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Medallia’s AI-powered vision for CX takes centre stage at Sydney Opera House

Medallia’s Experience World Tour took place yesterday at the Sydney Opera House, where the company unveiled its vision for the future of CX and AI. Set against the striking backdrop of the harbour, the event brought together partners, customers, and international speakers.It was an opportunity for Medallia to make some preliminary announcements about their product roadmap and the enhanced features they’ve been making to their experience management solutions.  More announcements are expected in the following weeks as the new features are rolled out globally.

During the keynote presentation, Sid Banerjee Chief Strategy Officer, explained Medallia’s vision to move beyond traditional CX methods, which often rely on a single data source like surveys, and instead leverage AI technologies to create a more comprehensive, operational CX strategy. He said, “At Medallia, our mission is to elevate customer experience (CX) to the next level. We’re doing this by expanding our capabilities to bring in, analyse, and act on a wider range of customer feedback. While Medallia has a long history of scaling CX knowledge to thousands of frontline employees, the newest AI technologies are now ‘turbo-charging’ this process”.

Sid Banerjee Chief Strategy Officer, Medallia

Key points from Banerjee’s keynote presentation included:

Expanding data sources: The goal is to move from solely using surveys to an ‘omnichannel’ approach, integrating data from calls, chats, social media, and automated interactions. This provides a fuller picture of the customer journey.

Operationalising CX: The company is shifting from a dashboards to actions” model. This means using new large language model (LLM)-powered AI to analyse data, synthesise insights, and automatically recommend or trigger actions. This goes beyond simply showing data to employees and instead helps them proactively improve the customer experience.

Three Pillars of AI: Banerjee identified three main applications for AI in CX:

  • Enhanced analysis: AI can quickly analyse data from all channels to identify root causes of problems (e.g., what is driving a low NPS score).
  • Assisted responses: AI can help employees respond to customer issues faster and more effectively.
  • Automated actions: AI can integrate with other business platforms to automatically take action based on customer insights, such as triggering a churn prevention offer or automating a manual task.

Value creation: Banerjee emphasised that this new approach to CX must be focused on three key areas of value for businesses:

  • Driving revenue: Increasing customer satisfaction, loyalty, and retention.
  • Improving Efficiency: Reducing friction and resolving issues faster to save time and money.
  • Mitigating risk: Using customer data to identify and address potential legal or regulatory issues.
  • Real-world examples: The speaker provides examples from the retail, healthcare, and financial services industries, highlighting how major companies are using these integrated, data-driven approaches to optimise their customer journeys and operational processes.

“Our goal is to help businesses move beyond simply looking at dashboards. We want to empower them to take direct action. Historically, companies relied on surveys and metrics like NPS. However, these metrics often lack the context needed to make quick decisions. To address this, we’re building a next-generation platform that integrates feedback from a variety of channels, including: calls and chats, social media reviews, and automated interactions (e.g., chatbots and voice bots).By capturing these “omnichannel” signals, we can gain a more complete understanding of the customer journey, from sales and service to complaints and retention. Our new AI tools are designed to analyse this complex data and deliver actionable insights. This allows frontline employees and managers to take proactive steps to improve both the customer experience and the business as a whole”.

Customer showcases

The event also featured customer showcases from companies like Bupa and Bunnings, who shared how they are modernising their CX programs. The event was designed to facilitate networking and provide attendees with tangible insights that could be implemented in their own organisations. The presentations provided a practical look at how these major companies are navigating the complex and dynamic landscape of customer experience and AI.

The challenges raised included:

  • Data silos and fragmentation: The most common challenge raised is that customer data is often trapped in separate systems and departments. For example, a company might have different platforms for its e-commerce store, its physical stores’ point-of-sale systems, its customer service call centre, and its social media channels.
  • Technology integration complexities:Many companies use legacy systems that were not designed to work together. Integrating these disparate technologies—from inventory management to customer relationship management (CRM) software—is often expensive and time-consuming.

The future roadmap – Frontline Ready

Fabrice Martin, Chief Product Officer, Medallia

“Medallia has been actively innovating, releasing over 100 new features in the last year, all driven by customer feedback. The company’s recent focus has been on integrating generative AI into its platform to create what it calls “Frontline Ready AI.” This approach ensures that AI tools are reliable, secure, and easy for non-technical frontline employees to use”, said Fabrice Martin, Chief Product Officer.

Martin highlights several new and upcoming features designed to accelerate the “data to insights to action” loop:

  • Agile research: A self-service tool for quick research and analysis, integrated with Medallia’s operational capabilities.
  • In-app video surveys: A feature that captures video feedback with automatic transcription and text analytics to gain deeper insights into customer emotions.
  • Predictive digital experience insights: Uses generative AI to summarize digital sessions and recommend actions to fix issues like high frustration or slow page load times.
  • Coaching intelligence: An AI tool for contact centre team leads that creates personalised coaching scripts for agents by analysing all their calls, saving time and providing more relevant feedback.
  • Intelligent summaries: A feature that provides quick, easy-to-read summaries of calls, helping agents prepare for customer interactions and improving productivity.

Martin concluded with a look at future possibilities:

  1. For a contact centre agent: An agent will be proactively informed about a VIP customer’s recent frustrated digital journey, allowing them to provide a personalised, empathetic solution with the help of an AI-generated script.
  2. For a store manager: Instead of sifting through dashboards, a manager will receive simple, actionable alerts about a product issue, complete with AI-recommended solutions like inspecting inventory or enhancing staff training.
  3. For an executive: An executive on the go will receive a quick summary of a business issue and can use a chat interface to instantly ask follow-up questions, like identifying customer demographics, to make quick, data-driven decisions.

The event underscored a shared vision among Medallia, its partners, and its customers: to transform CX from a reactive dashboard-driven process into a proactive, operational engine that drives business value and loyalty.

Mark Atterby

Mark Atterby has 18 years media, publishing and content marketing experience.