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Deon Nicholas 42 min

Navigating the Future of Customer Experience


Step into a realm where Artificial Intelligence (AI) drives the core of customer interactions, as Deon Nicholas, CEO and Co-Founder of Forethought, shares his extensive knowledge and experiences. With a rich history of contributing to tech behemoths like Facebook and Dropbox, and now leading Forethought’s mission of enhancing customer satisfaction through AI, Deon brings a wealth of insights into the transformative potential of AI in the customer service sector. This session will unravel the journey to create more personalized and efficient customer experiences. Attendees will have the opportunity to explore real-world examples of AI’s impact on customer engagement, delve into the challenges faced, and the innovative solutions conceived. With a focus on a human-centered approach, this session aims to provide a comprehensive understanding of how AI and machine learning are not just reshaping customer interactions but setting a new standard in the industry.



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- Welcome everybody, we're excited to get going here.

0:07

We're gonna be talking about AI and CX

0:10

and to do that we brought on a little partner of ours,

0:13

company called For Thought.

0:15

We've got the CEO and co-founder, Dion Nichols.

0:18

Dion, thanks so much for joining and how the heck are you?

0:21

- I'm doing well, Gabe.

0:22

Thanks for having me, really excited to be here.

0:25

And yeah, how are you today?

0:26

- Yeah, yeah, well man, it's been hard to get you locked down.

0:29

You're a busy man, but we're excited to kind of get down

0:32

and into the weeds on AI and CX.

0:34

But before we do that, cool stuff going on.

0:37

Tell us a little bit about your background

0:38

and what you guys are doing over there at For Thought.

0:41

- Absolutely, so as mentioned,

0:42

I'm the CEO and co-founder of For Thought.

0:45

We are the generative AI suite for customer support.

0:50

I like to say we're one of the OGs in the space,

0:52

so to speak.

0:53

We launched in 2018 and since then we've grown

0:56

to working with high growth companies,

0:58

everyone from Asana to Marriott.

1:01

And what we do is we plug into their existing

1:05

customer service workflows and then fine-tune

1:07

and train models to discover insights,

1:10

solve problems and assist agents using generative AI.

1:14

- Love it, love it.

1:15

Well, that's why we're here today

1:16

to talk a little bit more about that.

1:18

So you obviously, I assume have a little bit of an opinion

1:21

on AI and CX.

1:22

Maybe let's start big picture.

1:24

Lot of stuff obviously coming down the pipeline

1:26

just in the last little bit.

1:28

Challenges, good, bad.

1:30

What's kind of just your take on this concept of AI and CX?

1:34

Where are we, where are we going?

1:36

- Absolutely, so I mean, I think it starts with

1:38

just the awareness and the noise, right?

1:40

Like five years ago when we launched,

1:42

nobody was talking about AI

1:44

and now suddenly everything and everyone is all about AI.

1:48

And that's a good and a bad thing for vendors,

1:51

but ultimately at the end of the day,

1:53

four customers, which is most important,

1:56

there are, I would say two or three key challenges

1:59

that they're trying to solve using AI, right?

2:02

And the first of that is agent empowerment.

2:04

How do you leverage AI?

2:05

How do you leverage a GPT, something like that,

2:08

to turn your ramping agents into experienced super agents?

2:13

The second, I would say is the age old problem

2:17

of solving customer problems, ticket deflection,

2:20

whatever you wanna call it,

2:21

but ultimately how do you put AI in a customer facing way

2:25

so that your end users can get their problems answered

2:29

efficiently and quickly?

2:30

And then the last thing I'd probably throw out there

2:32

is insights.

2:33

I think AI, LLMs, data, with all of that in the hopper now,

2:38

we're actually able to make better decisions

2:41

as support teams, as customer service teams.

2:43

And I think AI is actually gonna ultimately enable that.

2:46

- And what's your take on this idea that agents

2:51

will be dead, you say, the AI will take over

2:53

and I'm sure you get that one all the time,

2:55

but where do you see that balance?

2:57

And then I wanna dive into a couple of those areas

2:59

you just talked about.

3:01

- Yeah, so no, I think it's a really interesting question

3:06

when people are like, hey, is AI gonna take over everything?

3:10

Or is the job of the agent dead, so to speak?

3:14

You know, I think it's a little bit sensationalistic,

3:19

but here's what I think.

3:20

Not only will AI radically transform customer support,

3:25

it will ultimately drive much better value for customers,

3:29

drive down costs, things like that.

3:31

But I think one thing that we forget is that

3:34

AI will also kind of create new opportunities, right?

3:37

It'll actually open up new markets.

3:39

Like for example, 100 years ago,

3:42

the concept of a software engineer didn't even exist, right?

3:47

And now it's one of the most in-demand jobs

3:50

in the tech industry or in technology.

3:53

And so I think the same way we're gonna see

3:56

prompt engineers, we're actually gonna see people like agents

3:59

who are experts at their field, experts at answering questions,

4:04

be the ones training the models,

4:06

be the ones creating the content,

4:07

be the ones actually building AI,

4:10

because in so many ways, AI is now democratizing

4:13

the concept of engineering, right?

4:15

And so I don't think the agent job will go away,

4:19

but I do think it'll transform and actually be upleveled

4:21

in so many ways by AI.

4:23

- Yeah, I love it.

4:24

Okay, well, let's dive a little bit further

4:26

into a couple of these concepts.

4:27

I love insights, agent, customers.

4:29

So a lot of people are always wondering about, you know,

4:33

self-service.

4:34

It seems like it's something that customers want to do more.

4:37

Is that something you guys are seeing in your line of work?

4:40

And if so, how is that starting to play out?

4:42

Like do all customers,

4:44

they don't want to deal with agents?

4:45

There's this balance of complexity.

4:47

How do you see that line being drawn?

4:49

- The way I see it is that the ultimate role

4:54

of customer service or customer support

4:56

is problem solving for your customers.

4:58

And that's like the end all be all goal.

5:01

Your customer has a problem whether in many ways

5:04

it's often with your own product or it's onboarding,

5:06

it's whatever, or heck, it can be about anything else.

5:09

When you think about it more broadly,

5:10

our goal in the customer support world

5:12

is to figure out who our customer is,

5:14

figure out their problems and help solve them.

5:16

And so the reason I start with that frame of reference

5:19

is because when you think about it that way,

5:21

whether you're using AI, whether you're using human agents,

5:23

whatever you want to think about, that is the end goal.

5:27

And so as a customer, you just want your problem solved.

5:30

Like nobody actually has beat with AI, right?

5:34

Like if an AI could solve your problem in three minutes

5:38

versus a human solving your problem in 10 minutes,

5:40

you would love that, right?

5:42

And if it was correct, it was empathetic and so on.

5:44

The problem though is that most chatbots

5:48

in the past decade have sucked.

5:51

They haven't been able to solve the problem, right?

5:54

And so people don't have issues with chatbots

5:57

or AI or anything like that.

5:58

They have issues when their problem is not being solved

6:00

and they're being tossed around, right?

6:01

And so everything comes back to the customer.

6:05

And so yes, they do want self-serve.

6:06

They do want to be able to solve their problems.

6:08

But look, if you have an AI that's not empathetic,

6:11

that isn't able to solve the problem,

6:12

then it's actually really important

6:14

to create that handoff path to say,

6:16

hey, look, I'm not solving your problem.

6:19

Let's get you to somebody who can

6:20

and usually that's the human agent, right?

6:22

And then that symbiosis is what enables

6:25

a beautiful customer experience.

6:26

If you can have an AI that can solve those tier one problems,

6:31

but also not get people in these doom loops,

6:33

trust me, we've seen it,

6:34

but make it very, very easy to hand off to a human agent

6:38

when you need that level of judgment,

6:40

when you need that level of care.

6:41

And I think ultimately,

6:43

our end users and customers would value that.

6:46

- Where do you see us going from here

6:48

when it comes to kind of the customer side of the house?

6:51

You know, right now to your point,

6:52

a lot of tier one issues are being resolved.

6:55

Any thoughts on kind of where it goes

6:59

in the next 12, 24 months?

7:00

- Absolutely.

7:03

I've kind of an unhinged thought on this.

7:07

The, like, I actually think we're gonna be treating AI

7:12

almost like we treat agents,

7:14

just like a different variant of agent, right?

7:17

Like we're gonna have AI agent.

7:19

We launched a technology,

7:21

we invented a technology called auto flows

7:23

in the last couple of months,

7:24

where you can basically give an agent or an AI a prompt,

7:28

a policy, the same way you'd give, you know,

7:30

GPT a prompt and it responds.

7:32

What if you could give an AI customer support agent a policy?

7:35

Here's how we handle refunds here.

7:37

Here's how we do password resets here.

7:39

The same way you'd give that, you know,

7:40

playbook to one of your ramping agents.

7:42

And then imagine giving it access,

7:44

not only just to the policies, but to all your systems,

7:47

your customer with a K, your transaction system,

7:51

whatever your database is, your snowflakes, your Shopify's.

7:55

And then letting the AI figure out how to do the rest.

7:59

Okay, I need to ask about this order ID.

8:02

I need to ask about it,

8:03

and then I'm gonna go hit the backend system

8:07

and so on and then pull out the order ID,

8:10

interpret the results and then follow up, right?

8:12

Like that is the future of self-service.

8:14

That is the future of customer facing AI

8:18

is what we call these AI agents.

8:20

And in many ways, and this is like the craziest part

8:22

is I actually think that's like baby AGI,

8:25

you know what I mean?

8:25

Artificial general intelligence in a sense.

8:27

Like we're getting to that point in the technology

8:30

where these things can become so good

8:32

and actually so powerful for end customers.

8:35

Anyway, I think that's gonna be the future

8:36

in the next couple of months.

8:37

- I love that, I love that one.

8:38

That's a great, I think next step that's probably not.

8:41

So aggressive is eliminating the rep,

8:43

but kind of taking that next level in probably complexity.

8:47

Let's flip to the agent for just a minute.

8:49

Obviously we talked a little bit about agents

8:50

being eliminated and stuff like that.

8:52

They're probably, that's a little bit abrupt.

8:55

How are you seeing AI start to play out to support agents?

9:00

Like where is it working?

9:01

Where is it not working?

9:02

- Oh man, and this is where the variety of use cases

9:05

is actually so fun, so powerful.

9:07

So the first is like everyone is using GPT

9:12

or support GPT or whatever,

9:14

right now to make their writing better,

9:17

to take in more context.

9:18

So auto completion, being able to draft responses,

9:22

especially in cases for example,

9:24

where let's say you're operating in an English language

9:27

business, but English might not be your first language,

9:29

like you might be operating out of a call center

9:31

in another country, this actually can raise the bar for that.

9:34

So right, being able to assist agents on that side.

9:37

Second, bringing up resources.

9:39

So there's this, like I would say the bulk of generative AI

9:44

use cases in production today are RAGs,

9:46

so retrieval augmented generations.

9:48

And that is just like a fancy way of saying,

9:51

take all the data, pull it in, and retrieve something

9:55

and then use that to generate an answer using an LLM.

9:59

And so a lot of companies are just doing that on public's

10:02

knowledge bases and stuff like that.

10:03

So that's the bare bones.

10:05

But when you get something really powerful

10:08

that's plugged into your data,

10:09

plugged into your conversation history in customer,

10:13

plugged into your knowledge bases internally,

10:14

your policies, imagine all of that power

10:17

at an agent's fingertips.

10:18

So when something, you know, a new question comes up,

10:20

it's able to pull up, hey, here are the past issues

10:22

from this customer, past issues from other customers

10:26

that are similar, here's your playbook on this,

10:29

and be able to pull all of that

10:30

and give these agents superpowers.

10:32

So I think, you know, answer writing,

10:35

retrieval augmented generation.

10:37

And then lastly, I would even say Q&A.

10:39

This is, I don't know, more unhinged ideas.

10:42

But like, we've been doing Q&A, or sorry, QA,

10:47

quality assurance for agents manually.

10:49

Like most companies do that, right?

10:51

You're literally walking through every single ticket

10:55

and trying to be like, was this helpful?

10:56

And you're trying to give your agent a scorecard

10:58

and they're like, yeah, please give me the feedback.

10:59

I don't know.

11:00

But imagine now, if you, as administrators

11:03

or as leaders, customer support leaders,

11:05

have an AI tool that can then sip through

11:07

all of that conversation data and say, hey, you know,

11:11

Gabe is very, very helpful, extremely empathetic.

11:16

And, you know, Dion is very good at solving the problem

11:20

but is maybe not as empathetic.

11:21

And you can kind of learn that and pull out those insights

11:24

and then use that to coach the agents back, right?

11:26

And so I think all of these use cases

11:28

are gonna be super powerful from answer generation,

11:31

retrieval, augmented generation, and search,

11:34

as well as QA.

11:35

And I could go on, but they're like, oh, that's not true.

11:38

- That's interesting, you know, the QA one.

11:40

Yeah, I don't, what a manual process that's been,

11:43

that's one I hadn't really thought too much about,

11:45

but that seems like an obvious use case

11:48

to see if you can get QA in there

11:50

and really start helping people kind of see that

11:53

a little bit different.

11:54

I like that one.

11:55

Okay, great.

11:56

So as we look to wrap here a little bit,

11:58

you know, you're obviously in this space,

12:01

so many things going on.

12:02

You've got a lot of people tuning in

12:04

that are just at the beginning and they're like,

12:06

"Ah, I don't know."

12:08

Yeah.

12:09

"What advice would you give to people

12:11

who are starting this journey,

12:13

what they're thinking about really wanting to get,

12:16

dip their toes in AI warnings,

12:18

best places to start, things to think about.

12:21

What advice would you give them?"

12:22

- Yeah.

12:24

So the first advice I would give is,

12:27

one, just start dabbling, start prototyping.

12:30

I think that's super critical, right?

12:33

Like one of the things that I think,

12:34

opening I did, that they don't get enough credit for,

12:37

is that they made the APIs dead simple to use.

12:41

Like in five lines of code,

12:43

you can get up an interesting little mini chatbot, right?

12:47

And so I think like figuring out how to use it,

12:50

start getting your engineering teams using, you know,

12:52

GPT or anthropic or whatever the models are

12:56

of your choice is the first step.

12:58

The second step I would say is,

13:00

you gotta really tease out the difference

13:03

between mission critical products and operational products.

13:07

And what I mean by that is,

13:08

let's say, you know, you are building a,

13:11

let's use like, I don't know,

13:13

a new as an example,

13:14

like a weight loss journey app or something like that.

13:18

And so for them, what's product, mission critical,

13:22

is the weight loss journey, right?

13:24

And so building GPT products may be around

13:26

suggesting meal plans or suggesting routines

13:30

and things like that can actually be really, really critical

13:33

and become a defensible moat for their own business.

13:37

For other things though,

13:39

what I would argue is there's also operational use cases

13:42

for generative AI.

13:43

For example, customer service, customer support.

13:45

For those, I would actually highly recommend

13:48

leveraging a best in class vendor,

13:50

like customer, like boardbot,

13:51

because what you're gonna find is,

13:53

there's actually so much hidden complexity in that use case.

13:56

And vendors like us are actually benefiting

14:00

and learning from all of the different businesses

14:02

that we work with, right?

14:04

And so I would actually argue,

14:06

if you have resources dedicated to generative AI,

14:10

start by figuring out which product critical use cases

14:13

you can build and which operational critical use cases

14:17

you can buy, 'cause you don't wanna build out

14:19

your own retrieval augmented generation engine

14:21

for all of your support tickets.

14:23

It's like, yeah.

14:24

And so those are the things I would consider.

14:26

So one, start dabbling to tease out the product

14:29

critical use cases and operational critical use cases.

14:32

And then I would say divert, build resources to the product

14:37

and then figure out what is your best in class partner

14:40

on a lot of the operational use cases.

14:41

- I love that.

14:43

Do you feel like there's anything people should be careful about?

14:45

You know, sometimes you hear about this idea

14:48

that you're gonna maybe get with false information

14:50

or any warnings that you'd put on this

14:53

as people go down this path

14:55

or kind of maybe gotchas they should be expecting.

14:59

- Yes.

14:59

So the first thing I would say is security and safety.

15:04

Like that comes up all the time, right?

15:07

And so you're gonna wanna go with a vendor

15:08

or again, if you're building internally

15:10

for your product critical paths,

15:12

you're gonna wanna make sure, you know,

15:14

you've got GDPR compliance, you've got SOC2 compliance

15:17

and understanding how you send data to vendors

15:21

and how that gets trained, how that gets used,

15:24

all of that's really important.

15:25

So for example, us at Forthought,

15:27

one of the things we did from day one was we invested

15:29

in technology to automatically redact PII, right?

15:32

And so, you know, so basically anything that gets sent

15:35

to our servers, you can automatically redact them

15:38

and then like with 99.99% accuracy,

15:42

you know that nothing getting shipped

15:44

to any of these large language models

15:47

contains PII because the bots don't need it.

15:49

You don't need to know that my name is on

15:51

in order to answer the question.

15:53

You can replace that with a token that says,

15:54

my name is, you know, name_one, and as long as it's,

15:58

you know, homomorphic, so to speak,

15:59

and you can actually perform the mapping or whatever,

16:02

then the algorithms will perform almost identically

16:06

on those, right?

16:07

So being able to invest in those security measures,

16:11

open AI and others have like zero data retention powers

16:16

that you can sign up for, so they won't retain your data

16:17

or train on it.

16:18

So there's like a lot of these considerations.

16:20

It can be done, obviously, again,

16:22

if you're building information critical stuff,

16:23

you've got to do all of this yourself.

16:25

If you're leveraging a best-in-class vendor,

16:27

you should make sure and ask your vendor,

16:29

are they doing all this stuff?

16:31

- Very, very helpful, 'cause I think that's very timely.

16:35

Okay, as we wrap then, if someone wants to know

16:38

a little bit more about Forthought or dive a little bit

16:42

deeper with you guys, what's the best way to do that?

16:44

- Yeah, easiest way is to connect on our website,

16:47

so www.forthought.ai, request a demo of the product.

16:52

It's a lot of fun to use, and I mentioned autoflows

16:55

and a few other things there.

16:57

If you wanna get in touch with me directly,

16:59

I'm on all the social channels, so find me on LinkedIn,

17:02

I'm Dion Nicholas, find me on Twitter or X,

17:06

I guess they call it now @dogidon, D-O-J-I-D-E-O-N,

17:10

and just mention customer, and I'd always be excited

17:14

to jam.

17:15

- Awesome, awesome, well, I appreciate it.

17:16

Great session, very timely, I think,

17:19

as we dive into this topic of the AICX,

17:21

so Dion again, thanks so much for your time,

17:23

and for everybody else, enjoy your afternoon.

17:27

- Thanks, Gabe.

17:27

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(upbeat music)

39:06

(upbeat music)

39:26

(upbeat music)

39:46

(upbeat music)

40:06

(upbeat music)

40:26

(upbeat music)

40:46

(upbeat music)

41:06

(upbeat music)

41:26

(upbeat music)

41:46

(upbeat music)

42:06

(upbeat music)

42:26

(clanging)