Speech recognition saves Aussie Post US$452,000

By Suzanne Tindal, ZDNet Australia
Tuesday, March 25, 2008 11:39 AM

Australia Post has invested in a speech recognition system for incoming calls, reducing call costs by 80 percent and allowing Post staff to be transferred to more complex tasks.

Implemented in June, the Inference Communications speech recognition system answers calls requesting information such as the location of post offices, postcodes of suburbs, trading hours and passport application enquiries.

Australia Post's NSW contact center receives 10,000 calls a day, according to the company, 1,500 of which are now answered by the speech recognition system.

The average call time with a human operator was 135 seconds, NSW Australia Post customer contact center manager Eddie Sayad said, while the average call time with the speech recognition system is now 89 seconds, with customers tending to ask fewer questions to the automated system.

The system doesn't just save the Post time--customers also get their calls answered quicker. Under the automated system, calls are answered within one second with no hold time.

According to Sayad, 82.6 percent of queries put to the system can be resolved successfully, with the rest put through to an Australia Post operator. In these calls, people have normally asked for information outside of the system's capabilities, Sayad said.

The staff who previously would have taken the calls now handled by the system will remain with the Post, and will work on more complex calls, according to Sayad. "We're not reducing any staff. We're just allocating them to more complex calls," he said.

The Post estimates the savings at around AU$0.5 million (US$451,850) per year, with ROI taking around one or two years, he said.

The Inference system was chosen after doing a study which looked at different speech recognition systems in terms of quality and cost effectiveness. The system is hosted by SmartSpeak, Sayad said--by opting for a hosted rather than in-house system, the company has been able to avoid significant infrastructure investment and shortened the timeframe to get the system up and running. The Post obtains the service on a per call basis.

In the future, the Post is looking to implement a call back system where customers waiting on hold can give their number and have their call returned later on. Another future development will be to have the system run outside of business hours, Sayad said.


See also:  Software
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Talkback 4 comments

Speech Recognition
Interesting article!
It's great to see Australia Post investing in the systems in their customer contact centres.
Posted by Kerry on Wednesday, March 26 2008 04:17 AM

Well Done
I used this service back at Christmas to find a post office opening hours during Christmas, it worked the first time and got me straight to the information I wanted without speaking to a person. I would rather use one of these automated things then sit on hold ANY DAY! Well done Australia Post, you have made the right decision!!! I wish the rest of Australia would hurry up and get into this sort of thing... I sat on hold for 37 minutes with Dell yesterday to log a faulty laptop. Quite frankly, that is NOT good customer service.
Posted by John Clarke on Wednesday, March 26 2008 07:32 AM

IVR Thing
Cool, what's the number I want to try this thing?
Posted by Matt Caery on Wednesday, March 26 2008 07:36 AM

What level of speech recognition?
I'm interested to know to which level is speech recognized? Is it on a word / simple phrase level, after going through a hierarchy of selections? Or can it interpret a whole sentence / paragraph? The first scenario is pretty common nowadays, but the second one must be very advanced!
Posted by Sam on Wednesday, March 26 2008 04:36 PM

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