• randon31415@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    6
    ·
    1 year ago

    Support Staff costs money. When they do their job right, they cost more money (refunds, repairs, etc…) . They don’t make money. The only reason support even exists is to keep the PR around the company good. If a company is small enough (or it is soon to be non-existent), it could just get rid of support and just hire a good PR firm and no one would know the difference.

    • lordcommander@waveform.social
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      1 year ago

      This isn’t entirely true, the core metric an effective support system optimizes for is LTV. A good support model can improve sentiment, as you said, but it can also improve brand loyalty (improving likelihood of repeat customers, WoM organic advertising, etc), improve funnel depth for existing customers (better product proficiency and confidence can lead to upsell purchases, lateral conversions, etc), and other more product-specific leading metrics that vary by product/company/industry.

      Scripted chat bots like Drift can solve for some of these issues, but currently llm-driven support has huge problems with hallucinations and almost entirely lacks the ability to apply knowledge.

      Depending on how complex this CEO’s products/business needs are, this will (most likely) be a colossal failure that will be expensive as hell to do by having to hire and train a whole new support team (or be bled dry paying for ‘enhancements’ to the llm).