
Customer service: The rise of the doom loop
The evolution of customer service from call centres to chatbots.
The quality of customer service can make or break a company. That has always been true but the kind of customer experience we now expect when things go wrong with our purchases is vastly different from what we wanted half a century ago. 1960s answering services, the new organisations managing calls on behalf of businesses, relied on a single technology: the telephone. Now a firm needs to offer its customers multiple ways to contact it. But which one should a company prioritise, especially in these financially straitened times? The latest AI-enabled chatbots? Well-trained, empowered people in call centres? Or something else entirely? And how do these changes impact customer service representatives, the people who actually deliver the service to us every day?
Iszi Lawrence discusses these questions with Jo Causon, CEO of the Institute of Customer Service in the UK; call centre researchers Professors Premilla D鈥機ruz and Ernesto Noronha from the Indian Institute of Management in Ahmedabad; Franco-American service designer Matthew Marino and World Service listeners.
(Photo: A woman in jeans interacting with virtual contact icons on a screen. Credit: Umnat Seebuaphan/iStock/Getty Images)
On radio
Broadcasts
- Sat 28 Jun 2025 11:06GMT成人快手 World Service except East and Southern Africa & West and Central Africa
- Sun 29 Jun 2025 02:06GMT成人快手 World Service
- Sun 29 Jun 2025 13:06GMT成人快手 World Service East and Southern Africa & West and Central Africa only
- Sun 29 Jun 2025 16:06GMT成人快手 World Service News Internet
- Wed 2 Jul 2025 09:06GMT成人快手 World Service
- Wed 2 Jul 2025 23:06GMT成人快手 World Service
What鈥檚 your favourite movie theatre?
Podcast
-
The Forum
The programme that explains the present by exploring the past