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Businesses Cloud The Almighty Buck

Amazon Web Services Jumps Into Call-Center Market With New 'Amazon Connect' Service (geekwire.com) 20

Amazon Web Services just unveiled a new service for running call centers, dubbed Amazon Connect, leveraging the same technology used by Amazon.com's own customer service system to route and manage calls using automatic speech recognition and artificial intelligence. From a report: The announcement is the latest move by the cloud giant beyond its core infrastructure technologies and into higher-level cloud services. Amazon says the service incorporates its Lex technology, an artificial intelligence service for speech recognition and natural language processing, which also powers the company's Alexa virtual assistant. The company says Amazon Connect works with existing AWS services such as DynamoDB, Amazon Redshift, or Amazon Aurora, as well as third-party CRM and analytics services. Salesforce says it's integrating its Service Cloud Einstein with Amazon Connect. It uses a graphical interface to let companies set up a workflow for calls without coding.
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Amazon Web Services Jumps Into Call-Center Market With New 'Amazon Connect' Service

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  • by sethstorm ( 512897 ) on Tuesday March 28, 2017 @10:34AM (#54127391) Homepage

    ...someone decides to make them worse.

  • For a cellphone company. And a fairly small percentage of the customers call so often that it bleeds away a lot of the profits. Trying to figure out how to get these people to stop calling so much is a full time job for many thousands of people in my industry. Next solution: Replace me with Siri-like bots. Customers won't like it at first but someone has to pay for me for my time and my benefits and the cost of the call center. AI customer service and sales bots are coming and not that far into the fu
    • Maybe stop making cellphones with so many problems. I bet the customer service calls will drop off sharply after that.
      • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *
        If you're of average intelligence (and yes for argument's sake lets assume that average = median for a moment although I know this is not necessarily true) just consider that half the people in the world are dumber than you. Now imagine what it's like to live on the right side of the Gauss curve. No matter how hard you try to design something that will work for the "average person" there will always be a mind numbing number of complete idiots who will always get it wrong. This is why toothpicks come with in
    • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *

      Trying to figure out how to get these people to stop calling so much is a full time job

      That was figured out in the 80's. Your support line is a 900 number. No more calls.

  • by freeze128 ( 544774 ) on Tuesday March 28, 2017 @10:51AM (#54127551)
    What Amazon describes isn't really a call center, but an IVR unit (Interactive Voice Response). Even if you buy this service from Amazon, you will still need a call center with actual humans in it answering phones.
    • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *
      I'm currently wondering how come every call center I call lately seems like I'm calling Mars. Ever called an airline to change a plane ticket? Then you know what I'm talking about. There's no point having a call center if all you can afford is a 4KHz connection and no one can hear each other. Skype or god forbid Teamspeak/Mumble/Discord sound like an audiophile's wet dream compared to say, KLM whom I called recently. I thought Amazon might be trying to solve this, but sadly not. /rant
    • "What Amazon describes isn't really a call center, but an IVR unit (Interactive Voice Response). Even if you buy this service from Amazon, you will still need a call center with actual humans in it answering phones."

      Amazon specifically provides features for those humans, so they are describing a call centre. You still need the humans, bit you don't need your own contact centre infrastructure.

      "Setting up a cloud-based contact center with Amazon Connect is as easy as a few clicks in the AWS Management Console

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