Engaging Customers with AI in Online Chats: Evidence from a Randomized Field Experiment
通过随机现场实验发现,AI辅助能提升客服效率和客户情感,尤其对新手客服效果显著,但效果因对话类型而异,且若客户此前遭遇聊天机器人理解失败,AI辅助反而产生负面溢出效应。
We examine how artificial intelligence (AI) affected the productivity of customer service agents and customer sentiment in online interactions. Collaborating with a meal delivery company, we conducted a randomized field experiment that exploited exogenous variation in giving agents access to AI-generated suggestions. We found that AI improved both the efficiency and effectiveness of the interactions: AI-assisted agents responded faster, engaged customers more deeply, and achieved greater improvements in customer sentiment. The benefits were most pronounced for less-experienced agents. However, AI’s impact varied by conversation type: It improved efficiency and customer sentiment in subscription cancellation requests but was the least effective in repeat complaint scenarios because of systemic issues beyond the AI’s capability. A text analysis of agent messages suggests that improved customer sentiment was explained by AI-assisted agents exhibiting higher levels of key response characteristics: empathy, information, and solution. Furthermore, we exploit a unique data feature: Customers first chatted with an automated chatbot without any human intervention before they were transferred to human agents (who may or may not have had AI assistance). We found that if customers who had experienced chatbot comprehension failures were then connected to AI-assisted human agents, the involvement of AI negatively affected customer sentiment. This is because unusually rapid responses in the latter scenario led customers to believe they were still communicating with a chatbot only, suggesting a spillover from their initial negative chatbot experiences. Companies should understand the conversation contexts, such as customer intent and chatbot interactions, when integrating AI into their customer support strategies. This paper was accepted by Catherine Tucker, Special Issue on the Human-Algorithm Connection. Funding: This research was supported by funding provided by Harvard Business School. Supplemental Material: The online appendices and data files are available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2022.03920 .