The point here Jim is that it is entirely because of these 'intractible' issues where the poor confused individual calling does not know where they 'fit' that IVRs are an inappropriate application of technology and exactly the reason why they should be kept simple.
Computers are wonderous machines. However, they are still as daft as brushes awhen compared to the human brain in the kind of application we are talking of here.
Computers work best, ie fastest and most accutately, when they applied to serial and repetitive tasks, exactly the kind of tasks a human brain is least efficient at. What the human brain does best, and computers perform worst at is making the seemingly random 'connections' between obscure bits of data and building something sensible from it. The following is taken from a book called WiredLife by a technologist called Charles Jonscher.
Currently (2000), the best computer in the world if you showed it a picture of a street with some cars parked at the roadsidein a leafy street, a van, a child and a ball MIGHT be able to identify one or two if the individual objects. A human being looking at that same picture would INSTANTLY tell you that the child was about to be run over by th van as she had chased her ball into the street. The human mind assesses the apparently random data and compiles a scenario that is 90%+ correct. The reality according to Jonscher is that just ONE human mind is more powerful than ALL the computers on the planet...
The point ofthat example is to try and convince you that we should be applying more appropriate processing power in places that it is needed.
When a person calls, often they do not know what exactly they want. By talking to a human being, who is prepared to listen, they will not often have to go into long diatribes to be understood as a few key words, coupled with the inate ability of all human beings, is enough to chase down what is really needed and sort it in mere seconds.
David |