Home Blog Page 198

Businesses need to embrace voice analytics to improve productivity and service efficiency

  • 82% of customers now consider no longer engaging with a business if they feel they have had a poor customer experience.
  • Voice analytics provide invaluable business intelligence insight for businesses to make better business decisions from every sales, service, or marketing conversation. 

Voice and speech analytics refers to the process of analysing recorded conversations such as phone calls to gain insights into customer behaviour and call quality, often utilising AI by employing a Natural Language Processing (NLP) engine that uses context and emotional clues to determine more accurately what is being said.

James Lockhart, Head of Product Marketing at TelcoSwitch.

In utilising voice analytics solutions, businesses are now able to spot keywords and phrases, as well as detect sentiment and emotional context using pitch, pacing, and language clues to observe whether a conversation is going in the right direction or if it’s going downhill.

By evaluating the tone of a customer’s voice, businesses can assess whether their customers are satisfied, annoyed, or upset. 82 per cent of customers now consider no longer engaging with a business if they feel they have had a poor customer experience, so understanding potential issues before they arise may be the single most valuable thing a business can do to retain customers.

Capitalising on business intelligence

Businesses can obtain a wealth of business intelligence from their phone interactions, across their entire business.

Typically, analytics have only been used to provide visibility into contact centre interactions, predominantly to measure and improve the quality of customer service, with research indicating a reduction in ticket resolution time by over 40 per cent. 

But customer service is just one part of the overall customer experience delivery, which is made up of every customer touchpoint across their business.

Individuals across several business teams often make and receive a high number of customer calls – their interactions could have a profound impact on a company’s overall customer experience, which is why it is estimated that around 75 per cent of all business calls will be recorded by 2025.

With voice analytics, companies can quickly and easily unlock insights from every customer discussion. Voice analytics provide invaluable business intelligence insight for businesses to make better business decisions from every sales, service, or marketing conversation. 

In providing a data-driven method of collaborative performance management, businesses can bolster their strategies with a variety of benefits.

Improving products and services

Formerly reliant on market research, focus groups, and post-sale surveys, the use of voice analytics opens up an almost instantaneous way for product developers and marketers to gather insights on discussions related to products, services, price, quality and more.

Learning from your customers in this manner will allow you to identify their core wants and needs easily.  Better still, it is proven that when they aren’t being ‘asked’ for feedback, but instead are giving unfiltered thoughts and emotion, the data is far more accurate and useful. 

Voice analytics can support product development by not only combining the ability to track keywords but also measuring them against the customers’ emotional states. Identifying repeated terms on negative customer service queries is easier, alongside comparing which product features led to an improvement in the satisfaction of a customer during an outbound sales call.

Businesses can thereby identify specific reasons they might be losing customers and rectify issues directly, right down to highlighting any key elements that cause customer dissatisfaction and use this knowledge to improve their products.

Supporting staff development 

Most teams will have to deal with making and receiving high volumes of calls daily. This provides a voice analytics system with a large amount of data perfect for analysis. Monitoring these calls is important to ensure that team members across the business can improve, thus reducing inefficiency and promoting development within the business.

However, manually analysing this call data is time-consuming for managers, with often only a tiny fraction of calls getting listened to. 

Voice analytics enable immediate access to detailed call data without having to listen to every single call. Instead, AI-powered call recording systems transcribe all calls for you, with inbuilt dashboards helping ensure employees are following processes.

 By also analysing both the employees’ and customers’ language and tone for sentiment, every call can be automatically scored against multiple criteria. As a result, businesses can improve overall performance with additional and specifically tailored training to plug the skills and knowledge gaps identified. 

Monitoring quality assurance

By assessing all calls with voice analytics, managers can keep a close eye on all interactions with your customers, reducing operational and performance issues whilst improving the overall outcome of initial calls.

Key phrase analysis can measure the script adherence of either sales or support agents, making sure they are representing your brand most effectively.

Identifying the messaging and conversation techniques that bring results and produce high levels of customer satisfaction is easily done, with voice analytics structuring call data to suit your needs.

Managers can maintain vigilance for specific terms or metrics, helping your customer service team “get on the same page” as customers, which ultimately increases first call resolution rates and reduces overall call volume. 

Identifying potential risks

With voice analytics, employees are provided with real-time data to make sure they stay on track and avoid saying or asking anything that would be considered outside the scope of regulatory compliance. Script deviations, data leakage, and factors that increase business risks can be easily identified, allowing businesses to solve problems before they become serious. 

A good example of this might be any business that is offering financial advice or selling any kind of financial products over the phone.

These businesses have legal obligations to explain products and services in a certain way, to obtain customer authority to make trades on their behalf, or to provide legal disclosures or disclaimers.

Voice analytics AI tools can even enable automated redaction of sensitive payment information to maintain a focus on standards including PCI-DSS and GDPR for enhanced customer data security.

By preventing non-compliance, businesses can avoid fines that may come with failure to adhere to industry regulations.

Reducing costs through focused efforts 

A practical benefit of adopting voice analytics is that it aids in reducing costs. By quickly identifying calls that need priority attention, businesses save time that would otherwise be wasted searching through volumes of interactions.

Any data collected can be utilised when it comes to refining and perfecting services, enabling any business to refocus its employees to where they would be needed more. 

Converting speech into raw data and organising and analysing with voice analytics saves time and effort, revealing critical insights that would be almost impossible to gain otherwise. In employing voice analytics, businesses have seen cost savings of up to 30 per cent and increased customer satisfaction by 10 per cent, according to research by McKinsey.

The benefits to businesses improving productivity and service efficiency are clear, thus embracing the power of a voice analytics solution should be considered the next step for businesses wishing to enhance their customer experience and sales capabilities.

  • James Lockhart is the Head of Product Marketing at TelcoSwitch.

Related posts:

BaaS has high-level potential to transform banking sector by 2024

  • The other technologies include chatbots, public cloud and social messaging payments apps.
  • Bank CIOs urged to consider how key innovations are shaping their industry and prioritise their technology investment strategies accordingly.

Banking-as-a-service (BaaS) is one of four technologies that Gartner says have the potential for high levels of transformation in the banking sector and is likely to mature within the next couple of years.

The other technologies include chatbots, public cloud for banking and social messaging payments apps.

Research firm Gartner predicts that 30 per cent of banks with greater than $1 billion in assets will launch BaaS for new revenue by the end of 2024, but half will not meet targeted revenue expectations.

Jeff Casey, senior director analyst at Gartner, said that bank CIOs should consider how key innovations are shaping their industry and prioritise their technology investment strategies accordingly.

The BaaS technology is gaining traction from both banks and nonbanks aspiring to establish or enhance direct and intermediated revenue streams.

“Technology innovations like these are driving bank and nonbank competitor activity, influencing customer demand for product and services, and shaping regulators’ actions globally,” Casey said.

BaaS

BaaS can be a discrete or broad set of financial service functions exposed by chartered banks or regulated entities to power new business models deployed by other banking market participants — fintechs, neobanks, traditional banks and other third parties.

Market participants are increasingly drawn to collaborative models that enable enhanced customer experiences, such as richer features, a broader set of products and innovative customer experiences.

Non-bank participants benefit from a quick onramp to the banking market by leveraging a regulated entity’s license instead of pursuing their own charter.

Chatbots

 Chatbots represent one of the primary use cases of artificial intelligence (AI) in banks and will impact all areas with communication between machines and humans.

While mostly applied to customer service, IT service management or human resources, chatbot uses are incredibly diverse. The change from “the user learns the interface” to “the chatbot learns what the user wants” has implications for onboarding, training, productivity and efficiency inside the workplace.

The sophistication of the enterprise conversational AI platform market has led to enhanced tooling for banks to build and maintain chatbots using non-IT resources. Operationalization in the business units outside of IT is making chatbot production a more productive activity.

Public cloud

Public cloud adoption is becoming highly transformational to the banking industry since banks can achieve a greater level of efficiency and agility by moving workloads to the cloud.

Public cloud for banking delivers banking-specific software within a public cloud ecosystem, by integrating those applications with different degrees, from cloud-based to fully native.

Banks achieve agility by rapidly scaling up and down to support changes in demand, as well as meet regulatory compliance by delivering on temporary demands. Resources are freed up for the development of digital assets by centralizing and optimizing them; fixed costs are reduced by avoiding oversized infrastructures; and cost structures are optimized.

Banks are also able to centralise applications and platforms that ease development and testing, avoiding overlapping or duplications.

Social messaging payment apps

Social messaging payment apps rely on instant messaging platforms to originate payment transactions. The messaging app interface is used to register payment accounts and to initiate and monitor related transactional activity. 

The modernisation of payment infrastructure and the ability to make use of open banking and payment APIs, provided new entry avenues for social messaging apps to deliver payments service.

The adoption of social messaging apps has transformed both shopping and payment behaviour, notably in Asia. Kakao Pay, LINE Pay, WeChat Pay and WhatsApp Pay all demonstrate how social messaging apps provide both the contextual data and interface to engage with customers.

Sowt swallows Finyal to create more growth opportunities

  • Finyal’s podcasts will support Sowt’s push for audience growth, commercial opportunities, and creative content.

Jordan-based Sowt Media has swallowed Dubai-based Arabic podcast production company – Finyal Media – for an undisclosed amount to create more growth opportunities.

Finyal Media has produced Arabic podcast fiction and branded content.

According to the companies, Finyal’s podcasts will support Sowt’s push for audience growth, commercial opportunities, and creative content.

Finyal has produced some of the best Arabic podcast fiction and branded content and their leading podcasts – 1001 Nights, Juha, Sindibad, Al Silah, and The Basement.

Leila Hamadeh, Co-Founder and CEO of Finyal, believes the acquisition marks a major milestone in the development of the MENA podcast industry and expect to see further growth and consolidation in the future.

Sowt is a digital audio media company producing podcasts, audiobooks, and audio articles focusing on Arabic-speaking audiences.

Major milestone

“This acquisition marks a big step for the audio industry in MENA and for Sowt. We’re excited about the potential growth that joining forces with Finyal provides listeners,” Ramsey G. Tesdell, CEO, Sowt Media said.

The financier of the acquisition, Media Development Investment Fund,  invests in independent media around the world providing news, information, and debate.

 “Sowt has assembled a young and talented team, bringing together backgrounds and skills that allow them to continuously innovate and experiment in this sector, and we are looking forward to working with the company as it continues to expand its work,” Bilal Randeree, MDIF Program Director for Africa and MENA, said.

Hub71, Siemens to bring CleanTech, ClimateTech startups to Abu Dhabi

  • Agreement to offer Hub71 startups the opportunity to work closely with global energy experts to advance the clean energy transition.
  • The partnership supports the nation’s ability to drive investments in green infrastructure and clean energy projects both locally and globally.

Abu Dhabi’s tech ecosystem – Hub71 – has teamed up with Siemens Energy AG to identify prominent CleanTech and ClimateTech startups and explore investment opportunities that have the potential to accelerate the clean energy transition.

Siemens will also provide select startups with strategic mentorship by participating in knowledge-sharing platforms, building from its expertise in developing sustainable, reliable, and affordable clean energy technologies.

The agreement comes at a time when the UAE is set to host COP28 in 2023 and is reinforcing its commitment to achieving net zero by 2050. The partnership will support the nation’s ability to drive investments in green infrastructure and clean energy projects both locally and globally.

Addressing global challenges

Badr Al Olama, Acting Chief Executive Officer of Hub71, said the partnership with Siemens reinforces the importance of energy transition as the world pivots towards more sustainable and renewable energy sources.

“The powerful combination of technology and entrepreneurship raises our ability to address global challenges and, by capitalising on the expertise of Siemens Energy, we will focus our efforts to attract leading CleanTech and ClimateTech startups to establish a presence in Hub71 so that we can pool our combined efforts towards reducing emissions and promoting a low carbon economy.”

Fundraising potential

Siemens Energy will explore opportunities to participate in Hub71’s value-driven programs focused on increasing market access and fundraising potential.

These programmes include Ventures Lab, a venture builder by Hub71 and Modus Capital, which helps exceptional entrepreneurs to build ideas into market-leading businesses.

Additionally, Siemens Energy will explore participating in Hub71’s The Outliers programme designed for tech startups worldwide to solve real industry challenges of corporate and government bodies.

In pursuit of increasing the number of clean and renewable energy startups, Hub71 will fast-track companies referred by Siemens Energy to its incentive programme that provides founders with up to AED 500,000 worth of incentives and benefits including setup and operational support.

“Accelerating the energy transition requires investment, innovation, and partnership. It is through collaboration with sustainability-focused and forward-looking organisations like Hub71 that we will transition faster,” Kendra Rauschenberger, General Partner at Siemens Energy Ventures, said.

Content web scraping for writers

0
  • Web scraping can create tools to improve department or even employee productivity.

A lot has been written about web scraping, mostly focusing on how corporations can use it to generate more revenue and produce better services. 

Some use cases have been developed for smaller businesses, which are becoming more popular as automated data collection becomes more accessible.

Web scraping can often be (only partially correctly) seen as something directly tied to revenue. It either improves operational efficiency or creates a product or service. 

Little has been written about how web scraping can create tools to improve department or even employee productivity.

Benefits of internal data scraping

Aleksandras Šulženko, Product Owner at Oxylabs.io.

It might seem that internal data (i.e., information collected from one’s website) is easily accessible and that there would be no need to use scraping. 

At best, fringe cases, such as searching for 404 hyperlinks or anchor text are mentioned. Even then, SEO tools can often perform such tasks, making internal scrapers an undertaking not worth undergoing.

Internal scraping, however, does have the benefit of being unlikely to trigger any issues that are usually associated with external data. After all, it’s your website, so there’s no need to worry about copyright infringement or producing a negative user experience unknowingly.

Additionally, there’s no need to work around anti-bot solutions or wonky website structures.

So, such data collection has none of the drawbacks usually associated with web scraping, reducing the overhead required to initiate such tasks.

Data for content management

Writing is something all businesses have to do nowadays. Landing pages and blog posts drive organic traffic, especially with the help of SEO activities. 

There’s often a call to create “good content”. Although no one seems to quite grasp what makes a piece of writing good, most of us seem to understand what it is once we see it. 

Getting there, however, is tough. Writing is an ephemeral skill that’s hard to pass down as there are fairly few hard and fast rules. As anyone’s experience might dictate – grammar and syntax aren’t enough for good writing.

Additionally, copywriters will often have wildly different weak points. Some may have smaller vocabularies, resulting in less eloquent pieces of content. 

Others may use parasite sentences or words that impart no value to the reader. Building a one-size-fits-all training programme is significantly harder than in some other areas of expertise.

Internal web scraping, however, can unveil potential areas for improvement. There are some prerequisites:

  1. Articles, blog posts, and landing pages should have a known author assigned to them. Such data has to be managed properly to ensure that authors always match the content they produce.
  2. There has to be a significant amount of content already published to generate a large enough dataset. A dozen, at the least, would be a good starting point.
  3. Writing has to be somewhat consistent in topics and quality.

Building plans for improvement

We need the above prerequisites to create an author-based dataset, which can be constantly updated whenever new content appears. 

Once such preparations are in place, data analysis can begin, and improvement plans can be drafted.

A common pitfall of many writers is the overuse of certain idioms or words. While not a major issue, it can ruin the flow of text and stifle more creative approaches to writing. 

With internal scraping, in-depth statistics on the overall vocabulary and frequency of use can be collected.

Prepositions, pronouns, conjunctions, and other lexical categories should be removed outright to give a better overview. Such a dataset, however, shows how wide a writer’s vocabulary is and if they opt for repetitive use of words, leading to clear avenues for improvement.

Additionally, sentence and paragraph length can be analysed. There seems to be a trend and expectation that both should be short, especially for online publications. 

Little hard data on that subject exists. Internal scraping provides us with a window into the potential truthfulness of such statements.

In isolation, these datasets can prove to be useful tools for writer self-improvement. In combination, however, they can be used to analyse what works from a business perspective.

Some writers will have better performance for reading times, scroll depth, etc., all of which are directly tied to the quality of the work.

Such data won’t be visible through internal scraping itself, however. But popular tracking tools such as Google Analytics give us enough data to enrich writer datasets to make performance analysis easier.

It’s important to note, however, that the data points from Google Analytics should be selected carefully. Not all metrics are a testament to the writer’s skill. 

Views, a seemingly intuitive metric, are far detached from the quality of the work. 

Without internal scraping, finding out why certain writers build better pieces of content would be tough. 

Additionally, it may be easier to be led astray as the metrics the business is concerned with (views, conversions, etc.) don’t always reflect the quality of the writing. It may reflect the quality of SEO research or a multitude of other factors.

Conclusion

Scraping is uniquely beneficial because its main product is the creation of data. While it has been mostly associated with improving business performance, it can be used in so many ways that focusing on that side of the equation limits scraping’s true potential.

Building an internal database to be used for the improvement of copywriting is just one such unusual use of scraping. In general, it can be used to customise data-driven practices and help build up teams where one-size-fits-all training might be more difficult to produce.

  • Aleksandras Šulženko is the Product Owner at Oxylabs.io, a company specialising in web data gathering.

Related posts:

Is it time to think about professional shredding to safeguard your data?

0
  • Professional shredders can guarantee that sensitive information will never get into the wrong hands by physically destroying it.
  • There are now businesses that provide legitimate “data destruction services”, such as Absolute Destruction.

Data security will always be a matter of special concern in all stages of human interaction, be it personal or business.

The correctness of data is vital for it to be useful. As computer and internet technology progressed, developments in the way people access and move data have made parallel improvements. We are now living at an age when data can be stolen.

In the Philippines, most of the cybercrimes were carried out in the banking sector. The increasingly busy lifestyle in the country has brought about a surge in transactions using credit cards, e-wallets, or similar instruments instead of cash.

Moving to cashless society

Likewise, the threat of Covid-19 also contributed to lessening over-the-counter transactions and the transition to cashless exchanges as Filipinos prefer to stay within their homes.

According to the online ready reference Statista, the volume of electronic money transactions processed by banks and financial institutions in the Philippines went up by 160 per cent to 1.65 billion pesos in 2020.

The dynamic pace of online bank transactions in the Philippines took place despite a 2016 heist pulled off by a bank branch manager of the Rizal Commercial Banking Corporation.

Based on a February 2016 report by Reuters, the perpetrators “used fraudulent orders on the SWIFT payments system to steal $81 million from the Bangladesh central bank account at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. https://www.reuters.com/article/cyber-heist-philippines-idUSL3N20Z1FL”

Cybercrimes are being increasingly perpetrated within the realm of cyberspace countermeasures need to be placed in that domain.

Cybersecurity is loosely defined as the set of actions to prevent hackers from gaining access to an individual or group’s computer or network. To guard against it, countries came up with laws.

Active approach

When asked about how bad was the Philippines’ problem with data security, Robert Paguia, Division Chief of the Philippines’ International Cooperation on Cybercrime Investigation and Coordinating Center, said in an interview recently that compared to the times before, the implementation of the Data Privacy Act (DPA) of 2012 saw data security issues much less of a problem now.

“This is because the National Privacy Commission (NPC) took an active approach to orient and making Filipinos, both here and abroad, more aware of their rights as data subjects which include among other things knowing how to protect and secure their personal information and in so doing would amount to improved data security.”

He suggested that the government “improve its cybersecurity posture” as well as those of private companies by putting in place security measures.

Like any conventional crimes, cybercrimes are based on deception, an increasingly common type of cybercrime is “Phishing.”

Phishing sounds like “fishing,” but the similarities don’t end there. Just like the act of fishing baits a fish into an inescapable trap, phishing lures a potential prey into revealing passwords to sensitive personal data such as tax and banking information, business plans, and personal data of clients and employees among others.

Piece of mind

Back in the days when desktop and portable computers and electronic data transmission through wires or fibre optic cables are still unknown, information was encoded on paper and kept in cardboard folders.

Sensitive files were burned or shredded by a special machine, a “shredder order to prevent them from falling into the hands of a client’s business competitors, state enemies, or political rivals. In the age of the internet, this has its counterpart.

There are now businesses that provide legitimate “data destruction services” such as Absolute Destruction. It was said that professional shredders can guarantee that sensitive information will never get into the wrong hands by physically destroying it.

“Whether you are a private citizen or you’re running a business, you inevitably accumulate data that needs to be kept confidential,” a Canada-based firm’s website said.

“It could be banking records, tax information, old contracts, business plans, personal data about clients and employees, or something else”.

“Whatever it is, Absolute Destruction offers you industry-leading professional shredding. We make it possible for you to get peace of mind and have the final word: your data destruction will have you feeling immediate relief, one less burden to worry about,” the firm’s website said.

  • Gilbert Felongco is an experienced freelance reporter from the Philippines.