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 <title>The Industry Standard - Talk To The Bot - Comments</title>
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 <description>Comments for &quot;Talk To The Bot&quot;</description>
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 <title>Talk To The Bot</title>
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&lt;p&gt;	Phone-based customer service, as necessary as it may be for your business, is expensive. An increasing number of companies are using the Internet as a customer-service channel, offering text chat with both automated responses and real-life agents. We talked with Stan Orelove, senior director of technology innovation at Cincinnati-based Convergys (&lt;a href=&quot;/companies/dossier/0,1922,CVG,00.html&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;CVG&lt;/a&gt;). While text chat represents less than 5 percent of his clients&#039; customer-service use, he says improvements in the technology will ensure it&#039;s the main channel of communication for Generation Y.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Why should companies use an automated customer-service system?&lt;br&gt; Virtual service representatives basically serve as [phone] call avoidance. Our virtual rep is a server-side program that functions like the frequently asked question page on the Web site, but it also serves as a tour guide for the site. It simulates a text chat session with a live agent, with page-push or cobrowsing capability [controlling the browser].&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;We also do callbacks, and we&#039;re trying to launch [teleconferencing over the Net]. We think we&#039;re ready to do voice over IP, where we can use the customer&#039;s computer as the voice conduit, but most of our clients are skittish about being the first to try it out.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;How do you keep the virtual rep experience from feeling impersonal?&lt;br&gt; The standard content on a Web site tends to be dry. We try to give a little more life to the bot ... [with] a picture of the virtual agent. Depending on the question asked, you can have a visage that greets your customer, one that smiles, frowns or looks confused. The virtual rep can also be conversational and answer off-topic questions. Depending on how our client wants us to answer those questions, we can give the bot personality - it can be polite or very sassy.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;A common question for the bot seems to be, &quot;Where do you live?&quot; The answer we&#039;ve scripted is, &quot;I live in a server in Company X&#039;s data center.&quot; Then people might ask, &quot;What&#039;s the weather like there?&quot; We&#039;ll push a Web page displaying the weather at the company&#039;s city and say, &quot;Here&#039;s the weather for Cincinnati, Ohio [my home town]. But I don&#039;t know what the weather is like anywhere else.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;But allowing off-topic questions can lead customers to abuse this form of customer service with inappropriate questions. How do you deal with that?&lt;br&gt; People tend to get more off-topic with the automated bots than with live chat, where a real person is on the other end. [Bots are] a novelty. They&#039;re not used to asking a computer system a question and receiving seemingly intelligent responses. We try to make the customer aware of the fact that they are speaking with a virtual service rep, but I guess not everyone gets that. &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;[The site flags] four or five profane words in a row. Our first reaction is to try to end the use of foul language. Some of the responses that the auto rep will try to use are, &quot;Chill,&quot; or if you want a sassy answer, &quot;Do you really kiss your mother with that mouth?&quot; If someone keeps swearing, though, the virtual service rep warns the customer that it will terminate the session, just as a live agent would. We try to be humorous about these situations. For example, if you call our virtual reps stupid, you&#039;ll get one of several answers: &quot;I&#039;m not stupid - I&#039;m a program, my flaws will be corrected,&quot; or &quot;Tolerance is a good quality for a service representative to have.&quot; My favorite one is, &quot;I&#039;m an inanimate object. You&#039;re hurling insults at an inanimate object. Which one of us is more likely to fit Webster&#039;s definition of stupid?&quot;&lt;br /&gt;
	&lt;br&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
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 <category domain="http://www.thestandard.com/taxonomy/term/1251">Media And Marketing</category>
 <pubDate>Mon, 19 Jun 2000 15:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
 <dc:creator>Baldwin Louie</dc:creator>
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