HomeNewsIndia NewsDo you Think AI is Getting Better? Experts Think Otherwise

    Do you Think AI is Getting Better? Experts Think Otherwise

    Pegasystems announced survey results from 3,500 global consumers that find most chatbots still aren’t smart enough to meet their high expectations. While most agree chatbots can be fast and convenient in certain situations, consumers cite a lack of intelligence as their top complaint against automated bots, and 65 percent still prefer a human agent on the other end of the chat.

    Seventy-two percent of consumers generally find chatbots to be helpful to some degree, but the interaction quality can be quite mixed. The majority (58 percent) rank their chatbot experiences as merely ‘adequate’ – doing some tasks well and others poorly. Another 18 percent grumble how chatbots are ineffective or even annoying. Only 16 percent gave their chatbot experience a high quality rating.

    Analysts expect chatbot usage to rise significantly in the next two years – a shift that could prove costly for brands that don’t evolve their bots. According to Gartner, “25 percent of customer service and support operations will integrate virtual customer assistant (VCA) or chatbot technology across engagement channels by 2020, up from less than two percent in 2017.”

    Best bots keep it simple

    Consumers tend to favor chatbots for only the simplest queries that can be done quickly. The most popular chatbot use cases are:

    · Tracking an order (60 percent selected)

    · Finding basic information (53 percent)

    · Asking basic questions (49 percent)

    The respondents also noted that fast service (56 percent), ability to engage on their own schedule (37 percent), and convenience (36 percent) are chatbots’ top benefits. When done well, 43 percent say chatbots can be almost as good as interacting with a human, while 34 percent disagree, and 23 percent don’t know.

    Artificial intelligence or artificial stupidity?

    However, speed and simplicity can only take today’s digital consumers so far. While most brands claim artificial intelligence power their bots, consumers’ top chatbot complaints include:

    · Not enough smarts to effectively answer questions (27 percent)

    · Lack of context in the conversation (24 percent)

    · Robot-like engagement with few human qualities (14 percent)

    Similarly, the top reasons consumers would drop a chatbot session are when bots can’t answer their questions (47 percent selected), make them do more work than expected (47 percent) or are too vague in how they can assist them (43 percent). Separately, only 17 percent said they would use a bot to purchase goods and services, further muddying the path from bots to direct revenue.

    In no mood for chit chat

    The survey found a separate group that have yet to try chatbots at all and have no plans to start anytime soon. These bot holdouts, which skew towards a slightly older demographic, say they haven’t used chatbots yet due to:

    · Lack of any real exposure to chatbots (53 percent)

    · A personal preference to only engage with a human (30 percent)

    · Lack of knowledge on how to use chatbots (23 percent)

    A full 45 percent of these consumers without chatbot experience said they won’t try one in the next year while another 30 percent aren’t sure, which presents a roadblock to companies trying to expand reliance on digital service channels. Only 25 percent of these non-users said they would be willing to experiment with a chatbot, albeit with some reluctance. Their biggest concerns stem from their lack of experience: they simply don’t know how to use chatbots (top concern at 46 percent), lack confidence in chatbot effectiveness (31 percent), or worry about security and privacy (27 percent).

    ELE Times Research Desk
    ELE Times Research Deskhttps://www.eletimes.ai
    ELE Times provides a comprehensive global coverage of Electronics, Technology and the Market. In addition to providing in depth articles, ELE Times attracts the industry’s largest, qualified and highly engaged audiences, who appreciate our timely, relevant content and popular formats. ELE Times helps you build awareness, drive traffic, communicate your offerings to right audience, generate leads and sell your products better.

    LEAVE A REPLY

    Please enter your comment!
    Please enter your name here

    Related News

    Must Read

    Top 10 Reinforcement Learning Companies in India

    Reinforcement learning (RL), a subfield of machine learning in...

    Reinforcement Learning Definition, Types, Examples and Applications

    Reinforcement Learning (RL), unlike other machine learning (ML) paradigms,...

    Infineon drives industry transition to Post-Quantum Cryptography on PSOC Control microcontrollers

    Infineon Technologies AG announced that its microcontrollers (MCUs) in...

    Decision Tree Learning Definition, Types, Examples and Applications

    Decision Tree Learning is a type of supervised machine...

    Renesas Introduces Ultra-Low-Power RL78/L23 MCUs for Next-Generation Smart Home Appliances

    Ultra-low-power RL78/L23 MCUs with segment LCD displays & capacitive...

    STMicroelectronics Appoints MD India

    Anand Kumar is the Managing Director of STMicroelectronics (ST),...

    Top 10 Federated Learning Applications and Use Cases

    Nowadays, individuals own an increasing number of devices—such as...

    Top 10 Federated Learning Companies in India

    Federated learning is transforming AI’s potential in India by...