A practical case: integration with Microsoft Teams
How we can make Microsoft Teams an effective self-service channel for IT support by implementing AI-enabled service bots.
In a world dominated by smart working and increasingly fluid and hybrid types of collaboration , the management of digital spaces requires a focus on the individual user who needs to be able to rely on continuous and timely remote assistance, achieved through simple and immediate contact modes.
Many companies are responding to this need by implementing new online support channels online, including web-based applications, social, digital assistants, chatbots, and automations. However, these innovations generate complexity that impacts IT: 39 percent of support staff surveyed by Ivanti research complain that they have too many logins to manage, 47 percent too many notifications and 42 percent use multiple tools or platforms.
So how does one balance the need to simplify how users are contacted with providing timely, quality support from increasingly overburdened IT teams?
In reality, the solution is not as modern and revolutionary as it may seem because the basis of Service Desk success is based on a simple concept: you need to know your user (or rather their journey) and create a strategy to support them using knowledge management. It is not about reinventing the wheel, but instead harnessing the power of what you already have.
With new digital platforms, people's interaction through the use of through the use of chathas intensified. Thousands of organizations, large and small, including 93 of the Fortune 100 companies according to a 2020 Microsoft release, have begun using Teams as their teamwork hub.
It is a widely used channel and the easiest thing for the user would be to be able to get immediate feedback to solve problems they are experiencing with the technology through this tool , which is already being used for work purposes, without the need to log into other platforms and/or enter new logins.
Microsoft Teams could become an effective self-service channel if integrated with AI functionalities to the IT Service Management platform: it could reduce first level tickets with guided responses thanks to an interactive knowledge flow and be able to offer visibility on the history of service requests.
With AI-enabled virtual agents serving Teams and integrated with the ITSM platformit is possible to provide users with answers and knowledgein a conversational format without the need for the physical presence on the other side of an operator:
With Service Bots technology, then, it is possible to collect information from users and automatically guide them using media-based knowledge procedures and even take actions on their behalf such as creating a ticket or requesting and/or obtaining information about tickets that have already been opened.
At WEGG, as expert consultants in ITIL best-practices for IT service management, we support our clients in defining and structuring Incident Management processes so that virtual support agents can be quickly deployed to provide answers and act on behalf of those requesting assistance.
Let's look specifically at how we integrated Microsoft Teams, , the channel most used by our client company's users, to our partner Easyvista's ITSM platform for providing self-service support.
Here is an example of a use case where we applied it: the creation, consultation and updating of open tickets, all done autonomously by the end user.
The advantage of bidirectional integration between Microsoft Teams and the ITSM platform allows to user-side data to be read and written , but also for updates to be received in the event of back-end evolutions in ticket managementOne can, in fact:
After gathering functional requirements and organizing knowledge on shared taxonomies with the help of AI, we:
The fact that the integration with Teams takes place in the customer's tenant allows immediate authentication of users, and as a result, in addition to ease of access, there is also enhanced security (only those who can log in according to corporate access requirements log in), and it is possible to provide customized experiences based on the business unit or work team of the interlocutor querying the bot.
The flexibility of the platform also allows integration of bots across multiple channels (web portals, alternative messaging applications), all without having to develop different solutions and maintaining uniformity of user experience.
See a video of the integration in operation:
In addition, the generative AI capabilities of Copilot Studio, of which Power Virtual Agent is a part, open the door to the implementation of more complex scenarios that allow for the creation of bots capable of autonomously handling more complex logic. We think of a potential first triage of the ticket even before it is viewed by a help desk operator, reducing the workload of the first-level team, or sending the user a response based on internal knowledge, enabling the rapid autonomous resolution of simpler reports.
In conclusion, we can say that integration with Teams facilitates the users because they find themselves quickly receiving answers and updates to the problems they encounter, but also the IT team , which finds itself deferring to automation the more repetitive cases for which a solution has already been provided.
It is a win win situation.
Article written by Riccardo Sacchetto, IT Consultant in WEGG – The Impact Factory
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