Customer Satisfaction stories
Mid-sized contact centres can now cut spreadsheets and manual scheduling as 8x8 folds workforce management into its platform at no extra charge.
Rising enterprise spending on AI helped push Genesys Cloud annual recurring revenue to USD $2.8 billion, with international sales nearing 45%.
Rising fees and longer free-shipping thresholds are widening the gap between what Australian shoppers want and what retailers promise at checkout.
Frontline teams at multi-location service businesses could cut dashboard churn as AskNicely's new tools automate insights and routine review replies.
The agreement will modernise SKF's global IT systems and speed up its shift to AI-driven operations across manufacturing and services.
Leasing firms could cut delays and insurance risks as new software spots delivery errors and missing paperwork before contracts begin.
Small businesses could cut support complexity as the new system links calls, chat and AI tools in one place, helping staff manage customers faster.
Retailers could lift margins by testing shipping rules live, rather than relying on spreadsheets and guesswork to decide how orders are routed.
Routine call-handling jobs face the sharpest risk as AI agents take over most customer queries, forcing firms to retrain staff quickly by 2030.
Seven in ten SMEs now act on AI financial advice before calling accountants, as many expect software to soon handle compliance work too.
Customers saw One NZ extend its five-year lead after umlaut ranked it ahead of rivals in every category across New Zealand.
AI is trimming contact-centre admin and lifting productivity as CX teams seek gains without sacrificing the human touch.
Most firms have expanded customer-facing AI even as a survey found 77% fear their strategies could harm vulnerable customers.
AI-powered analytics can cut avoidable calls, speed issue resolution and uncover product gaps before they dent customer satisfaction.
Seven in 10 retailers expect growth next year even as labour costs and supply chain disruption push technology investment up the agenda.
The retailer shifted 90% of UK deliveries to cheaper services after adding carrier choice and more flexible checkout options for shoppers.
Demand for more accountable managed services is rising as New Zealand clients seek local support and stronger customer relationships.
Better delivery visibility is helping the equestrian brand lift conversions and reduce checkout drop-off across 69 countries.
The move gives APAC customers a named engineer and faster post-sales help as support demand rises across multi-vendor cloud and security setups.
British firms could face costly disruption if they delay modernising communications before the PSTN switch-off on 31 January 2027.