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Zoom Aims to Improve CX With Video Engagement CenterZoom Aims to Improve CX With Video Engagement Center

Video contact center capabilities like Zoom’s Video Engagement Center can speed up issue resolution and improve customer relationships.

Robin Gareiss

September 14, 2021

4 Min Read
Contact center agent at work
Image: fizkes - stock.adobe.com

We regularly interact with family, friends, and business colleagues using video. But companies have fallen behind at promoting video when it comes to communicating with their customers — whether for sales, support, or customer service.

 

Zoom’s Video Engagement Center (VEC), announced Monday at Zoomtopia, will address requests from customers and agents. It also will provide the framework that allows companies to deliver a better customer experience. The cloud-based solution will be available in early 2022, and it will allow companies to implement video-optimized workflows using templates provided by Zoom. Videos can start from digital channels or physical locations and integrate with other interaction channels, while leveraging AI applications along the customer journey.

 

I could easily see a workflow where customers start in a self-service knowledge base and are escalated with an icon click to live agent webchat. During the webchat, they realize the question can be answered quicker with visual engagement. So, the customer clicks on a video icon directly from the webchat interface, and an integrated video/screen-sharing screen pops up to resolve the issue. AI-enabled transcription would record the entire interaction.

 

Or, perhaps an interaction starts with a video icon directly on the website. The agent who takes the call doesn’t have the expertise to resolve the customer’s issue. Since the company has integrated UC and contact center, the agent can locate a non-contact-center agent expert to join the video conference and resolve the issue.

 

Video Benefits CX

Already, 48% of organizations offer video as an interaction channel (up from 41% in 2019). That figure will reach 57% by the end of this year, according to Metrigy’s CX and Workforce Optimization 2021-22 global research study of 524 companies.

 

The top driver for using video is that it speeds up interactions so agents can solve issues faster. It’s much easier to show someone the problem you’re having than to try to explain it in just verbal or text communications. Video also improves customer relationships by delivering more personal interactions (think investment advice, real-estate transactions, or telehealth visits). Interestingly, customers and agents are asking to use video — and the pandemic made everyone used to video, so that has extended to the contact center, as well.

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Though many companies have added video as a customer interaction channel, 64.9% rely upon their existing employee video platform to communicate with customers. In those cases, agents send customers a video link that launches a separate video call. The problem is that video isn’t integrated into their contact center platform. So, the video interaction happens in isolation from analytics, transcriptions, translations, and other AI-enabled apps already available in the contact center platform. Only 33% of those who have implemented video have integrated it into their contact center.

 

Zoom’s VEC would address that shortcoming by integrating the visual engagement capabilities into its own AI apps, and presumably, Five9’s platform once its acquisition is complete. What’s more, we see a growing number of companies wanting to buy their UC and contact center applications from the same provider to bring together both the technology platforms and all the employees within and outside of the contact center. Zoom’s existing UC platform coupled with its upcoming VEC and acquisition of Five9 will give customers a potentially promising solution — if the platform integration is done swiftly and done well.

 

Zoom’s video and screen-sharing application is familiar to many and easy to use. Though video clearly adds value to any customer interactions, sometimes screen sharing or co-browsing will do the trick. Either way, VEC will provide the platform for any of those visual apps.

 

VEC’s reach will be broad, given the rapid growth of Zoom. But Zoom isn’t first to market with these visual engagement capabilities if your requirements dictate evaluation and purchase sooner than 2022 (or beyond, depending on how long the Five9 integration takes). Companies such as eGain, Glance, Glia, LogMeIn, and Surfly already offer video, co-browsing, and/or screen-sharing capabilities; other contact center platforms, such as 8x8, Enghouse Interactive, Lifesize, and others, have integrated visual engagement capabilities into their cloud platforms.

 

We see compelling benefits by adding video to CX transformation initiatives, including a 59.1% increase in revenue, a 41.7% improvement in customer ratings, and a 32.1% boost in agent productivity.

EC2020_225_0.jpgAre you looking for more insight into the contact center? Then, make sure to attend Robin Gareiss's Enterprise Connect session, "Top Uses of AI to Deliver Stellar Customer Experience." Learn more about the event by visiting the Enterprise Connect website and explore event pass types here

About the Author

Robin Gareiss

Robin Gareiss is CEO and Principal Analyst at Metrigy, where she oversees research product development, conducts primary research, and advises leading enterprises, vendors, and carriers.

 

For 25+ years, Ms. Gareiss has advised hundreds of senior IT executives, ranging in size from Fortune 100 to Fortune 1000, developing technology strategies and analyzing how they can transform their businesses. She has developed industry-leading, interactive cost models for some of the world’s largest enterprises and vendors.

 

Ms. Gareiss leads Metrigy’s Digital Transformation and Digital Customer Experience research. She also is a widely recognized expert in the communications field, with specialty areas of contact center, AI-enabled customer engagement, customer success analytics, and UCC. She is a sought-after speaker at conferences and trade shows, presenting at events such as Enterprise Connect, ICMI, IDG’s FutureIT, Interop, Mobile Business Expo, and CeBit. She also writes a blog for No Jitter.

 

Additional entrepreneurial experience includes co-founding and overseeing marketing and business development for The OnBoard Group, a water-purification and general contracting business in Illinois. She also served as president and treasurer of Living Hope Lutheran Church, led youth mission trips, and ran successful fundraisers for children’s cancer research. She serves on the University of Illinois College of Media Advisory Council, as well.

 

Before starting Metrigy, Ms. Gareiss was President and Co-Founder of Nemertes Research. Prior to that, she shaped technology and business coverage as Senior News Editor of InformationWeek, a leading business-technology publication with 440,000 readers. She also served in a variety of capacities at Data Communications and CommunicationsWeek magazines, where helped set strategic direction, oversaw reader surveys, and provided quantitative and statistical analysis. In addition to publishing hundreds of research reports, she has won several prestigious awards for her in-depth analyses of business-technology issues. Ms. Gareiss also taught ethics at the Poynter Institute for Advanced Media Studies. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, Chicago Tribune, Newsweek, and American Medical News.

 

She earned a bachelor of science degree in journalism from the University of Illinois and lives in Illinois.