home Customer Experience Trust and security – Why identity is the new currency of CX

Trust and security – Why identity is the new currency of CX

In the digital economy, customer experience has evolved from a competitive differentiator into a strategic imperative.

Boardrooms no longer debate whether CX matters, but how every investment – from product design to cybersecurity – reshapes the customer journey. CX is no longer just a differentiator but the foundation of long-term success.

That foundation, however, is being stress-tested by two powerful and converging forces: rising consumer expectations and the rapid emergence of agentic AI.

The shrinking tolerance for friction

Today’s consumers operate in a hyperconnected environment where digital interactions define brand perception. Email, websites, apps, social platforms and increasingly AI agents serve as the primary touchpoints between businesses and customers. With each interaction, customers weigh not only convenience but trust.

Yet trust remains fragile. According to recent research, fewer than one in five consumers fully trust organisations to manage their identity data. At the same time, tolerance for poor experiences is eroding. Even among customers who love a brand, 59% will walk away after several bad experiences, and 17% after just one.

This creates a high-stakes balancing act. Companies have responded to escalating fraud, credential theft and session takeovers by layering on more security controls. The intention is sound however the outcome is often friction.

Multi-step logins, repeated authentication prompts and clunky verification processes interrupt the very experiences brands work so hard to design.

In an era of shrinking patience, even well-established loyalty cannot compensate for cumbersome digital journeys.

Agentic AI raises the stakes

In such a world, brand discovery and even transaction decisions may occur without direct human intervention. This transition presents enormous upside for companies that command digital trust.

When an autonomous agent selects vendors on behalf of a customer, trust signals such as security, reliability, reputation become algorithmically weighted inputs. Brands with robust digital identity infrastructure and strong trust credentials stand to capture disproportionate market share.

However, the same AI capabilities also empower adversaries. AI-generated attacks, deepfakes and personalised phishing campaigns are increasingly sophisticated. Threat actors are no longer merely exploiting system vulnerabilities; they are targeting trust itself.

Security as a feature, not a hurdle

Consumer expectations make the path forward clear. Globally, 78% of consumers rank security as a top priority when interacting with brands online, closely followed by 76% who prioritize ease of use.

Meanwhile, more than 80% say they would stop doing business with a company following a breach.

Convenience and trust are no longer trade-offs; they are joint requirements.

The identity layer (logging in, authenticating and managing digital credentials) has therefore become one of the most critical touchpoints in the customer journey.

Done poorly, it generates abandonment and reputational damage. Done well, it produces what might be called “frictionless trust”: a seamless experience underpinned by rigorous, largely invisible controls.

Historically, stronger security meant more friction however that binary is dissolving. Modern Customer Identity and Access Management (CIAM) platforms allow businesses to assess risk dynamically and adjust authentication requirements in real time.

Technologies such as passwordless authentication, single sign-on and adaptive multi-factor authentication further reduce customer fatigue while maintaining high levels of protection.

The shift is reflected in spending priorities. Nearly a third of IT security professionals expect their budgets for identity management solutions to increase in the coming year. Identity, once viewed as a back-office function, is now a board-level growth lever.

From cost centre to competitive edge

For years, security was treated as a necessary cost but something that could slow innovation. That framing is outdated. In a market where one bad experience can trigger immediate churn and where AI agents may soon determine which brands are even considered, trust has become a core competitive asset.

Embedding security into the fabric of CX transforms it from a blocker into an enabler. When customers experience fast onboarding, personalised interactions and seamless authentication – all backed by adaptive protection – loyalty strengthens. Security becomes part of the value proposition.

The companies that lead in this next phase will be those that integrate digital identity strategy into product design, marketing and AI deployment. They will scrutinise not only their own defences but those of partners and vendors, recognising that ecosystem risk can erode hard-won trust.

In a world where algorithms may decide what gets seen and purchased, brands cannot rely on familiarity alone. They must demonstrate reliability at machine speed and human scale.

The CX puzzle is therefore not about choosing between convenience and control. It is about designing systems where both coexist seamlessly.

Ash Diffey

Vice President Australia and New Zealand, Ping Identity.

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