Get ready, world: AI assistants may become your new business BFF.
Imagine writing an email in 20 seconds instead of 20 minutes, completing hours of research in minutes, or automatically receiving a full summary of a customer’s service history.
These timesavers demonstrate the power of an AI assistant, or copilot. It’s the next level of innovation within generative artificial intelligence (AI) technology, where you simply tell a assistant what to do for you, right in the flow of your work.
While hundreds of millions have flocked to AI platforms over the past year, an AI assistant takes them to a whole new level. You won’t find this assistant on a website. It shows up as a conversational AI interface integrated with your everyday workflow, whether it’s a customer relationship management (CRM), email, or other system specific to your industry.
An assistant makes you more productive by doing work on your behalf. The best part? You just tell it, in plain language, what you want it to do and it does it for you. The technology is now being applied across sales, service, marketing, retail, and many other industries and roles. If you’re a knowledge worker (that is, anyone who works with information), an AI copilot is for you.
A report by the Oliver Wyman Forum found 55% of global workers are already using generative AI at least once a week, but the expected productivity gains have been lacking. The turning point, however, is coming as generative AI integrates into daily workflows. That, the report predicts, will propel massive productivity gains to the tune of 300 billion hours saved annually by 2030.
So, how do these productivity workhorses get the job done? Just like the major AI platforms, assistants use large language models (LLMs) to parse immense amounts of data in seconds. But they take the outputs further by performing tasks on your behalf. Given their unprecedented functionality, AI copilots are expected to transform every business function. Many companies are jumping in as early adopters.
You might be thinking, “How could I use an AI copilot at work?” To help answer this, we’ll break down the most common ways to use AI assistants at work, as well as look at how companies are planning ahead with this technology in mind.
What’s an AI Copilot?
Generative AI is laying the foundation for a new kind of app: super intelligent assistants that can do the work of hundreds — or even thousands — of individual applications based on a simple prompt.
AI assistants for salespeople
Andrew Russo, enterprise architect at Baca Systems, an industrial equipment supplier, envisions many ways of using an AI assistant. First up: sales emails.
“We found that salespeople spend up to 20 minutes writing one custom email to a customer,” he said. “Being able to dish out more emails would be a high-value thing for us.”
Picture your sales and marketing teams equipped with an AI in CRM assistant that drafts individualised emails, customised with the information that will resonate with each audience. These aren’t run-of-the-mill, generic messages. Generative AI can use CRM information about past interactions, or automatically segment your audience to create emails with a personalised feel that can dramatically increase engagement rates.
Salespeople can also use an assistant to prioritise. Imagine starting your day by asking your computer to give you the top three sales leads. An assistant can do that, and also provide context. Why is the customer a good prospect? Generative AI can flag recent news from the company indicating, for example, that it plans to invest in new markets or expand its product portfolio.
Once you’ve contacted a lead, an AI assistant can support you by summarising conversations and highlighting customer needs, preferences, and all commitments made. It can also create complete sales summaries by merging call details with broader account information and historical data.
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Don’t know how to move a deal forward? An AI assistant can review contacts, recent emails, calls, and customer meetings, and recommend next-best actions. For example, if a customer’s decision-makers are ready to buy, the assistant might recommend the right time to send them detailed information about your products and services.
The assistant can even suggest optimal meeting times, based on the customer’s known preferences. Then, it can:
- Generate a suggested task list.
- Draft an email to decision-makers, which you can review before sending.
- Mark the deal as closed and update the opportunity, including the sales amount.
This kind of end-to-end support represents what’s possible when your AI assistant has access to all the data in your organisation. While many companies have different sets of data siloed in different departments, those who can bring different types of information from different sources into one organised system will reap the full benefits of AI copilots.
AI assistant for service teams
If you work in customer service — or have ever interacted with a service department — you know chatbots aren’t anything new. With an AI assistant , though, you supercharge an agent’s ability to resolve problems. AI assistants can often gather the most relevant information about a customer, in real time, to help agents resolve cases faster, freeing them up to troubleshoot more complex problems.
Consider this scenario: A customer says they were overbilled for their monthly internet expense. In this case, the agent simply asks its assistant to:
- Retrieve the relevant billing information based on the date range provided by the customer.
- Get the purchase order and contract terms for the subscription.
- Compare how much higher this time period’s bill is compared to the same time period last year.
- Gather product usage information and analyse whether the usage has increased.
- Find out if pricing or contract terms have changed.
- Create a proposal for how to address the issue.
In the past, gathering this information would require an agent to access several different systems or departments. That takes lots of time and, in many cases, frustrates the customer and the agent.
AI assistants for self-service customers
The verdict is in: Customers prefer to not call you for routine questions. Salesforce research shows 57% of customers prefer to deal with companies through digital channels, like text and chat, for simple issues like checking order status or changing a mailing address.
How can an AI assistant make these interactions better? Instead of providing links to help customers complete a task, the way many chatbots currently do, an AI assistant can serve up personalised data that draws from your information bank (also known as a knowledge base), customer data, and other sources. This gives self-service systems much more depth, with conversational abilities that are more like a human-to-human conversation.
Because the assistant is pulling data from across your organisation, it can answer questions about orders (When will it arrive? Can you change the shipping address?) and specific customer account data (When is my next payment due?). It can also take actions that previously required a human, like closing an account or mailing a replacement card.
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AI assistants for retailers
Product recommendation engines have been used by brands for years, but they lack the granularity and personalisation that customers expect. An AI assistant changes the game.
Now, a customer can enter a simple prompt like “show me short-sleeved pink dresses I can wear to a June wedding” on a retailer’s website and get relevant choices. In the background, the AI assistant is using its knowledge of natural-language prompts to quickly return the best results to the shopper.
In this way, an AI assistant can act as a digital concierge, helping the customer discover the perfect product, with minimal hassle. Assuming the customer is a known shopper, the assistant would use the customer’s profile to understand their intent, and make recommendations based on past purchases, affinities, and service records. For example, it wouldn’t bother recommending a product similar to something the customer has returned in the past.
AI assistants are also a game-changer for retail teams. They can automate complex tasks like managing multiproduct catalogue data and personalising product promotions, simply by telling the assistant to perform those tasks. They can also craft product descriptions based on historical data that shows what copy has converted well in the past, as well as write product descriptions in multiple languages.
The most recent State of Commerce report found that, while AI adoption is nascent in retail organisations, early adopters are saving an average of 6.4 hours per week. Retail marketers, for example, can save loads of time by asking their assistant to create a targeted promotion for, say, hiking boots for loyalty program members.
AI assistants for marketers
Marketing teams spend lots of time analysing trends, understanding customer preferences, developing segmentation strategies, and establishing competitive positioning. They’re also deeply invested in content creation to personalise their messaging
Imagine if a trusted assistant could do that work for you. You can ask your AI helper to:
- Closely analyse historical customer data to identify narrower segments, and tailor marketing messages on a more personal level.
- Write marketing copy unique to each customer segment.
- Track and understand how your customer is engaging with you at every step of the relationship – then suggest next-best actions.
- Use existing customer data to infer which topics and channels customers prefer, and then personalise the products, articles, and other information they’ll see there.
- Understand how customers prefer to receive communications and what they’re interested in, and prioritise those message types and relevant content.
AI assistants = smarter workdays for everyone
AI can already automate repetitive tasks, process and analyse large volumes of data quickly, and help you make data-driven decisions across any department. Now, with AI assistants, we’re at a productivity inflection point similar to how PCs revolutionised the way people tackle business tasks and communicate.
The breakthrough now is twofold:
- Business users can ask their AI assistant for what they want. The assistant goes to work in the background, provides an answer in seconds, and takes action accordingly. This is the kind of futuristic, “I can’t imagine that ever being possible” stuff from “The Jetsons.”
- With the right protocol and prompt systems in play, the split-second answers you get from your assistant are grounded in business data from across your organisation, not just a sales, marketing, or customer service system. Actions built for assistants have access to all this business data, plus data that previously couldn’t be analysed like PDFs, web pages, and emails.
AI assistants are “a really a big shift from the idea of people thinking we’re going to automate them out of a job to showing them that we’re helping them close more deals and serve customers better,” said Russo.
It’s not just about speeding up the usual mundane tasks. It’s about redefining what you can achieve in a day’s work.