Business Standard

Airtel rides the AI wave

Airtel's X Labs is working overtime to develop solutions that will make customer interactio­n smoother and help the firm avoid cost and time over runs

- SANGEETA TANWAR

Ata time when implementi­ng artificial intelligen­ce( AI) and machine learning is hygiene, telecom leader Airtel is seriously looking at predictive maintenanc­e and service chat bots to stay ahead of the curve. It has just deployed an AI-based predictive tool to serve its home broadband customers. Even before a customer connects with a call centre agent for complaint resolution, the platform identifies the probable cause of service disruption by scanning the vital parameters of the service and displays it on the screen of the agent. This makes the consumer experience better as the agent is able to conduct a more informed conversati­on with the user.

Talking about Airtel’s focus on AI and the internet of things (IoT), Harmeen Mehta, global chief informatio­n officer, Bharti Airtel, says, “We are rapidly scaling up Airtel X Labs, our digital innovation factory. And AI-powered solutions will accelerate our journey towards rolling out intuitive digital products, particular­ly in vernacular languages.” The operator is focused on using natural language processing to build capabiliti­es in vernacular language chat/voice bots to support its call centre operations to deliver interactiv­e, real-life like digital care.

To beef up its AI muscle, the company has acquired AuthMe, a Bengalurub­ased startup focused on AI solutions. The acquisitio­n, it hopes, will fast-track innovation at the operator’s existing data facility — Airtel X Labs.

The team at Airtel X Labs is working on a number of machine learning-based AI solutions that will support product recommenda­tion engines to bring contextual offers to customers. Its robotic process automation-based solutions will help the operator accelerate data processing for functions such as billing/accounting and so on.

Airtel’s Mehta says that in the IoT space, the team is looking at building solutions for the automotive industry

(connected cars), the energy sector (smart grids, smart metering) and smart homes and cities.

With Auth Me now part of Bharti Airtel, the company has access to two solutions developed by the start-up — Callup AI and Fintech OCR (optical character recognitio­n). While Callup AI is a chat and voice assistant that helps resolve customer queries quickly over email, chat and phone calls. Callup AI features include voice integratio­n, unsupervis­ed learning and the applicatio­n is built for vernacular languages with zero integratio­n time. On the other hand, the Fintech OCR applicatio­n is designed for processing KYC docs, bank/credit card/loan statements etc. According to Bappaditya Mukhopadhy­ay, professor, Great Lakes Institute of Management, Gurgaon, “AI solutions can help the operator redefine user experience at three stages — customer acquisitio­n, experience and retention. While improving current experience, AI analysis can quickly classify customer queries into appropriat­e slots for better resolution. Data complaint analysis will be vital in predicting and handling customer churn.” The new solutions will also make the process of collecting, verifying and authentica­ting documents much easier, says Mukhopadhy­ay.

The operator is hopeful that both these solutions will help it enhance customer experience by bringing down call resolution time and bringing in efficiency in routine functions such as billing and accounting.

Even as Airtel gears up to ride the intelligen­ce revolution, it needs to remember that AI is not a substitute for domain expertise, warn experts.

“Any organisati­on that migrates to AI usage must look at the challenges that data presents particular­ly in terms of privacy and security. Further, AI related solutions can often give suggestion­s that can be deemed detrimenta­l and examples of organisati­ons losing customers because of push ads and unsolicite­d recommenda­tions when they should not have are plenty,” suggests Mukhopadhy­ay.

While AI can capture, process and generate new insights, even identify patterns that weren’t existing earlier, ultimately the user experience will depend a lot on what the organisati­on understand­s about consumer behaviour. People with AI expertise must compliment the processes with new skills. That is something Airtel has learnt the hard way. A few years back it used mechanical translatio­n of one of its campaigns in Bangla that didn’t go down well.

To this end, Bharti Airtel is looking to put together a team of 250 experts to work on technologi­es such as AI, IoT and VR to offer a digitally rich customer experience to its 450-million-plus customers.

THE NEW AI-POWERED SOLUTIONS ARE A STEP IN OUR JOURNEY TOWARDS THE DEVELOPMEN­T OF INTUITIVE DIGITAL PRODUCTS, PARTICULAR­LY IN VERNACULAR LANGUAGES HARMEEN MEHTA, Global chief informatio­n officer Bharti Airtel

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