AI Customer Service
May 22, 2019 • 5 minute read

3 Ways Conversational AI can help your Customers in an Urgent Travel Situation

As the weather heats up this time of year, vacation is the top thing on my mind and I start to book my summer travels. Whether a domestic beach destination or an international adventure, I make a list of everything I have to do. Book flights? Check. Book a rental car? Check. Book a hotel? Check. With improved self-service, I find it easy to navigate through websites and channel options to get exactly what I want. And if I am put on hold or have to deal with a complication, it’s frustrating, but I can find the time to finish the task later in the day or on  a different channel.

In my experience, the major problems with booking travel happen at the worst possible time. It’s not when I’m comfortably sitting in my house with my laptop and phone, but instead when I’m running through the airport trying to book another flight because my connection was just cancelled, or trying to contact my hotel last minute so I can book another night.

This is when the headaches start. Long wait times. On hold for hours when I don’t have a minute to spare. It’s during these urgent travel situations when I need customer care to perform at it’s best, and it’s often when it fails the most.

We decided to take a look at customer preferences and tendencies when booking and managing travel, especially in urgent situations, and how AI and self-service can best support customers when these manic situations happen. The survey that we conducted had more than 1,700 participants –both business and leisure travelers. Here’s what we found:

1. Voice Rules in Urgent Matters (and even in non-urgent matters)

Love it or hate it, voice is still king. And when is comes to making direct contact with a travel and hospitality company, phone is still the preferred method. In fact, 59% of respondents who had contacted an airline, hotel, rental car, or cruise line in the past year did so through the phone, in both urgent and non-urgent situations. And when it came to urgent matters, over 50% of both leisure and business travelers chose phone as their preferred method of contact.

If your company deals with any type of urgent travel situations, it’s vital to have quick, efficient service through the phone. Sure, chatbots and text channels may have a lot of hype right now, but if they cannot deliver or be accessed when customers need them most, then what’s the point?

2. Self-Service is essential

In an urgent matter, time is of the essence. Speaking with an agent can be helpful, but if people  can use self-service and get the same quality of service more quickly and without a long hold time , they are on board. Our survey showed that travelers don’t mind using technologies like a virtual care assistant to take care of urgent matters like rebooking a flight or hotel due to weather cancellations.Seventy-one percent of business travelers and 67% of leisure travelers said they would use self-service in this type of situation.
Another trend that we found is that travelers don’t like to repeat themselves or be transferred multiple times (no surprise there). This means there is a big opportunity for travel and hospitality companies to implement self-service for the entire transaction, or to have self-service collect the information needed so agents can  quickly help travelers and efficiently process their requests. Using an accurate and intelligent virtual assistant is vital if a travel company is implementing self-service, because otherwise you are just wasting your customers’ time in often frantic situations by putting them on hold or sending them to the wrong agent.

3. Keep the experience positive

When it comes to urgent or unexpected travel situations, maintaining a good customer experience is essential. Frustrating a customer when they are already overwhelmed will create a bad experience, and most likely lead to him ranting about your company on social media and possibly never using your services again.

The top characteristic of poor customer service in travel is that no one wants to sound like a broken record. Thirty-six percent say that having to repeat an inquiry and information multiple times to different representative is the ultimate turn-off. Being transferred multiple times (25%), unknowledgeable agents (20%), and long wait times (19%) also topped the list. To prevent this from happening, companies must consider if their self-service truly understands their customers, with technologies like Conversational AI that use Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) and Natural Language Processing and when needed, the help of humans.

How can Conversational AI help?

Incorporating Conversational AI into your contact center environment allows for scalable, productive, and efficient self-service interactions that will leave your customers happy and their problems solved. Especially in urgent travel situations, it’s important to have an automation option that can scale for an unexpected increase in calls, like flights  being cancelled due to a storm. And it’s also an important aspect for self-service to provide the same, if not better, customer care in terms of productivity so that travelers have one less thing to worry about.

Want to learn more? Let’s talk.