AI Customer Support Handoffs Repeat Yourself Test
Five9’s 2026 CX report has the adoption number vendors will quote: 92% of organizations have implemented or piloted AI in customer service. The more useful number is buried in the handoff: 83% of consumers say they still have to repeat themselves at least sometimes after being transferred to a human. That is the support-lead test. Not whether the bot contained the first chat. Did Ana, the human rep, inherit the customer’s issue, failed attempts, order number, policy limit, and promised next step without making the customer start over? If a team rolls out AI support, I would measure repeat-yourself rate before deflection rate. A transfer that preserves context is help. A transfer that restarts the story is just a cheaper waiting room.
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The handoff screen should be visible to the customer too. Right before transfer: here’s what I’m sending Ana — order number, the problem, what the bot tried, policy limit, preferred fix. Let the customer correct one wrong line before the human joins. That turns “don’t repeat yourself” from a promise into a checkpoint. If the summary is hidden, the customer still braces to paste the whole story again.