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World's Rudest Robot Set To Simulate the Fury of Call Center Customers

An anonymous reader writes: A New Zealand-based company called Touchpoint Group has unveiled the world's angriest robot, which is designed to help train call center employees in the art of dealing with frustrated customers. The project, named Radiant, will involve one of Australia's biggest banks, which is providing researchers with recordings of real-life interactions with customers. Once finished Radiant will simulate hundreds of millions of angry customer interactions, helping companies better understand what triggers heated calls.

10 of 150 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Oh! by sinij · · Score: 4, Funny

    I read at -1, and I can personally assure you, that thing is a frequent AC poster here.

  2. And the answer is... by AnotherBlackHat · · Score: 4, Funny

    What makes the callers angriest? Call center employees who act like robots.

    1. Re:And the answer is... by Megahard · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It would be amusing to hook the angry robot up to one of those online automatic assistants.

      --
      I eat only the real part of complex carbohydrates.
    2. Re:And the answer is... by H0p313ss · · Score: 5, Funny

      It would be amusing to hook the angry robot up to one of those online automatic assistants.

      You want Skynet? Because that's how you get Skynet!

      --
      XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
  3. Impressive... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It sounds like somebody is justifying have their head in the sand by commissioning a fancy study on mineralogy.

    People fucking hate call centers because they have to traverse some hellish phone tree, wait too long to talk to a representative who is generally underinformed and insufficiently empowered to actually do anything about the problem. In some cases the rep is even required by company policy to be actively unhelpful, attempt upsells, and the like. Plus, of course, nobody calls phone support when things are working properly, so you start out with a somewhat skewed sample of people who are having issues of one kind or another; not so much happy people just looking to transact.

    What do they want? The magic fancy AI to tell them how to keep customers from being pissed off because of bad service without actually making service better? The one weird trick to making someone feel calm about being told that the problem cannot be fixed? A deeper understanding of why listening to hold music and inane recordings about how much we care about your call for half an hour is obnoxious?

  4. Incompetent staff with no authority. by Ami+Ganguli · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That's not hard to answer. Nobody wants to spend hours on the phone with somebody who:

    • Can't say anything that isn't on their script.
    • Has no authority to fix the problem even if they could understand it.

    Modern call centres appear to be designed specifically to infuriate people by politely wasting their time without solving any problems.

    --
    It is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail. - Abraham Maslow
    1. Re:Incompetent staff with no authority. by ArcadeMan · · Score: 4, Funny

      Keeping customers "happy" while you screw them is key.

      It's worked so far for the world's oldest profession...

  5. Ug, this sucks by rsilvergun · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I saw this coming in the mid 2000s. Companies realized it was more cost effective (read:cheaper) to have happy sounding customer service than a good product and knowledgeable staff. For people wondering why they don't just create an environment and products that don't make people angry in the first place it's because that costs money. Lots of it. So you dump the job of cleaning the mess left by management's lousy decisions onto some poor bastard in Bangladesh or some barely literate goof in Alabama. The sad thing is it works. People remember how the interaction felt more than it's content... For anyone who isn't an overly emotional idiot it's incredibly frustrating; and all the robots in the world don't help that.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  6. Why not use Comcast's excess customer calls? by ZipK · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Since Comcast can't seem to service their customer service lines in a timely, intelligent or helpful manner, and nearly all of the callers end up angry, why not just use the excess calls for training? It's not like these callers will be any more frustrated by operators who know nothing about Comcast than they are by actual Comcast customer service agents.

  7. Re:Oh! by stephanruby · · Score: 4, Funny

    Me, I'm waiting for the consumer edition.

    It's only fair that we use our own robots, to get through their robots, and to speak to their customer service representatives (who may not be robots themselves, but who may act like robots anyway).

    "Please cancel my Comcast subscription.", "By the way, I'm recording this phone conversation for proof that I've actually cancelled my Comcast subscription. So let me ask again, please cancel my Comcast subscription.", "I don't care about any of that, please cancel my comcast subscription. ", "What was your name and employee number again? Thank you 'John, I can't give you my last name because of company policy'. Despite the fact that I've given you my social security number, my address, my birthdate, the maiden name of my mother. Once again, please cancel my comcast subscription. ", "No, I don't want to be transferred to your retention specialist. Hello, hello..."

    Busy signal...

    "Is anyone there? Fuck all of you!! I just want to cancel my Comcast subscription!!"

    Busy signal...

    "I'm just a robot. I can do this all day. Please cancel my Comcast subscription!!"

    Click. The Comcast system has just hung up the phone.

    My robot redialing...

    Busy signal...

    My robot redialing...

    Busy signal...