By Dave Nyczepir – December 12, 2019
The U.S. Postal Service plans to reduce wait times on about 80 million customer calls fielded annually through a partnership with Google Cloud announced Thursday.USPS awarded Carahsoft â Google Cloudâs authorized distributor for public sector clients â a cloud contract with a $50 million ceiling covering customer experience and mail delivery solutions.
Increased delivery competition from new carrier services like Amazon has the postal agency reinventing itself, and customer experience is âone of the bigger pain points,â Mike Daniels, vice president of global public sector at Google Cloud, told FedScoop.
âTheir call wait times are very unacceptable. Theyâre limited in what they can do with respect to staffing; you canât just throw more people at it,â Daniels said. âItâs super expensive and risk fraught to tear out the aging console.â
The worldâs largest mail delivery operation, USPS has about 630,000 employees, but its call center canât handle current call volume.
In November, the agency launched its first Google Cloud pilot aimed at answering customersâ questions about obtaining passports.
Google Cloudâs Diologflow Enterprise Edition creates artificial intelligence virtual agents (AIVAs) that can respond to customers more quickly than USPS employees.
AIVAs use the same conversational technology as Google Assistant and will eventually be incorporated into the agencyâs call center technical architecture. That means customers will be able to access AIVAs by calling the agency, visiting its website or even texting.
Diologflow will also be used to establish conversational interfaces across the agencyâs websites, mobile applications, messaging platforms and Internet of Things devices. Future iterations will allow customers to search ZIP codes, nearby post offices, and instructions on shipping valuable items and tracking packages.
Forthcoming pilots will not be limited to customer experience solutions, Daniels said.
âPostal is really looking to transform everything theyâre doing from a production, back-end standpoint,â he said. âFrom true production systems that deliver the mail to customer interaction systems.â
Source: FedScoop.com