Getting past the AI customer service assistant is beyond challenging!

I don’t know about you, but I dread having to call any company or retailer these days. The phone is usually answered promptly by an AI customer service bot. The bot has a cheery female voice and typically says: “Hi, I’m ___(fill in a name)_____. I’m your helpful digital assistant. How can I help you?”

Then you need to summarize your issue to the AI bot, which usually doesn’t grasp it. For me, anyway, the AI bot repeats verbatim the offer to help. That’s when I start to get annoyed since I know that the only way to resolve my issue is through human intervention.

I begin what usually takes repeated efforts to request a person. I ask for a “person” or an “agent”. (I’m not 100% sure what the magic word is to get a human being on the phone. I would have thought “person” or “agent.” Perhaps there’s another word I’m missing in the AI bot’s vocabulary. Human?)

Each time I ask for a “person” or an “agent,” my tone gets more impatient. When I’ve had to call Lowe’s, for instance, I’m practically shouting into the phone.

Eventually, after 5-7 minutes, I succeed. I’m not sure if the bot is programmed to detect the caller’s emotional state. Perhaps you have to be having a nervous breakdown before it will get a person on the phone. Whenever I do, I deal with the reason behind my call but I also make a point of saying that their AI assistant doesn’t work very well, and to pass that fact along to the powers-that-be. It’s my small contribution to try to keep people in the workforce and customers from losing their minds.

Good luck to us all in this new AI powered world.


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2 responses to “Getting Past AI Assistants: A Guide to Human Help”

  1. creationenthusiastically7b41d33b5d Avatar
    creationenthusiastically7b41d33b5d

    Couldn’t agree with you more. But count your blessings. ; – ) At least you got a person at SOME point. I have been left without reaching any person more times than I care to count. And voicemail messages asking for a return call are often ignored — even by such civilized institutions as museums. It is beyond frustrating.

    Judy

    Like

  2. abbyparis Avatar
    abbyparis

    I agree.  And so many peop

    Like

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I’m Amy

I live in Manhattan and get much of my exercise dodging vehicles and bicycles on the Upper West Side. That aside, I think New York City, with its incredible diversity of people and cultural offerings, is the best place on the planet to age happily.

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