Wednesday, May 15, 2024

MIT SMR Connections Study: AI is the Power Tool of CX

A new global research report from MIT Sloan Management Review Connections, Delivering Experiences That Win Business and Build Loyalty: CX Champions Share Their Strategies, sponsored by SAS, reveals that customer experience (CX) Champions gain better returns from their CX tech investments than competitors by managing CX across the enterprise through cross-functional teams, clearly defined workflows. and extensive use of analytics and AI. The report is based on a survey of 2,670 respondents of which just 15 percent qualify as CX Champions.

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“With more than 40% of survey respondents planning to increase CX technology investments by as much as 25% over the next two years, and some 35% expecting to boost investments by up to 50% from current levels, it is imperative that companies have a roadmap on how to get the most payoff from these tools,” said Lisa Loftis, Principal Product Marketer for SAS Customer Intelligence. “The research findings offer a caution against ‘random acts of technology’ because value is created only when the technology helps to fulfil customer expectations. In today’s world, this means adding martech that enables companies to capture digital activity at a customer level and dynamically manage identities, to make the most of first-party data by managing journeys, and to incorporate analytics and AI into real-time decisions.”

Antonio Grasso, founder and CEO of the digital transformation consultancy Digital Business Innovation, emphasized the importance of CX tech. “We have the technology to achieve real-time insights, which are essential to adapt to a changing customer landscape,” he told MIT SMR Connections. “Our world is accelerating so much that companies also need to rely on real-time insight to manage and improve CX.”

The research also found that Champions are significantly more likely to employ “smart” approaches to improve CX, including smart assistants embedded in goods and services. They also expect to outpace the competition in their use of edge computing, using its ability to boost real-time analytics.

Perhaps most eye-opening is that organizations with the poorest-quality CX are more likely to be using cutting-edge VR technology than are businesses with top-rated CX.

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