assistant allows for multi-tasking and accomplishing tasks hands-free, and 59 per cent say that chat assistants keep improving personalization over time. The study also found that people now want more human-like engagement with their assistants: 58 per cent want to personalize their voice assistant, 55 per cent want to give it a name and 53 per cent want to define its personality.

“This research establishes that conversational assistants are the future of customer interactions, valued by consumers for their convenience and by companies for the operational efficiencies they enable. Compared to our study released in early 2018, a much higher proportion of consumers now foresee voice assistants as their first choice within the next three years. In the meantime, the expectations of customers are evolving as they progressively use the technology,” said Mark Taylor, head of customer engagement at Capgemini Invent. “Privacy and security also remain paramount. Since our last research, it seems there has been little change in consumer concerns about how voice assistants affect privacy and data security. Companies must do more to address both these concerns and consumers’ increasing expectations, as conversational commerce increasingly moves into the mainstream.”

Stan Sthanunathan, EVP at Unilever echoes the need for businesses to adopt voice assistants: “The biggest experience that we’ve had is to not look at conversational interfaces as a cure for all the problems that you have, but instead to use them to augment human intelligence. This makes human intelligence a lot more productive. Voice or chat bots can communicate with multiple people simultaneously. They, therefore, help in reducing the amount of stress and strain on our human agents who are responding. These interfaces eliminate anywhere between 20 per cent and 30 per cent of issues reaching the human agents because they are answered then and there. And even when the issue is guided to a human being, it is actually a lot more purposeful.”

The report identified four critical success factors for organisations to leverage this growing consumer appetite for conversational interfaces:

  • Find the right balance between human and robotic interactions to drive greater engagement – nearly half of consumers would display greater loyalty for a company and show a higher propensity to spend – if their interactions with AI were human-like.
  • Equip conversational assistants with additional features, such as images/videos – nearly two-thirds of consumers said that their experience would be enhanced by a range of additional information provided on-screen, such as images (selected by 63 per cent of consumers), videos (64 per cent) or more textual information (65 per cent).
  • Focus on gaining consumer trust by solving pain points, being contextually relevant and when selecting use cases for conversational assistants – while consumers are increasingly willing to trust the recommendations of conversational assistants (on a low involvement interaction, 54 per cent said they would trust product recommendations from their voice assistant, compared to 49 per cent from a salesperson), levels of concern over privacy and security remain high (with 52 per cent being concerned about their voice assistants listening in the background to their private conversations).
  • Develop talent in three key areas: experience design, architecture/technology and legal/compliance –along with culture, the standout challenge for organizations is digital skills.

Share

Twitter Facebook LinkedIn WhatsApp

Related News


Sign up to receive our newsletter