Firms to do a way with call centre agents as AI rules
Most businesses are rapidly adopting technological changes to enhance efficiency
by JACKTONE LAWI
Audio By Vocalize
Pawa IT CEO and
head of product
Oscar Limoke
/JACKTON LAWI
IF you are working in the call centre
space your job is likely to be replaced
by robots or artificial intelligence
agents next year, a concern that is
putting thousands on the edge.
Evolving technology like the inclusion of technology models that
understand different languages will
only move to fast-track the transition.
With the customer care and call
centre jobs perceived as short-term
work, players in the technology space
say that the cost of training new staff
now and then will spur the uptake
of newer, faster
Pawa IT Solutions CEO and head
of product Oscar Limoke said there
has been a high turnover of people
at the call centres further raising the
cost of training new staff who leave
after a few years.
“Because again, call agents or human agents, no one wants to keep
receiving calls and just doing chats
every day. It’s not a very progressive
career choice. So of course, you don’t
start a career and say, I just want to
be doing calls every day, five years,”
Limoke explained.
“This constant churn increases
training costs and disrupts service
quality.”
According to a new report by the
Kenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis, rapid advancements in artificial intelligence (AI),
automation, and digital platforms are
set to displace millions of workers in
Kenya over the next decade.
The study warns that unless urgent
measures are taken, nearly 40 per
cent of jobs in key sectors—including manufacturing, agriculture, and
services—could be wiped out by 2035.
Pawa IT Solutions, a company that
develops conversational AI agents,
says that low-skilled and repetitive
jobs are the most vulnerable.
In recent months, the open AI chatbot ChatGPT has made its way into
courtrooms, classrooms, hospitals,
and everywhere in between.
With
it has come speculation about AI’s
impact on jobs.
In manufacturing, robotic automation is replacing workers in assembly lines, particularly in textile and
food processing factories.
Meanwhile,
AI-driven chatbots and customer service tools are reducing the need for
human agents in banks, call centers,
and retail businesses.
Limoke notes that to many people,
A.I. feels like a ticking time bomb, sure to explode their work. But to
some, the threat of A.I. isn’t abstract.
They can already feel its effects.
“AI will never replace the need for
human interaction and conversation.
Let’s just stop there. So in fact, there’s
a report I was reading where it says
75 per cent of customer engagements,
they want to speak to a human in the
first instance,” said Limoke.
Mark Menhennet, a consultant
at Client Contact Centre, contends
that while chatbots improve efficiency,
they won’t replace human customer
service—especially for complex or emotionally sensitive interactions
where empathy and problem-solving
skills are essential.
Instead, they work alongside human agents to improve service quality.
Kenya has recently shown a real
interest in chatbot technology, evidenced by the fact that most organisations increasingly see it as a fast
and effective way of enhancing the
customer experience and customer
engagement and cutting costs.
“With the increasing customer expectations and all those things, one of
the ways you engage customers is by speaking to them. But we only have
as much human capital and capacity
to do that. So conversational agents
are a component businesses can incorporate into their operations to allow
them to converse with their customers
and prospects in a human-like style,”
said Limoke.
Pawa IT Solutions CEO and Head
of Product Oscar Limoke said there
has been a high turnover of people
at the call center, further raising the
cost of training new staff who leave
after a few years.
According to the World Economic
Forum’s Future of Jobs Report 2025,
advancements in AI and information
processing alone are projected to displace 9 million jobs by 2030, exceeding any other technological trend.
Experts from Hosting, a web hosting company, say that the global artificial intelligence market is projected
to grow from $184 billion (Sh 23.8
trillion) in 2024 to $826.7 billion (Sh
106.8 trillion) by 2030.
The experts say that when automation swallows up jobs, it often comes
for customer service roles first.
Most businesses are rapidly adopting these technological changes to automate tasks and enhance efficiency.
They argue that between 2025 and
2026, jobs in data entry and basic administrative roles, up to 90 per cent of
these jobs, will be automated, possibly
leading to job losses.
For customer service operatives
by the year 2026, AI-powered virtual assistants may handle 50 per cent
of routine inquiries, cutting response
times from hours to seconds.
In the financial services by 2030,
about 35-40 per cent of accounting,
financial analysis, and risk assessment
processes are projected for automation by 2030.
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