GenAI can also be an invaluable tool to amplify human creativity. For example, a surveyed executive at a global fashion brand reported using GenAI to develop prompts and visualizations for product designers, drawing on trends harvested from customer sentiment analysis.
As the technology frees up time for larger, more impactful work, it should create a positive cycle: Satisfied employees help make satisfied customers, which in turn helps boost employee satisfaction, because employee experience and customer experience are interlinked.
This correlation was a major discovery in a customer experience optimization program at Dow — in the vast majority of instances, customer pain points aligned to employee pain points. For example, if customers were having to wait for answers to a question, the delay was typically because employees were struggling to find the right information. This is a clear use case for empowering employees with AI-powered tools to serve customers faster and better, and to make their own roles more rewarding.
Themes for CMOs to consider:
- Determine the needs and pain points of the people delivering customer experiences — both employees and channel partners. Customer experience and employee experience are interdependent.
- Define and deliver training programs and learning labs, or provide space to experiment for all employees, from executives to practitioners.
- Have a clear strategy to validate that GenAI-produced content is aligned to your brand guidelines.
Drive GenAI innovation with confident governance
To unlock the potential of GenAI, organizations need to develop governance that can help explore opportunities while mitigating risks.
As a foundation, CMOs should choose solutions that are built for specific use cases, with business outcomes such as cost savings or content acceleration in mind. The solutions should also meet unique criteria and have the right controls in place. For example, the base large language model (LLM) must provide transparency into data provenance and be designed for commercial safety. And any data used in the solution must be secure and private, not shared with other businesses or used to train a publicly available model.
As organizations move GenAI from pilot to production, they need “air traffic control,” a team comprising marketing, compliance and technology heads, to coordinate and direct GenAI development across the organization.
“It’s crucial for the marketing function to be positioned at the heart of an AI control tower strategy. With an emphasis on efficient content creation, AI personalization, and advanced analytics focused on the consumer, it’s critical that marketing coordinates with legal, cybersecurity, privacy and technology stakeholders to harness and action data insights effectively,” says Tom Edwards, Managing Director, Applied & Generative AI Lead, EY. “This centralized approach facilitates a unified direction and decision-making, to move at the speed of business while mitigating risk.”
AI governance must extend to the creation and delivery of customer experiences. As AI increasingly becomes autonomous, capable of creating, personalizing and anticipating using customer data, people must remain central to creative and commercial decisions. Offering experiences without an adequate filter of human judgment could have commercial and reputational repercussions.
Themes for CMOs to consider:
- Select vendors and partners who are passionate about preserving intellectual property and content credentials, and are helping to guide global regulation.
- Establish a distinct GenAI Center of Excellence to govern opportunities across the business and operating model, and to identify and mitigate risks.
- Optimize governance of GenAI tools within the organization and evolve the existing internal controls framework.
Artificial intelligence with real human values
GenAI can provide an unprecedented understanding of human behavior, but there will always be aspects of the customer that cannot be fully understood or anticipated by a machine. It may know what we want, but likely doesn’t know why we want it.
GenAI can be a transformative force in customer experience, both for practitioners and audiences – and at the heart of that transformation is human agency.
Far from taking away creative work from marketing teams, GenAI can supercharge it, creating exponential value, and putting a new palette of customer experience capabilities at the fingertips of the whole team, which further builds confidence.
Today, people have greater confidence in humans than machines. But as machines take precedence in marketing, the organizations to succeed with GenAI will be the ones that use it to unlock human advantage.