People don’t automatically trust machines, so as personalisation and automation step up a notch marketers need to ensure they do everything they can to create transparent and user-friendly experiences.
If you search the internet for ‘content and AI’, you’ll mostly find people talking and writing about how algorithms are trespassing on the territory of creatives. Algorithms for short and structured copywriting, algorithms as tastemakers, algorithms producing movies and so on.
But what’s more interesting than all the future-gazing is the question of how marketers are setting the context for AI?
https://www.marketingweek.com/ben-davis-user-experience-ai/
In today’s world of automation, IoT (Internet of Things) concept is gaining ground swiftly among the industries. Be it a smart home, smart workplace, or a smart city, IoT has started strengthening its presence everywhere. A report has revealed that around 31 billion connected devices will be available globally by 2020. We can expect that all major industry sectors will leverage the benefits of this thriving technology soon.
Interestingly, people want to control the connected devices on the move by using fingertips, and this requirement gives a boost to IoT penetration in mobile application development. There is no exaggeration in mentioning that IoT is all set to drive the future of custom mobile app solutions. Here we mention eight factors through which the IoT technology will revolutionize the app development domain.
https://thriveglobal.com/stories/mobile-app-development-and-iot-right-blend-to-boost-your-business/
According to Gartner, customer experience (CX) – more than products or solutions – is the new battlefront for business, with 81% of marketers saying that by 2020 they expect to be competing mostly or completely on the basis of CX. However, with customer expectations constantly rising, businesses continue to fall behind. Forrester’s Global Customer Experience Index continues to find that most companies are rated as “poor” or “very poor” year on year. Even the organisations that scored “good” in 2017 either fell in 2018 or didn’t improve. In order to future-proof their business, organisations need to be asking themselves not ‘what do customers want?’ but, ‘what will customers want?’
http://www.itnewsafrica.com/2018/11/how-will-automation-ai-and-iot-shape-user-experience/
Recently, a lot of trending customer journey analysis around user experience, marketing and technology, is attempting to take humans and their cost out of consideration, replacing them with technology and automation. But what are we pursuing with such an effort?
Apart from optimisation and efficiency, are we pursuing the anticipation of emotions or feelings in a given circumstance and expecting technology and automation to take care of it? Interestingly, most successful brand stories are about human beings who have gone out of their way to help customers.
One reason for that is “help” between brands and customers is based on empathy rather than just solutions. So, it is paradoxical to find a lot of content surrounding AI focused on making contact “more human” and more “naturally conversational”. With that said, are we expecting AI to drive customer-brand relationships rather than solutions?
https://www.marketing-interactive.com/relationships-or-solutions-how-collaboration-can-succeed-in-an-ai-world/
CIOs are often inundated with vendor promises of a user experience so superb, they won’t need to fret about employee training. But CIOs should be skeptical when they hear promises like these, especially when it comes to AI and automation technologies.
https://searchcio.techtarget.com/blog/TotalCIO/AI-and-automation-will-need-more-than-a-great-user-experience/