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How AI-Driven Interfaces Help You Connect with Your Customer

How AI-Driven Interfaces Help You Connect with Your Customer

AI AI, AI & Emerging Technology Consulting, Digital transformation, Platform, Websites & Platforms 4 min read
Profile picture for user Niels Dortland

Written by
Niels Dortland
Group Creative Director

Stylized image of a woman looking at her laptop.

There’s a lot of talk about artificial intelligence (AI) related to marketing tools, trends and tech. But my latest obsession is how it can help build relationships between brands and customers—and how the current and coming changes will influence people’s behavior. As the AI revolution accelerates, how we interface with the internet itself stands to change. How will this be reflected in brand websites, apps and other platforms?

We’ve all seen and heard how generative AI can supercharge creative content production by creating large volumes of images, video and copy in just seconds. This is only one sliver of AI’s potential, because conversational interfaces that learn from us will profoundly transform the way we search for and discover products and information. And we’re already seeing it happen before our eyes: Instacart offers contextual advice for grocery shopping, Zalando created a virtual fashion consultant, and Intercom launched a GPT4-powered business messaging solution that can solve 50% of customer questions instantly. AI is changing the way people interact with your brand, and this is igniting a paradigm shift in brand interfaces and product design.

For many brands, this creates a challenge. How do we connect people with the right answer, content or product they are looking for? The examples above hint at an answer: AI and LLMs go a long way in making consumer experiences more intuitive. Here’s how we’re thinking about it in our Platforms practice.

New search behaviors will elevate the role of the dotcom.

One area that will drastically influence consumer behavior is search. Search is already the default starting point for consumers, but Google’s new AI-powered results page will soon be the only place a user needs to visit, bringing comparison and conversion onto one screen.

This brings some urgency to how brands approach their own platforms, because to bring their products to the top of search, they’ll need to think less about keywords and more about context and intent. What context would users search for around your products? What would they intend to do with it? What values do your offerings deliver to people?

No one yet can say how to solve SEO in the future. But we can help brands begin to integrate this layer of information into their catalogs and user experiences now to prepare for that kind of change—because in this new world, I see an elevated role for the brand dotcom. Think of Google as the department store that carries all brands, and your platform as the expressive branded spaces users will choose to go to connect and build a relationship. Delivering on this expectation will be the key factor to success in the age of AI.

AI is elevating the brand experience.

I’ll extend the department store analogy a little bit further to illustrate the role of AI on modern digital platforms. A good store employee only asks if they can help at the right moment, and AI will likewise be to gently and organically nudge users through conversation. The difference is that AI will be fully trained on your brand, products and services and can represent those perfectly. Think personal product advice, answers, cross- and up-sales, all in the context of a user’s intent.

A restaurant chain, for example, might use natural language to transform its ordering platform, especially for catering and large orders. Rather than scroll through a menu, users could describe an occasion, like “I’m throwing a birthday party for my 5-year-old son. We’ll have 15 people, mostly children.” The system can then take that information and recommend a customized party package. Any allergies among or dietary restrictions in the group? Not a problem—the AI can edit the order for the customer to review. Think of AI as a butler for your brand and its customers.

More personalized experiences give more opportunities for relationship building.

These little details—why you’re ordering, when you need it by, plus any additional personal requests—go a long way in getting to know your customers. The results are both better customer experiences and the ability to forge hyper-personal relationships, ultimately fulfilling the original promise of digital.

We are finally moving beyond segments and personas. A properly programmed AI understands every user’s personal sentiments, curiosities and needs, because it’s able to pull from and connect different pieces of data from across the consumer ecosystem. It can remember those facts and become more personal with every interaction, like offering personalized promotions and loyalty incentives honed to every user’s context. This new type of personalization shows great promise for conversion.

It's also great for building customer loyalty, because AI unlocks interactions that are designed specifically for building longer lasting relationships with them. As customers engage over time, their interactions across the platform produce greater and more detailed insights that can be used to further optimize the experience and deliver upon their unique needs.

Start with a sprint, then optimize and personalize.

AI will continue to shape consumer expectations and behaviors, underscoring the need for platforms that can pivot with speed and agility. It’s more important now than ever to be able to listen, learn and adapt to how your customers are engaging.

On the flip side, that means your implementation of AI is also always a work in progress. If any of the above sounds interesting to you, rest assured that you don’t have to make a full overhaul of your website. It starts with looking at what you already have and seeing if your tech stack can support these hyper-personalized experiences. Innovation sprints or experimenting with building better experiences—on the main dotcom or maybe in a separate domain—are great places to start, as are smarter search functions that are fairly easy to implement. Then optimize continuously to perfect your toolkit and extend your ability to personalize.

It's too early to say with utmost specificity how AI will shape customer experiences years down the line. But by realizing how recent AI developments are serving pre-existing marketing goals—more personalized user flows, greater customer loyalty, and an elevated brand experience—it’s clear that now is the time to lay the foundations for AI-powered customer journeys.

Want to learn more about how our platforms team can support you in building more personalized experiences?

As the AI revolution accelerates, how we interface with the internet itself stands to change. Find out how this will be reflected in websites, apps and other platforms. AI digital platforms apps mobile app development search engine marketing Platform AI & Emerging Technology Consulting Websites & Platforms AI Digital transformation

How Brands are Truly Taking Off with Creative Differentiation

How Brands are Truly Taking Off with Creative Differentiation

5 min read
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Written by
Monks

What separates your brand from competitors? Across industries, brands are increasingly investing and allocating resources to improving the customer experience (CX). While that’s great news for customers and the audiences they serve, for brands, it means they’ll have to work much harder to stand out. With a sea of sameness looming over the horizon, brands must hone in on their key, unique qualities that differentiate them from the rest through best-in-class creative experiences. 

Creative differentiation is more than simply raising awareness or traditional notions of driving customer loyalty. In his Forrester report “The Cost of Losing Creativity,” Jay Pattisall writes that “every brand offers the same digital experience because they all address the same customer needs.” Rather than fulfill the same KPIs as their competition, organizations must seek out opportunities that fulfill a unique brand promise and offer memorable creative experiences.

MediaMonks Founder and COO Wesley ter Haar notes that what separates average or even good creative from truly exceptional work is impact. “It’s not just about big ideas. If you have the right idea, you have to go really big on the idea itself,” he says. “The scale of those ideas–the way you commit to them to have real impact–defines the pinnacle of creative work.”

Screen Shot 2019-11-12 at 10.26.02 AM

We redesigned the Aeroméxico app to transform the customer experience from the ground up.

One way brands can begin thinking about this is through purpose. Look at it this way: while you might know your brand’s purpose, what really matters is whether consumers do. 76% of brands may think their organizations have a defined purpose, but only one in ten have actually defined a purpose statement that they’ve put into action, according to the ANA. 

When faced with competition from digitally-native brands that have integrated purpose well within their platforms (like making it easier to get a ride in a couple of taps at a guaranteed rate), brands must likewise ensure their promise is fulfilled through the creative user experience. It’s through these experiences, if done right, that brands can strike an emotional connection and build brand love in the mind of consumers.

Creativity as a Key Factor

The challenge of creative differentiation is felt across all industries these days, though it’s especially relevant to industries that push traditional strategies around growing loyalty–retailers, travel brands, and fintech are just some of the industries that could benefit most by embracing creative differentiation. As part of a digital transformation process, MediaMonks worked with leading Mexican airline brand Aeroméxico to revamp their app, turning the typical ticket-booking experience into a space for wanderlust and travel inspiration.

“What differentiates one brand from another nowadays?” asks Carlos Rivera, Consulting and Platforms Lead at MediaMonks Mexico. “Loyalty is not easily achieved unless through experiences that result in habits or small moments that inject emotion to the customer journey.”

Craft alone doesn’t solve the challenge. Brands must leverage consumer insights and data to address and solve the primary needs of customers, aligning the essence of their brand with a strategy that reacts to those needs. This makes all the difference between novelty and designing truly differentiated experiences that cultivate lasting emotional and business impact. “Differentiated creative combines an understanding of culture with real, heavy-lifting business impact that drives real bottom line value,” says ter Haar.

The process must begin with placing the human at the center of your creative focus. Working with Aeroméxico, MediaMonks put this idea into practice, helping the brand creatively differentiate by striving to truly transform the full scope of the customer experience. 

“Often it’s not about the place you’re going; it’s about the person you’re visiting,” says ter Haar. “This insight bubbled up, can we build people into the app as a destination? That’s a really nice message and normally if you look at the siloed nature of our industry, that’d be it–with some shiny creative around it. Instead, we’re filling the gaps. Yes, there’s creative and an app, but what’s happening in between?”

This question sparked the development of “People are the Places” for Aeroméxico, a state-of-the-art platform that enables the brand to build meaningful relationships by letting travelers experience places like never before: linking them to the people actually living there. This experience was recognized with the Gold Cannes Lion 2019 in Brand Experience & Activation.

The challenge in embedding such emotive experiences in a platform lies in “trying to communicate different experiences to different audiences,” says Aeroméxico’s Angélica Romero, UX and Web Optimization Lead. Brands must design strategies to create personalized experiences that impact users directly and make those experiences memorable. For example, once a user fills in their profile in the Aeromexico app, their name appears throughout the reservation flow, along with geolocalization and recent searches, which anticipate their needs and require fewer taps for them to take.

Redesigning the Customer Experience

Nowadays, many brands are redesigning their corporate image, but these tweaks are often a matter of brand identity. True transformation requires balancing commercial goals with experiences that resonate with consumers. The challenge with the Aeroméxico app was clear from the start: establish a strategy to increase ticket sales by improving the experience of buying a ticket in mobile format. This prompted the team to study the booking process, looking for opportunities to redesign the process as a whole, from discovering flights to inspiring users to act on a destination–a strategy that we’ve taken with subsequent campaigns for the brand, too.

The focus was put not only on helping the user find flights, but also on inspiring them to travel. “And so we launched the complete redesign of the reservations section with a user-thought experience process,” says Carlos Rivera. “We carried out prototypes, interviews and even testing sessions to ensure that every button made sense and to determine what information to show at what time during the reservation flow.” From color choice to animations, each element in the process serves a specific purpose to impact the user experience. Through ongoing analysis, MediaMonks and the Aeroméxico team can tweak and adjust the app to enhance the CX even further and continuously iterate.

Monk Thoughts We redesigned the visual layout to raise the user experience. We humanized a very functional flow without losing usability and conversion goals.

González notes that the centerpiece of the design is how visual elements change and conform as the user follows the flow. From the background image that changes when you select the destination, to the copy and image that indicate the step in which you are in the header of each screen, the design builds a sense of excitement and anticipation before culminating in an animated message that lets you know that “Your trip is ready!”

“We know that buying a plane ticket is a rational decision,” says González. “But that carries a very important emotional load because, in the end, it materializes in your next trip: It’s happening!” 

Creating user-centered experiences goes a long way to help brands make their purpose clear and to establish the differentiator that will make them stand out from the crowd. Addressing customer’s needs is something any brand can do, but doing it in a relevant and unique way is something only brands with defined purposes can aspire to achieve.

Transforming the customer experience (CX) can be key for brands that want to achieve creative differentiation through the use of design, data and technology. How Brands are Truly Taking Off with Creative Differentiation How design and technology come together to transform the customer experience in creatively differentiated ways.
customer experience data technology app apps platform digital transformation creative differentiation design UX UI customer journey Aeroméxico

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