Case Studies

Panasonic Reduces Costly Call Volumes With AB Tasty’s CXO Solutions

11.6% Increase in digital customer support

$30,000 Yearly cost reduction

Customer journeys are more nuanced than ever before. As consumers switch between devices, channels, and touchpoints, businesses on the digital frontier, like Panasonic, are focusing on the not-so-simple task of bringing continuity to each interaction and delivering an omnichannel experience.

We spoke with Michelle Esgar, who is spearheading the brand experience for Panasonic Consumer Electronics, about the challenges and strategy involved in delivering this integrated experience. We started by looking at an experiment we worked on together to reduce calls to customer support (and as a result, avoid lengthy wait times for users and bottlenecked workflows internally).

From there, we discussed how this experiment fits within Panasonic’s overarching strategy—and how successful customer experiences are built with an integrated understanding of every consumer touchpoint.

Here’s a snapshot of Panasonic’s 360-degree approach.

The Challenge

Panasonic has a recurring goal: reduce customer support costs year-over-year. Currently, every call to the support center costs up to 5 dollars, which quickly adds up to be: expensive. And along with optimizing the budget, Panasonic also needed to improve the entire experience.

Consumers reach out to customer support when their product isn’t working as intended. So, from the gate, there’s an element of frustration. More often than not, users will check the website first to help solve their problem. If they can’t find the answer, frustration mounts. That’s when they’ll call a representative, and have to go through a complicated IVR for an average of six minutes before getting someone on the line. 

Consider how exit rates will exponentially increase on web pages after load time passes three seconds. Asking someone to wait six minutes in “the age of instant” isn’t sustainable.

By conducting a call center analysis, it became clear that for the majority of incoming calls, Panasonic already had self-service information available that could answer the question. So, the underlying issue wasn’t so much about bandwidth as it was about putting the right information in front of the right user at the right time. This meant tackling everything from the website’s information architecture to physical product manuals; a concerted effort that would, of course, take time. So, while refining this ongoing strategy, Panasonic focused on a more immediate tactical next step: driving customers to their digital channels for faster support.

Test Hypothesis

Since representatives could handle multiple chat queries and emails at a time, it was important that these channels were properly promoted. Originally, these links were placed in the middle of Panasonic’s customer support page—easy to miss if users were scrolling through quickly.

Panasonic-Contact-Header

Michelle believed that if this contact information was more visible—in the header of the web page—consumers would be more likely to engage with these channels. Using AB Tasty’s visual editor, Panasonic was able to quickly add this option in the navigation bar as an A/B Test (splitting traffic 50/50).

Results

Measuring the success of this test was based on the percent of digital customer support contacts vs. phone calls. In the few weeks this test ran, this ratio shifted 11.6% in favor of digital support. Based on average call volume, this equates to approximately $2,500 a month in costs saved, or roughly $30,000 a year. Based on these results, this new header was made visible to 100% of web traffic.

Takeaway Tip

How do you make sure you’re solving the root cause of a problem and not just one of its symptoms?  In this scenario, leveraging online support would create a faster experience for users and significantly reduce costs. But this experiment represents just one facet of Panasonic’s multi-pronged strategy: to eliminate the pain points prompting these queries in the first place. Improving documentation and recognizing when issues are the result of user error, as a chance to improve product usability, are just two examples of this integrated approach. At AB Tasty, we’re excited to keep working with Panasonic on this omnichannel strategy to further enhance the customer experience.

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Case Studies

Generali’s Chatbot Averages 800 Conversations a Day to Streamline Customer Support

800 conversions per day

2,400 calls avoided

Generali is a global insurance and assets management group that’s been focused on building life-long partnerships with customers since its establishment in 1831.

Situation

No one likes being put on hold—especially when you’re trying to reach customer support with a question related to your livelihood (like insurance or wealth management). So, Generali decided to streamline the entire process.

The goal was to help visitors more readily find the information they needed on Generali’s website and curb calls to customer support (particularly for questions that could more easily be answered online). This way, Generali’s customer support team would have the increased bandwidth needed to help individuals with complex questions.

Generali developed a chatbot that was able to interact with visitors on its site by answering basic questions and highlighting relevant insurance offers. If there was a question the bot couldn’t answer, it would connect users to the appropriate Generali agent directly.

The Generali team had tested various names and avatars for its bot among a small pool of clients before ultimately settling on ‘Leo.’

Then, Generali worked with AB Tasty to integrate Leo into its website and track performance.

Campaign

AB Tasty Technical Solution Engineers were able to write the JavaScript and CSS code needed to trigger Leo on desktop devices. Data was then collected in real-time (in the AB Tasty platform) to track Leo’s engagement rates and highlight how visitors interacted with the chatbot during a 6-month period.

Generali also used AB Tasty’s visual editor to quickly make cosmetic changes to the site and measure the impact of these modifications on Leo’s performance.

Results

Leo was clearly a hit with Generali’s clients. At the end of the campaign, there were 100,000 recorded interactions with Leo on the website and more than 2,400 calls avoided, giving Generali the reassurance they needed to integrate the chatbot on mobile and tablet devices.

These high engagement rates, and reduced customer support wait times, proved Leo’s positive impact on the user experience. This campaign also provided a benchmark for evaluating Leo’s ongoing performance—which is essential for continuous optimization.

Currently, interactions with Leo are averaging 800 conversations a day.

Takeaway Tip

Chatbots have the potential to streamline customer support and enhance user experiences—when implemented strategically. As Generali shows, simply integrating a chatbot into your site isn’t enough. You need to set performance goals, collect analytics and track engagement to understand how visitors use this feature. With AB Tasty, Generali was able to easily modify their interface and collect data on Leo’s performance to know with certainty that it benefited the user experience.

This campaign also points to the ways in which artificial intelligence can increase the efficiency of human operations. Leo wasn’t created to take the place of customer support representatives, but to help them by handling straightforward tasks so team members could focus on more complex, higher-level questions.

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Case Studies

How Eurosport’s Survey Pop-In Got 5K Responses in Less Than Two Weeks

5000 responses

3 countries

Eurosport is the go-to network for sports coverage in Europe. Working with AB Tasty since 2016, stakeholders across their Product, Web Analytics, and Digital Marketing teams have quickly excelled at more nuanced experimentation that leverages personalization and precise targeting to create relevant experiences for the company’s international clientele.

Challenge

The Australian Open, like all Grand Slam tournaments, is a huge event for Eurosport. Coverage is comprehensive to meet the demand of its viewership, spanning best-of-the day replays, clips of press conferences, and interview-style videos of athletes sharing insights. But, as one would expect, the main attraction is consistently the real-time streaming of matches. These high-profile events will always be top performers when it comes to traffic and streams. But Eurosport wanted to more concretely evaluate the quality of its coverage from viewers’ perspectives—using these insights to drive and refine their larger live event strategy.

Campaign

Using AB Tasty’s NPS widget, Eurosport set up a short campaign in which a survey pop-in would appear for desktop users in France, the UK, and Italy who viewed any Australian Open content. The first pop-in asked users to rank their satisfaction with the Australian Open coverage on a scale that ranged from “Very Satisfied” to “Not at all Satisfied.” After making this initial selection, a second pop-in would ask users to explain their reasoning in a write-in field.

eurosport nps 1

First survey pop-in

eurosport pop-in

Second survey pop-in

Results

At the end of the two-week experiment, roughly 5,000 written insights were collected from users—invaluable information on the strengths of Eurosport’s coverage and what could be improved (and how these sentiments varied between regions). But, two key reasons why this test succeeded was the timing and the targeting. Eurosport adapted the pop-ins to suit three different markets, which were strategically chosen for this test. They then ran the experiment during peak viewership as there was an increased likelihood of responses.

Takeaway Tip

As a pan-European company, Eurosport saw an opportunity to gain international insights on its viewership by running a survey during the Australian Open. This is one of the pillars of conversion rate optimization: sending the right message at the right time. While surveys and/or NPS pop-ins will always be valuable, maximize their potential by launching them during peak traffic times or high-profile events

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