Your Banker Is Always In: Sweden Rolls Out the AI Robots
Your Banker Is Always In: Sweden Rolls Out the Robots
Sweden’s biggest banks are pioneering new AI technology
Chatbots are starting with less complex customer services
By Hanna Hoikkala
and Niklas Magnusson July 30, 2017, 3:00 AM PDT July 31, 2017, 4:17 AM
PDT
Aida is the perfect employee: always courteous, always
learning and, as she says, “always at work, 24/7, 365 days a year.”
Aida, of course, is not a person but a virtual
customer-service representative that SEB AB, one of Sweden’s biggest banks, is
rolling out. The goal is to give the actual humans more time to engage in more
complex tasks.
After blazing a trail in online and digital banking,
Sweden’s financial industry is now emerging as a pioneer in the use of
artificial intelligence. Besides Aida at SEB, there’s Nova, which is a chatbot
Nordea Bank AB is introducing at its life and pensions unit in Norway. Swedbank
AB is adding to the skills of its virtual assistant, Nina. All three are
designed to sound like women, based on research suggesting customers feel more
comfortable with female voices.
“There are some frequent, simple tasks that we need to
deal with manually today, and in that effort we’re looking into AI to see how
we can deploy it, and Aida is one,” Johan Torgeby, the chief executive officer
of SEB, said in an interview.
Chatbots have access to vast amounts of individual client
data, meaning they can quickly handle straightforward customer requests. That
in turn frees up human employees to deal with more complex services, like
coming up with the best mortgage plan to suit a specific customer.
“Basically all banks are closing branches,” Mattias Fras,
head of Robotics, Strategy and Innovation at Nordea, said in a phone interview.
“This is a way to return to full service again.”
Nordea’s chatbot will eventually help customers who want
investment advice, who want to cancel lost credit cards or to open savings
accounts.
Winning Over Customers
Swedish banks have already seen their customer
satisfaction scores drop to a 20-year low after shutting branches and pushing
people onto online services.
But AI might be part of the cure. According to a recent
study by market researcher GfK, there are wide gaps between what consumers hope
to receive from banks in terms of service and financial advice, and what they
actually get. AI applications such as chatbots “hold the promise of filling in
these service gaps, given the right data and programming,” GfK said.
Swedbank, which already operates its chatbot Nina in
Sweden and plans to roll it out to its Baltic markets as well, says one of the
benefits to the technology is that it eases users into the new digital age.
AI “can help our customers become more digitized, for
example by guiding a client in paying bills on the Internet,” Swedbank
spokeswoman Josefine Uppling said.
Petra Stenqvist, a partner at Pond, which looks into
innovative business ideas, says it’s unlikely AI will ever be able to think
like humans.
It “will never be able to replace subjective
assessments,” she said. “But it will be able to contribute to better decision
making.” And because of the massive amounts of data that AI can store,
“individuals will be able to find out things about themselves that they didn’t
even know.”
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