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posted by hubie on Saturday June 07, @08:30AM   Printer-friendly

Klarna CEO says company will use humans to offer VIP customer service:

"My wife taught me something," Klarna CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski told the crowd at London SXSW. He was addressing the headlines about the company looking to hire human workers after previously saying Klarna used artificial intelligence to do work that would equate to 700 workers. "Two things can be true at the same time," he said.

Siemiatkowski said it's true that the company looked to stop hiring human workers a few years ago and rolled out AI agents that have helped reduce the cost of customer support and increase the company's revenue per employee. The company had 5,500 workers two years ago, and that number now stands at around 3,000, he said, adding that as the company's salary costs have gone down, Klarna now seeks to reinvest a majority of that money into employee cash and equity compensation.

But, he insisted, this doesn't mean there isn't an opportunity for humans to work at his company. "We think offering human customer service is always going to be a VIP thing," he said, comparing it to how people pay more for clothing stitched by hand rather than machines. "So we think that two things can be done at the same time. We can use AI to automatically take away boring jobs, things that are manual work, but we are also going to promise our customers to have a human connection."

He spoke about how the company plans to balance employees and AI workers. Siemiatkowski said that right now, engineering positions at the company haven't shrunk as much as those in other departments, but he notes that this could shift.

"What I'm seeing internally is a new rise of businesspeople who are coding themselves," he said, adding that the challenge many engineers have these days is that they are not business savvy. "I think that category of people will become even more valuable going forward," Siemiatkowski continued, especially as they can use AI and put their business understanding to good use.

He himself is using ChatGPT to help him learn to code and help him understand more of the data side of Klarna. He said doing this has helped Klarna become a better company. Before, he thought he would never catch up in learning what was needed to take a more present role in database conversations at the company.

"I'll take a Slack thread, I'll throw it in ChatGPT and say, 'This makes sense, right?'" he said, adding that he uses ChatGPT like a private tutor.

[Editor's Comment: Klarna Group plc, commonly referred to as Klarna, is a Swedish fintech company. The company provides payment processing services for the e-commerce industry, managing store claims and customer payments. --JR]


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  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by r1348 on Saturday June 07, @10:43AM (3 children)

    by r1348 (5988) on Saturday June 07, @10:43AM (#1406317)

    ...you're right.

    Klarna doubled their losses in their past year. I wonder what kind of VIP customer will need a buy now, pay later scheme. Steer clear.

    • (Score: 5, Insightful) by crm114 on Saturday June 07, @03:07PM (2 children)

      by crm114 (8238) Subscriber Badge on Saturday June 07, @03:07PM (#1406329)

      I don't know.

      Recently I've had a couple instances where the credit card receipt says some kind of VIP (for lack of a better word). When I called our bank, (on a weekend, even) I talked to a native language speaker. (actually tested ...) Later talked with a real, live human with our ISP (again, put them to the test.)

      I don't mind talking to a chatbot for the simple stuff. But when it is time to talk to a human (who is probably using AI themselves, but knows how to sort out the garbage) I'm willing to pay a little extra to get a human to help me move on with the job/life/whatever.

      Life-time is valuable. Being treated like a human by a human also has value.

      • (Score: 3, Insightful) by krishnoid on Saturday June 07, @05:23PM

        by krishnoid (1156) on Saturday June 07, @05:23PM (#1406346)

        That's something people overlook. Companies advertise APR, cash back, etc., but if you dig a little nowadays, you can get a better idea of how well the average customer support interaction goes. If more and more people voted with their wallets for better customer support, companies would probably have to apply their efforts in that direction.

        I predict this will become much more of a problem (within say, a quarter and a half) since a lot more people [slashdot.org] are using these types of services, out of necessity rather than choice.

      • (Score: 2, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 08, @03:24AM

        by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 08, @03:24AM (#1406386)

        Later talked with a real, live human with our ISP (again, put them to the test.)

        Would that be the Turing Test ?

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