I once did some consulting work for a big mobile phone company. They wanted to get their customers to love them. "Love" was a big word for the brand team. They were committed to love.
In a quieter moment I remember being frank with one of the client team. The company was unlikely to achieve love with its customers if, each year, those customers had to phone up and threaten to leave the relationship just to get a better deal. Annual threats of divorce aren't great grounds for a loving relationship. This brand ranked, and still ranks, low on customer satisfaction.
This week's Financial Times Weekend Magazine contains a really good article on this: How did customer service get so bad?
I've spent years thinking about this. I should confess - I'm a proper service nerd. If I have a book in me, it's one about service (and maybe it should stay inside me. After all, as neurodivergent special interests go, this one is very niche).
The article does a good job of summarising the basic causes of customer service failure. Lack of investment in customer service, lack of customer service skills, fragmentation of the service chain across myriad third party providers, all stacked against rising customer expectations.
But having spent a 25 year career building, studying and fixing services, and trying to work out why "the act of service" seems to be so incompatible with "services", I think the article misses a big point. That fundamentally, we don't value service.
Since 2000, I saw software eat service. The article is really a study of what that era has left us with. What interests me, now that I'm running an artificial intelligence business, is what happens when AI eats service.
Given our AI business is focused on social media, I'm particular interested in what happens when AI eats service on social media. Given social teams expect a 318% increase in the use of AI for customer support in 2024, it's an increasingly urgent question.
But first, before we can address how AI will impact service on social - for better or worse - we need to consider why we're already getting bad service.
Go to an established, locally-owned restaurant in Milan, and odds are the waiter will be a man in his late 50s. He'll appear effortless in his ability to read the entire room - spot the dropped fork at table 3, anticipate the bill request from table 7, sense that table 2 have been waiting too long - and manage them to a good conclusion.
Go to an equivalent UK restaurant and odds are your waiter is much younger and usually much less capable. This isn't a criticism, it's just a recognition that we see service sector jobs as low-grade - something to do whilst we look for a 'real job'.
The irony of course is that we tend to look down on people who work service jobs, whilst simultaneously relying on the service sector for almost every aspect of our lives.
We get bad service because, in advanced Western capitalist economies, we don't value service. And you really have to value service, because although in principle service is a simple and human dynamic, making it a reality in an organisation is really hard.
In that Milan restaurant service is a simple and elegant dance between service provider and customer.
The former gets paid with cash, loyalty and recognition (which converts into the goldmine of word of mouth). The latter gets food, drink, ambiance and their own sort of recognition. Done well, service creates this temporary bubble, where the customer is momentarily the centre of someone else's world - being looked after and comfortably moved from one state (hungry) to a better one (satiated). (NB Danny Meyer writes beautifully on the art of restaurant service in his book Setting the Table).
In my mind service is pretty close to holiness. And the church would agree. After all one goes "into service" when joining the church. All our thousand year institutions get this implicitly - church, army, government - all have selfless service hard-coded into their DNA. They're perhaps not always successfully at it, but their modus operandi is to "put aside one's own interests, in the interests of moving others from a lesser place to a better place". Church: damnation to salvation. Army: vulnerability to safety. You get the picture.
The problem is capitalism finds service really hard to do. Not impossible, just hard. More specifically, I think service quality has been going down the more mature and entrenched capitalist values become. And most of our organisations are in late-stage capitalism. It takes a maverick organisation to prove it's not impossible. More on that later.
(Ps. I'm not suggesting that businesses should give up the profit motive and selflessly prostrate themselves in service of the customer. You'd win lots of customers, but lose lots of shareholders.)
I made the leap from Service Design to Artificial Intelligence a few years ago. I saw how software ate services in the early 2000s. I saw AI coming and I definitely wanted to be part of it.
Arwen, the company I help run, uses AI to help clients get greater value out of social media. We started four years ago by solving the problem of toxic content. Our AI now processes hundreds of thousands of comments a day, automatically detecting and removing spam, hate and toxicity in real time.
Having tackled the bad stuff, clients started asking us about the good stuff. Their social media communities are full of people trying to find out about their brand, select the right product, ask how to use it, complain about problems with it - basically whatever customers have being doing in stores or on phone lines, is now happening in their social media communities.
The problem is that most social media teams are small, and the communities they're trying to support are massive (a ratio of 1 employee to 1,000,000 followers is not unusual).
So I now have skin in the game. Our business is at the cutting edge of a service revolution, where you'll be able to interact with an intelligent piece of software which will help you progress from problem to solution (eg unhappy and complaining, to happy and resolved. Looking for a solution, to owning the product. etc).
It's in my interest to avoid the problems software had eating service, and overcome them now that AI is eating service.
We're currently in phase 1 of the AI hype cycle - which is unsurprisingly a bit disappointing. It's full of crappy chatbots that don't even admit their machines, making a pigs ear of interaction, and leaving us all feeling poorly looked after.
These chatbots are powered by general-purpose language models, that don't require additional background knowledge. But service requires lots of background knowledge - about the customer, the context, the history, the organisation's rules etc. Good service chatbots require the next generation of AI
At Arwen we're focused on the Slope of Enlightenment [tips ash from his gauloise and sips his espresso]. Arwen's artificial intelligence is able to automatically detect questions and complaints, read and segment them in real time, and generate responses in the client's brand voice.
Because service is a complex and knowledge-intensive tasks, the large language model-based system needs to access external knowledge sources to complete the task. This allows for more factual consistency, improves reliability of the generated responses, and helps to mitigate risks of "hallucination".
At Arwen we're playing with this new underlying technology (which Meta AI researchers have called Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG)), to synthesise conversation from multiple data sources, and create factually correct, human-like, branded and compliant interactions. We call it Engage. It promises 1,000 conversations a minute.
Good AI service is going to be hard. We will need to get these things right:
Undoubtedly AI eating service brings big ethical and social questions. People are right to be anxious about it. But I'm excited by what's to come.
AI eating service is going to bring about some pretty profound changes. AI eating social alone will enable things that were previously impossible - like answering questions posted on a social ad, determining purchase intent, and helping someone find and buy the product.
I mean, imagine the day when you can tell the CFO that the social media team is now a revenue generator, rather than a cost centre!
It's closer than you think.