Five months ago, we published an article about AI in CX platforms. That may not seem like much time, but in AI years that might as well be a different generation. This technology has gotten bigger, better, stronger, and faster since our CX AI blog went live.
Believe it or not, AI has also gotten more human-friendly.
For contact centers like C4, the continued growth of AI isn’t about replacing human agents with robots. Instead, it shows us new ways human empathy can be combined with machinated efficiency, creating something far better than either could accomplish alone.
Our original pitch for AI suggested it could be a powerful assistant, handling necessary yet tedious tasks to help agents focus on handling customers directly. That remains true today, but AI has developed a broader set of skills.
Advances in natural language processing make virtual assistants better at understanding people. Even a chatbot can feel less like a search engine and more like someone who “gets it.”
As sentiment detection has gotten sharper, emotional nuance is no longer a guessing game, for both the humans and the machines. Subtle changes in tone and urgency get detected faster, helping agents make decisions in real time.
Where once AI would have been a standalone feature, it’s become increasingly integrated with workflows and systems agents use every day, from ticketing platforms to CRM tools.
It shows us new ways human empathy can be combined with machinated efficiency, creating something far better than either could accomplish alone.
That’s why C4 aims not to replace its users, but to empower them with cutting-edge AI tools. These include:
To show how C4’s tools truly benefit its users, lets look at a demonstration of customer service before and after AI.
An agent picks up a call blind. The agent asks several questions relevant to the call, realizing after the fact that this was all covered in a previous conversation. Every agent knows repetition doesn’t make for quality customer service interactions, but it’s too late for that now.
All the information the agent needs happens to be stored in the CRM system, but getting there and finding it could take several seconds. To a customer waiting in silence, that’s going to feel like hours.
When the interaction is over, everything’s resolved, but no one’s really happy about it. Worse yet, our intrepid agent has a difficult discussion with management to look forward to.
Finding information takes no time at all. It's instead provided to the agent automatically as the conversation progresses. The AI makes sure to select only the most relevant information at any given moment to keep the agent from being overwhelmed.
In the end, everything’s resolved sooner and with much less stress on everyone’s part. Management won’t have any complaints about this. The only thing our longsuffering agent will hear after this is a “good job” from the AI (and only if they programmed it to do that).
These examples show how much AI can improve the process, but it also shows that human experience is at the core of everything.
Finding information takes no time at all. It's instead provided to the agent automatically as the conversation progresses. The AI makes sure to select only the most relevant information at any given moment to keep the agent from being overwhelmed.
It’s tempting to look at AI’s growing capabilities and wonder if human agents might become optional. There remains, however, one thing that even the best AI can’t do: empathetic problem-solving.
You may retort with examples of how kind and considerate a chatbot has been to you in the past, but that’s exactly the point. AI’s understanding of empathy and compassion is limited to say the least. What many chatbots try to pass off as empathy is more in line with toxic positivity, endlessly affirming its users and telling them exactly what they want to hear.
It feels nice in the short term but isn’t beneficial beyond that.
Humans are better at saying something like “I understand how frustrating this must be” in a way that feels lived-in and sincere. They’re also much more inclined to deliver hard truth when it needs to be delivered.
It’s not your agents’ responsibility to kick your customers in the pants, but that doesn't make counterproductive affirmations a better option.
C4 aims to let the AI clear a path to let agents connect, correct (if necessary), and empathize with customers in way that makes them feel valued.
As AI continues to evolve, the future of the contact center won’t be man or machine—it will be man and machine, working in seamless partnership.
C4 is built to thrive in that future, integrating the latest AI advancements into a platform that keeps humans at the heart of every interaction. In a marketplace where many are chasing full automation, that balance might just be the real competitive advantage.