PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

AI can boost service for vulnerable customers

Businesses can use artificial intelligence to identify and aid consumers who need extra help

2024-01-18
(Press-News.org) AUSTIN, Texas –– Artificial intelligence has become the Swiss Army knife of the business world, a universal tool for increasing sales, optimizing efficiency, and interacting with customers. But new research from Texas McCombs explores another purpose for AI in business: to contribute to the social good.

It can do so by helping businesses better serve vulnerable consumers: anyone in the marketplace who experiences limited access to and control of resources.

“AI is widely recognized for its operational and financial benefits, but it also holds promise for harnessing social good and helping businesses adopt socially responsible practices,” says co-author Gizem Yalcin Williams, Texas McCombs assistant professor of marketing.

With Erik Hermann of ESCP Business School in Berlin and Stefano Puntoni of the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, Williams devised an AI framework that businesses can use to identify vulnerable consumers, address their specific needs, and mitigate potential discrimination and inequalities.

By making customer service more accessible, more interactive, and more dynamic, Williams says, AI can help vulnerable consumers improve their understanding of specific information so that they can make better decisions for themselves. For example, there are already AI tools businesses can use to analyze consumer voice and reactions, while providing real-time feedback to customer service representatives, along with tips to improve the interaction. Key concepts of the framework include:

We’re All Vulnerable (Sometimes). Rather than always being an ongoing condition, vulnerability may be a dynamic state that can come and go. Cognitive and physical limitations can compromise a person’s judgment, but so can emotional distress, such as suffering a layoff, breakup, or death in the family.

“Vulnerability can differ in duration and intensity, but literally every consumer can be vulnerable,” Williams says.

This revised definition of vulnerability opens new doors for AI technologies to do social good, she adds. “With advancements in machine learning and natural language processing algorithms, AI is uniquely positioned to identify vulnerable consumers and to help employees better serve and empower these customers.”

Rating Risk. Recent reports indicate that customer service agents are often unaware when they interact with vulnerable consumers. But AI can perform real-time analysis of consumer chat responses and use cues to build a risk score for agents.

Targeting Extra Support. When AI detects vulnerability, it can offer customer service agents customized tips and suggest special measures. For example, if a consumer shows signs of being overwhelmed or having trouble processing information, AI can recommend that agents explain options in simple terms, along with their pros and cons.

Positive Ripple Effects. Designing and integrating AI into customer service requires investment. But by detecting vulnerability and guiding consumers through vulnerable times, businesses can harvest both financial and reputational benefits.

“Doing good often pays off,” Williams says. “When effectively implemented, businesses utilizing AI to empower their vulnerable customers can expect a positive spillover, fostering increased loyalty, improved customer satisfaction, and boosted profits.”

“Deploying Artificial Intelligence in Services to AID Vulnerable Consumers” is published in the Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science.

Story by Judie Kinonen

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Structural study points the way to better malaria drugs

2024-01-18
Structural insights into a potent antimalarial drug candidate’s interaction with the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum have paved the way for drug-resistant malaria therapies, according to a new study by researchers at Weill Cornell Medicine and Van Andel Institute. The antimalarial molecule, TDI-8304, is one of a new class of experimental therapeutics that targets the proteasome, an essential, multiprotein complex in P. falciparum cells. Two years ago, the researchers showed in a preclinical study that TDI-8304 potently kills malaria parasites at multiple stages of their life cycle and ...

VCU research promotes a business paradigm shift that emphasizes people, not just profit

2024-01-18
RICHMOND, Va. (Jan.  18, 2024) – New research from Virginia Commonwealth University fundamentally challenges the paradigm that business organizations should promote profit above all else. Christopher S. Reina, Ph.D., executive director of the VCU Institute for Transformative Leadership, lays out the foundation for transforming business to be much more people-centered and humanistic in “Humanistic Organizing: The Transformative Force of Mindful Organizational Communication.” ...

Towards the quantum of sound

Towards the quantum of sound
2024-01-18
The quantum ground state of an acoustic wave of a certain frequency can be reached by completely cooling the system. In this way, the number of quantum particles, the so-called acoustic phonons, which cause disturbance to quantum measurements, can be reduced to almost zero and the gap between classical and quantum mechanics bridged. Over the past decade, major technological advances have been made, making it possible to put a wide variety of systems into this state. Mechanical vibrations oscillating between ...

NFL PLAY 60 launches Fitness Tracking Competition to help students get daily minutes of movement

2024-01-18
DALLAS, January 17, 2024 — The American Heart Association and National Football League are asking classrooms, afterschool programs and other student groups to join the NFL PLAY 60 Fitness Tracking Competition from Jan. 22 to Feb. 9. The classroom with the most activity minutes in each of the 32 NFL club markets will receive a $1,000 grant with an additional $1,000 PLAY 60 grant awarded to the top classroom overall. The competition and the goal of NFL PLAY 60 is to increase physical activity in kids which impacts overall mental and physical wellness which is essential to help children reach their full potential. The NFL PLAY 60 Fitness Tracking Competition takes place ...

Using magnetized neurons to treat Parkinson’s disease symptoms

2024-01-18
Electrical deep brain stimulation (DBS) is a well-established method for treating disordered movement in Parkinson’s disease. However, implanting electrodes in a person’s brain is an invasive and imprecise way to stimulate nerve cells. Researchers report in ACS’ Nano Letters a new application for the technique, called magnetogenetics, that uses very small magnets to wirelessly trigger specific, gene-edited nerve cells in the brain. The treatment effectively relieved motor symptoms in mice without damaging surrounding ...

How does one species become many?

2024-01-18
Evolutionary biologists have long suspected that the diversification of a single species into multiple descendent species – that is, an “adaptive radiation” – is the result of each species adapting to a different environment. Yet formal tests of this hypothesis have been elusive owing to the difficulty of firmly establishing the relationship between species traits and evolutionary “fitness” for a group of related species that recently diverged from a common ancestral species. A global team of biologists led by McGill University have compiled nearly two decades of field data – representing the study ...

St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital adds $13 million project to Research Collaboratives Program

St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital adds $13 million project to Research Collaboratives Program
2024-01-18
(MEMPHIS, Tenn., January 18, 2024) St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital today announced a nearly $13 million investment toward a new research collaboration with scientists at Columbia University, Duke University and Stanford University to expand the understanding of G-protein coupled receptors (GPCR), which are vital proteins that impact human health and disease. The collaborative research project is led by two St. Jude researchers, Scott Blanchard, Ph.D., and M. Madan Babu, Ph.D., who are working with Nobel laureate and Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator Robert Lefkowitz, M.D., of Duke University; Jonathan Javitch, M.D., Ph.D., of ...

Efficiently moving urea out of polluted water is coming to reality

Efficiently moving urea out of polluted water is coming to reality
2024-01-18
WPI Researchers have developed a material to remove urea from water and potentially convert it into hydrogen gas. By building these materials of nickel and cobalt atoms with carefully tailored electronic structures, the group has unlocked the potential to enable these transition metal oxides and hydroxides to selectively oxidize urea in an electrochemical reaction. The study, led by Xiaowei Teng, the James H. Manning professor of Chemical Engineering at WPI, was recently published in the Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters and highlighted in the publication’s supplementary front cover.  The ...

Researchers awarded $2.7 million grant to develop the faba bean as a sustainable mid-Atlantic crop

Researchers awarded $2.7 million grant to develop the faba bean as a sustainable mid-Atlantic crop
2024-01-18
Consider the faba bean, also known as the fava bean or broad bean.  The bright-green legume has been enjoyed as a diet staple for thousands of years in Africa, Asia, and the Mediterranean. Just one cup of faba beans has 13 grams of protein — making it a better protein source than most other legumes — along with plenty of fiber, potassium, and iron. Plus, it’s a good cover crop that helps improve soil health, slow erosion, and control pests, disease, and weeds.  But you don’t often see it in the fields or on the menus in Virginia. That’s why College of Agriculture and Life ...

Cobalt-free batteries could power cars of the future

Cobalt-free batteries could power cars of the future
2024-01-18
CAMBRIDGE, MA – Many electric vehicles are powered by batteries that contain cobalt — a metal that carries high financial, environmental, and social costs. MIT researchers have now designed a battery material that could offer a more sustainable way to power electric cars. The new lithium-ion battery includes a cathode based on organic materials, instead of cobalt or nickel (another metal often used in lithium-ion batteries). In a new study, the researchers showed that this material, which could be produced at much lower cost than cobalt-containing batteries, can conduct electricity at similar rates as cobalt batteries. The new battery also has comparable storage ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Low-glutamate diet linked to brain changes and migraine relief in veterans with Gulf War Illness

AMP 2025 press materials available

New genetic test targets elusive cause of rare movement disorder

A fast and high-precision satellite-ground synchronization technology in satellite beam hopping communication

What can polymers teach us about curing Alzheimer's disease?

Lead-free alternative discovered for essential electronics component

BioCompNet: a deep learning workflow enabling automated body composition analysis toward precision management of cardiometabolic disorders

Skin cancer cluster found in 15 Pennsylvania counties with or near farmland

For platforms using gig workers, bonuses can be a double-edged sword

Chang'e-6 samples reveal first evidence of impact-formed hematite and maghemite on the Moon

New study reveals key role of inflammasome in male-biased periodontitis

MD Anderson publicly launches $2.5 billion philanthropic campaign, Only Possible Here, The Campaign to End Cancer

Donors enable record pool of TPDA Awards to Neuroscience 2025

Society for Neuroscience announces Gold Sponsors of Neuroscience 2025

The world’s oldest RNA extracted from woolly mammoth

Research alert: When life imitates art: Google searches for anxiety drug spike during run of The White Lotus TV show

Reading a quantum clock costs more energy than running it, study finds

Early MMR vaccine adoption during the 2025 Texas measles outbreak

Traces of bacteria inside brain tumors may affect tumor behavior

Hypertension affects the brain much earlier than expected

Nonlinear association between systemic immune-inflammation index and in-hospital mortality in critically ill patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and atrial fibrillation: a cross-sectio

Drift logs destroying intertidal ecosystems

New test could speed detection of three serious regional fungal infections

New research on AI as a diagnostic tool to be featured at AMP 2025

New test could allow for more accurate Lyme disease diagnosis

New genetic tool reveals chromosome changes linked to pregnancy loss

New research in blood cancer diagnostics to be featured at AMP 2025

Analysis reveals that imaging is overused in diagnosing and managing the facial paralysis disorder Bell’s palsy

Research progress on leptin in metabolic dysfunction-associated fatty liver disease

Fondazione Telethon announces CHMP positive opinion for Waskyra™, a gene therapy for the treatment of Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS)

[Press-News.org] AI can boost service for vulnerable customers
Businesses can use artificial intelligence to identify and aid consumers who need extra help