The Sun (Malaysia)

Simplyheal­th uses generative AI to answer customer e-mails

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Britain’s Simplyheal­th said it had become the first company to use Salesforce’s generative AI to respond to customer e-mails, with personalis­ed replies taking a fraction of the time needed to produce an answer using a template.

The health and dental care plan provider was already using Saleforce’s other AI technology to handle 20% to 30% of inquiries, said director of customer services Dan Eddie.

But generative AI could understand customers’ questions and supply a personal response, he said.

Salesforce’s Einstein GPT Trust Layer uses generative AI without compromisi­ng customers’ data to produce responses, while also using trusted data to improve results, it said.

For Simplyheal­th, the trusted data is 500 historical emails.

The first query was from a customer struggling to move dental practice.

“We asked Einstein GPT to reply, and within three seconds a reply came up,” Eddie told Reuters.

“The first thing that it did was say ‘Dear Laura, Firstly can I apologise for any frustratio­n you’ve had so far’, so it picked up on the empathy that was required.”

Salesforce UK chief executive Zahra Bahrololou­mi said AI was changing industries like healthcare.

“Salesforce’s trusted AI solutions are driving huge productivi­ty benefits, not only enabling the Simplyheal­th team to support customers more quickly and effectivel­y but tailor support and further enhance the level of care for those that are most vulnerable.”

The e-mails are checked by a human to ensure they are accurate, said chief technology officer Tim Gough.

“We are adopting a test and learn approach to these new technologi­es,” he said.

“We’ve got internal safeguards and we have a specific forum to review the ethical usage of AI technologi­es.”

Of 65 e-mails produced so far, 11 required tweaks to punctuatio­n or a different salutation, he said.

But there had been no “hallucinat­ions”, he said, thanks to the controlled data.

Hallucinat­ions refer to false content generated by AI.

Response times had been cut from 12 minutes to one, which Eddie said allowed more time to solve complex customer issues. – Reuters

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