2025-11-10 17:15:00
One SQL query to traverse entire hierarchies. No loops, no N+1 queries, no tears. Just elegant recursive CTEs.
Your product manager walks up to your desk with that look. You know the one.
"Hey, can you pull all products in the 'Electronics' category? Oh, and include all subcategories too. And their subcategories. You know, the whole tree."
Your internal monologue: "Oh no. Not the N+1 problem again."
Your options:
Or... you could write one elegant SQL query with a recursive CTE and go grab coffee while your teammates wonder if you're a wizard.
This is Part 2 of 3 in our CTE series. In Part 1, we covered basic CTEs. Now we're going recursive.
This series:
Quick glossary:
From Part 1: CTEs are named subqueries that make complex SQL readable and maintainable.
WITH recent_orders AS (
SELECT user_id FROM orders WHERE order_date > '2025-01-01'
)
SELECT * FROM users
WHERE id IN (SELECT user_id FROM recent_orders);
That's a non-recursive CTE. It runs once, produces a result, done.
Now let's make it recursive. 🔄
Hierarchical data is everywhere in software:
Approach 1: Multiple Queries (The Slow One)
# Get parent category
parent = db.query("SELECT * FROM categories WHERE id = 1")
# Get children
children = db.query("SELECT * FROM categories WHERE parent_id = 1")
# Get grandchildren
for child in children:
grandchildren = db.query(f"SELECT * FROM categories WHERE parent_id = {child.id}")
# And so on... 😱
Approach 2: Recursive Application Code (The Bug Factory)
def get_all_descendants(category_id, visited=None):
if visited is None:
visited = set()
if category_id in visited: # Cycle detection
return []
visited.add(category_id)
children = db.query(
"SELECT * FROM categories WHERE parent_id = ?",
[category_id]
)
results = children
for child in children:
results.extend(get_all_descendants(child.id, visited))
return results
Approach 3: Materialized Paths (The Maintenance Nightmare)
-- Store full path in each row
CREATE TABLE categories (
id INT,
name VARCHAR(100),
path VARCHAR(1000) -- "/1/5/23/"
);
-- Query becomes simple
SELECT * FROM categories WHERE path LIKE '/1/%';
There's a better way. Let the database do what databases are good at: set operations and recursion.
A recursive CTE has two parts connected by UNION ALL:
WITH RECURSIVE cte_name AS (
-- Part 1: ANCHOR MEMBER (starting point)
SELECT id, name, parent_id, 0 AS level
FROM table_name
WHERE parent_id IS NULL -- Root rows
UNION ALL
-- Part 2: RECURSIVE MEMBER (the magic)
SELECT t.id, t.name, t.parent_id, cte.level + 1
FROM table_name t
JOIN cte_name cte ON t.parent_id = cte.id -- Reference itself!
)
SELECT * FROM cte_name;
Visual example:
Iteration 0 (Anchor):
SELECT WHERE parent_id IS NULL → Returns: [CEO]
Iteration 1 (Recursive):
JOIN with [CEO] → Returns: [VP1, VP2, VP3]
Iteration 2 (Recursive):
JOIN with [VP1, VP2, VP3] → Returns: [Dir1, Dir2, Dir3, Dir4]
Iteration 3 (Recursive):
JOIN with [Dir1...Dir4] → Returns: [Manager1, Manager2, ...]
Iteration 4 (Recursive):
JOIN with [Manager1...] → Returns: [Employee1, Employee2, ...]
Iteration 5 (Recursive):
JOIN → Returns: [] ← STOP, no more rows
Final result: CEO + all VPs + all Directors + all Managers + all Employees
Key insight: The database handles the iteration. You just define the rules.
Let's build a complete organizational hierarchy with all the trimmings.
Setup:
CREATE TABLE employees (
id INT PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR(100),
manager_id INT,
department VARCHAR(50),
salary DECIMAL(10,2)
);
The Query:
WITH RECURSIVE org_hierarchy AS (
-- Anchor: Start with CEO (no manager)
SELECT
id,
name,
manager_id,
department,
salary,
0 as level,
CAST(name AS VARCHAR(1000)) as hierarchy_path
FROM employees
WHERE manager_id IS NULL
UNION ALL
-- Recursive: Find all direct reports
SELECT
e.id,
e.name,
e.manager_id,
e.department,
e.salary,
oh.level + 1,
CONCAT(oh.hierarchy_path, ' > ', e.name)
FROM employees e
JOIN org_hierarchy oh ON e.manager_id = oh.id
)
SELECT
level,
REPEAT(' ', level) || name as indented_name,
department,
salary,
hierarchy_path
FROM org_hierarchy
ORDER BY hierarchy_path;
What You Get:
level | indented_name | department | salary | hierarchy_path
------|---------------------|------------|---------|---------------------------
0 | Sarah Chen | Executive | 250000 | Sarah Chen
1 | Mike Johnson | Sales | 150000 | Sarah Chen > Mike Johnson
2 | Anna Smith | Sales | 95000 | Sarah Chen > Mike Johnson > Anna Smith
2 | Bob Williams | Sales | 92000 | Sarah Chen > Mike Johnson > Bob Williams
1 | Lisa Anderson | Engineering| 160000 | Sarah Chen > Lisa Anderson
2 | Tom Davis | Engineering| 110000 | Sarah Chen > Lisa Anderson > Tom Davis
Benefits:
✅ Complete org structure in one query
✅ Indentation shows hierarchy visually
✅ Full path from CEO to each employee
✅ Can add filters, aggregations, whatever you need
Want just one manager's team? Change the anchor:
WHERE id = 123 -- Start from specific manager
Your product manager's request from the intro. Here's how to solve it elegantly.
Problem: Show all products in "Electronics" including all subcategories (Phones → Smartphones → iPhone, etc.)
The Query:
WITH RECURSIVE category_tree AS (
-- Anchor: Start with parent category
SELECT id, name, parent_id, 0 as depth
FROM categories
WHERE id = :category_id -- "Electronics" = 5
UNION ALL
-- Recursive: Get all subcategories
SELECT c.id, c.name, c.parent_id, ct.depth + 1
FROM categories c
JOIN category_tree ct ON c.parent_id = ct.id
)
SELECT
DISTINCT p.id,
p.name,
p.price,
c.name as category_name,
ct.depth as category_depth
FROM category_tree ct
JOIN products p ON p.category_id = ct.id
JOIN categories c ON c.id = ct.id
ORDER BY ct.depth, c.name, p.name;
Result: All products in Electronics, Phones, Smartphones, Tablets, Laptops, Gaming... the entire subtree. One query.
Without recursive CTE: You'd need to either:
With recursive CTE: Define the traversal rules once, database handles the rest.
Here are battle-tested patterns you can adapt for your use cases.
Calculate all components needed to build a product, including nested assemblies:
WITH RECURSIVE bom AS (
-- Anchor: Top-level product
SELECT
product_id,
component_id,
quantity,
0 as level
FROM bill_of_materials
WHERE product_id = :target_product
UNION ALL
-- Recursive: Components of components
SELECT
bom_next.product_id,
bom_next.component_id,
bom.quantity * bom_next.quantity, -- Multiply quantities!
bom.level + 1
FROM bill_of_materials bom_next
JOIN bom ON bom_next.product_id = bom.component_id
)
SELECT
component_id,
SUM(quantity) as total_needed
FROM bom
GROUP BY component_id;
Use case: "To build 100 bikes, I need 200 wheels, 400 spokes, 200 tires..."
Calculate total size of a directory and all subdirectories:
WITH RECURSIVE dir_tree AS (
-- Anchor: Starting directory
SELECT id, name, parent_id, size, 0 as depth
FROM filesystem
WHERE id = :directory_id
UNION ALL
-- Recursive: All subdirectories and files
SELECT
f.id,
f.name,
f.parent_id,
f.size,
dt.depth + 1
FROM filesystem f
JOIN dir_tree dt ON f.parent_id = dt.id
)
SELECT
SUM(size) as total_size,
COUNT(*) as total_items,
MAX(depth) as max_depth
FROM dir_tree;
Use case: "Show disk usage for this folder and everything inside it."
Find all people within 3 degrees of separation:
WITH RECURSIVE connections AS (
-- Anchor: Direct friends
SELECT
user_id,
friend_id,
1 as degree
FROM friendships
WHERE user_id = :start_user
UNION ALL
-- Recursive: Friends of friends
SELECT
c.user_id,
f.friend_id,
c.degree + 1
FROM connections c
JOIN friendships f ON c.friend_id = f.user_id
WHERE c.degree < 3 -- Stop at 3 degrees
)
SELECT DISTINCT
friend_id,
MIN(degree) as closest_degree
FROM connections
GROUP BY friend_id
ORDER BY closest_degree;
Use case: "People you may know" features, network analysis, influence mapping.
✅ Single query vs multiple round trips to database
✅ Database-optimized traversal using indexes and join strategies
✅ Clean code that's easy to understand and maintain
✅ Handles arbitrary depth without hardcoding levels
✅ Set-based operations instead of row-by-row processing
⚠️ Memory-intensive on large hierarchies (thousands of nodes)
⚠️ Infinite loops if your data has cycles (A → B → C → A)
⚠️ Performance varies significantly between database systems
⚠️ No early termination - processes entire tree even if you only need part
Never write a recursive CTE without a depth limiter:
WITH RECURSIVE tree AS (
SELECT id, parent_id, 0 as level
FROM table_name
WHERE parent_id IS NULL
UNION ALL
SELECT t.id, t.parent_id, tree.level + 1
FROM table_name t
JOIN tree ON t.parent_id = tree.id
WHERE tree.level < 10 -- 🎯 SAFETY LIMIT
)
SELECT * FROM tree;
Why?
How to choose the limit?
If you suspect your data might have cycles (A → B → C → A), add cycle detection:
WITH RECURSIVE tree AS (
-- Anchor: Include path as array
SELECT
id,
parent_id,
ARRAY[id] as path,
0 as level
FROM table_name
WHERE parent_id IS NULL
UNION ALL
-- Recursive: Check if current id is already in path
SELECT
t.id,
t.parent_id,
tree.path || t.id, -- Append to path
tree.level + 1
FROM table_name t
JOIN tree ON t.parent_id = tree.id
WHERE NOT t.id = ANY(tree.path) -- 🎯 CYCLE DETECTION
AND tree.level < 10
)
SELECT * FROM tree;
How it works:
path array stores all ancestorsNOT t.id = ANY(tree.path) stops when we'd revisit a nodeProduction tip: If cycles exist, fix your data. Don't rely on detection as a permanent solution.
Always verify performance with real data:
EXPLAIN ANALYZE
WITH RECURSIVE org_hierarchy AS (
-- Your recursive CTE here
)
SELECT * FROM org_hierarchy;
Look for:
Red flags:
Recursive CTEs are well-supported across major databases:
| Database | Support Since | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| PostgreSQL | 2009 (v8.4) | ⭐ Excellent: reliable, performant, well-documented |
| SQL Server | 2005 | ⭐ Native support from the beginning |
| Oracle | 2010 (11g R2) | ✅ Full support (also has CONNECT BY for legacy) |
| MySQL | 2018 (v8.0) | ✅ Supported but newer, test thoroughly |
| MariaDB | 2018 (v10.2.2) | ✅ Follows MySQL implementation |
Translation: Every modern database has recursive CTEs. They're not experimental. They're production-ready.
But your ORM still doesn't care. (We'll fix that in Part 3.)
-- Just use a JOIN
SELECT p.*, c.*
FROM parents p
JOIN children c ON c.parent_id = p.id;
-- If you always need exactly 2 levels, be explicit
SELECT p.*, c.*, gc.*
FROM parents p
JOIN children c ON c.parent_id = p.id
JOIN grandchildren gc ON gc.parent_id = c.id;
The rule: Use recursive CTEs when the alternative is multiple queries, complex loops, or unknown depth. Don't use them just to be clever.
You now understand both types of CTEs:
But there's one problem: Doctrine, Hibernate, Eloquent, and most ORMs don't support CTEs natively.
In Part 3, we'll cover:
"Using CTEs When Your ORM Says No (The Lazy Developer's Survival Guide)" - Coming soon.
Recursive CTEs transform complex hierarchical problems into elegant, performant solutions.
The psychopathic approach: Write recursive functions with N+1 queries, hope for the best, watch it crash in production, blame the database.
The masochistic touch: Know there's a better way but stick with painful code because "it works" and you're scared of SQL.
The professional approach: Write one recursive CTE, let the database do what it's optimized for, go home on time.
Your ORM probably doesn't support them. That's fine - we'll work around it in Part 3. But don't let tool limitations stop you from solving problems elegantly.
One query to rule them all, one query to find them. One query to bring them all, and in the resultset bind them.
Got a hierarchy horror story? Share it in the comments. We've all fought the N+1 dragon.
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2025-11-10 17:11:39
Have you ever figured out how much time and money your company spends in a year delivering repetitive answers to customer questions? According to a Gartner report, poor customer service can impact up to 30% of your revenue opportunities, primarily caused by slow response time or limited availability. Traditional customer service call centers and service desks often face challenges with scalability and quality to keep up with the growing expectation of 24/7 personalization and support, leaving customers frustrated and businesses at risk.
This is exactly where AI Agents in Customer Services are changing this narrative. Unlike the basic chatbots of the past, new generations of AI-enabled service agents not only understand intent, but can even produce personalized, contextual responses with pre-emptive capabilities around predicting customer issues. For organizations, this means understanding customer intent, improving the efficiency of customer support, improving operations, and improving customer retention.
Here, we’ll explore how AI Agents in Customer Service are transforming customer interactions, the benefits they bring to businesses, and what the future holds for organizations adopting this technology.
Let’s begin:
Basically, Customer Service AI Agents are smart systems or tools designed to facilitate human-like interactions in the support function. In contrast to a standard chatbot that has a static and static Q&A or list of answers, AI Agents rely on natural language processing (NLP), machine learning (ML), and analytical processing of real-time data to assess intent and manage context, and even customer sentiment.
For example, rather than providing a link to a frequently asked questions (FAQ) document when responding to the phrase "I lost my order," the AI Agent is able to identify the issue, such as confirming how to access the order information in real time, and provide other relevant information in addition to the order history. This contextual knowledge enables businesses to provide different conversations versus one generic answer.
In addition, AI Agents are always learning. With every interaction, AI Agents identify trends, improve replies, and become adept at recognizing new requests. AI Agents can also function on a range of different platforms, such as chat, email, social media, and even voice, while maintaining brand experience. Customer Service AI Agents are meant to provide augmentation to Customer Support for queries such as a password reset, order history, and simple troubleshooting queries, while freeing up Human Support to deal with complex inquiries that require negotiation skills, empathy, and/or decision-making skills.
AI agents may appear simple to customers, responding instantly and accurately, but their operations involve several advanced processes running in the background:
Intent Recognition
AI agents don’t just match keywords; they identify the actual purpose behind a query. For example, when a customer says “my payment failed,” the system distinguishes whether it’s a billing error, card issue, or network delay.
Context Awareness
The agents keep track of customer history and previous conversations, so users no longer need to repeat information. This allows the interactions to become more fluid and personalized.
Omnichannel Integration
Today's customers can often switch between chat, email, social channels, and applications, all in a single transaction. AI agents ensure that data is consistent across all of those channels, allowing for seamless organizational experiences.
Smart Escalation
When requests become too complex, AI agents seamlessly transfer those requests to human representatives. Importantly, these AI agents present the context alongside the request so that the human agent can resolve the issue without further prompting.
These combined functions explain why AI Agents in Customer Services are not just faster but also smarter, helping businesses deliver consistent and efficient customer support at scale.
Adopting AI agents in customer service is no longer just a trend; it’s becoming a necessity for businesses that want to stay competitive. While the idea sounds futuristic, the real value comes from very practical benefits.
Let’s have a look at the benefits of AI agents in customer service:
1. Faster Response Times and 24/7 Availability
Waiting is one of the biggest annoyances for consumers. Traditional customer service is limited due to business hours and limited human agents. However, AI agents solve this problem. They are always available, responding to customers' inquiries instantly, so customers do not have to wait in line.
2. Cost Savings and Easy Scalability
A constant expense in customer service is hiring and training human support agents. Even during the most expensive holiday shopping season, costs can be elevated. AI agents solve this problem as well. They can manage several thousand customer inquiries at once without excessive costs.
This means that businesses can save on labor costs while consistently processing consumer inquiries. And, with time, those savings can be redeployed in other areas, like product development or improving customer experience. In other words, AI is scalable without the subsequent cost involved.
3. Customized Customer Experiences
Today's consumers do not want the same old answers; instead, they expect brands to know them. Personal AI agents accomplish this via data: past purchase behavior, browsing behavior, or even intent in messages. AI can provide tailored recommendations or responses based on this information.
For example, if a customer regularly orders skincare products, the AI will proactively suggest items related to the products or notify the customer about filler timeframes. That personalization makes it an interactive relationship instead of a simple exchange, and it is typically an increase in sales through cross-selling and up-selling.
4. Enhanced Employee Productivity
Customer success teams spend most of their time helping customers reset passwords, update shipping, or answering basic FAQs about a product. AI can help eliminate those processes to enable human teams to help with the cases that need empathy, judgment, or complex problem-solving.
This benefits the resolution, but also improves job satisfaction for the human employee. Instead of feeling stuck with tedious support processes, the agent will feel they played a role in building or maintaining a relationship with the customer, which ultimately improves the brand.
5. Consistent Multi-Channel Support
Today's customers reach out via various platforms - live chat, email, social media, and voice assistants. The challenge for brands is to ensure consistent responses across all of these touchpoints. AI agents are intended to interface with different communication channels while allowing for consistent responses when customers ask questions.
6. Data-Driven Insights for Business Growth
All customer engagements that an AI agent has are logged and tracked. Rather than being lost in call logs or emails, reported engagement data can be broken down into actionable insights. Brands can see common frustrations, or complaints repeatedly mentioned, or emerging needs.
For example, if a large volume of customers is inquiring about late product deliveries, dashboards can identify this, alerting businesses to possible supply chain problems to fix before they snowball.
The tasks that Artificial Intelligence Agents will play a role in Customer Services are rapidly changing, and organizations that embrace this technology early may be able to seize an important strategic advantage. AI agents in customer service will play a role beyond simple routine task automation, to an expected predictive, intelligent, and human-like role in customer service.
1. Reactive to Proactive Support
These AI agents will not wait to be asked when things go wrong - they will anticipate the customer’s needs. These AI systems will scan and analyze the customer transaction history and summarize the customer’s behavior. By making proactive recommendations and sending loss reminders, these systems will prevent problems from becoming persistent.
*2. Emotional Intelligence and Personalization *
The next generation of AI agents will evolve beyond features such as using the customer's name; instead, they will interpret emotion and tone to make real-time suggestions in the messaging. If a stressed customer contacts support, the AI will suggest more empathetic responses, guiding the conversation toward a calm, task-driven conclusion. Even though the assistance is via messaging, it feels human, real, and helpful.
3. Voice and Conversational Interfaces
Voice-based artificial intelligence is poised to increase in usage, permitting customers to interact naturally by using phones, smart speakers, or in-vehicle assistants. This is not just easier to use for the customer but also provides additional accessibility and reduces customer resolution times.
4. AI as a Partner, Not a Replacement
AI agents will provide value as research assistants to human staff instead of replacing them. AI agents can summarize and inform agents of past interactions, recommend responses to the customer, and provide contextual information to agents dealing with complicated issues, thus freeing the human agent to deal with unique situations. This allows for conversation flow and efficiency while maintaining the relationship that customers value the most.
5. Ethical AI and Trust
As writing AI takes on more responsibility, businesses will have to provide ethical transparency and fairness in performing alongside human agents. Businesses will need to explain or justify how they made their decisions, provide protection of customer data, and reduce bias in their interactions with the customer. The companies that seek to provide ethical AI will establish a sense of loyalty and credibility in the marketplace.
While AI Agents in Customer Services bring numerous benefits, implementing them is not without challenges. Understanding these obstacles is crucial for businesses to maximize value while avoiding pitfalls.
1. Data Protection and Security
Every day, AI agents deal with highly sensitive customer data. This may consist of a person's identity, contact details, and purchase history. Businesses should also comply with various regulations, such as the GDPR or CCPA. In order to retain a customer’s trust, protecting that data with secure systems and encryption is crucial.
2. Keeping the Human Touch
AI capabilities lend well to taking on some routine tasks with efficient automation, but customers still desire empathy and a caring nature. Too much AI can lead to robotic interaction. Effective implementation of AI decides how much or how little to use it if the circumstances become complex or emotionally charged.
3. Integrating with Existing Systems
Many companies are running digital operations using legacy platforms or a plethora of software tools. Integrating AI agents with existing CRM, ERP, or communication systems is an operation in itself. To mitigate operational disruption issues, make sure to set proper plans and roll them out in phases.
4. Customer Trust and Transparency
Customers must know when they're interacting with AI and how decisions are made by AI agents. By explaining the overall role of AI in any service or product being deployed, consumers are more likely to trust AI, feel less frustrated, or, at best, be skeptical.
5. Continuous Monitoring and Improvement
AI agents improve over time, but they require ongoing training, monitoring, and updates. Regular performance reviews and feedback loops ensure the system evolves alongside changing customer expectations and business goals.
By acknowledging these considerations, businesses can implement AI agents effectively, leveraging their advantages while maintaining high customer satisfaction and operational efficiency.
Implementing AI Agents in Customer Services requires careful planning to ensure smooth adoption and maximum ROI. Here’s a step-by-step approach:
1. Identify Pain Points and Goals
Analyze your current support operations. Which tasks consume the most time? Which queries are repetitive?
Define clear goals: faster response, reduced costs, better personalization, or all three.
2. Start with a Pilot Program
Launch AI agents in a specific channel or department first.
Monitor performance and gather customer feedback before scaling across the organization.
3. Choose the Right Solution
Evaluate vendors based on integration capabilities, AI sophistication, and customization options.
Ensure the platform can handle your business’s specific industry needs and expected volume.
4. Train Your Human Agents
Educate staff on how AI agents work, when to intervene, and how to collaborate with them.
Focus human resources on complex cases that require empathy or critical thinking.
5. Monitor, Optimize, and Evolve
Continuously track AI performance metrics, customer satisfaction, and response times.
Use insights to refine the system, update knowledge bases, and improve personalization.
By following these steps, businesses can adopt AI agents efficiently, minimize disruption, and maximize the benefits of automation and intelligence in customer support.
AI agents are no longer just a future vision; they are shaping the competitive edge of businesses today. Companies that implement AI thoughtfully deliver faster responses, provide personalized experiences, and build stronger customer loyalty, while freeing human teams to focus on complex, high-value interactions.
In today’s fast-paced market, where customers expect instant and meaningful engagement, AI has become essential. The real winners will be businesses that embrace AI as a trusted partner, combining its efficiency with human empathy to create unmatched customer experiences.
2025-11-10 17:11:39
Have you ever figured out how much time and money your company spends in a year delivering repetitive answers to customer questions? According to a Gartner report, poor customer service can impact up to 30% of your revenue opportunities, primarily caused by slow response time or limited availability. Traditional customer service call centers and service desks often face challenges with scalability and quality to keep up with the growing expectation of 24/7 personalization and support, leaving customers frustrated and businesses at risk.
This is exactly where AI Agents in Customer Services are changing this narrative. Unlike the basic chatbots of the past, new generations of AI-enabled service agents not only understand intent, but can even produce personalized, contextual responses with pre-emptive capabilities around predicting customer issues. For organizations, this means understanding customer intent, improving the efficiency of customer support, improving operations, and improving customer retention.
Here, we’ll explore how AI Agents in Customer Service are transforming customer interactions, the benefits they bring to businesses, and what the future holds for organizations adopting this technology.
Let’s begin:
Basically, Customer Service AI Agents are smart systems or tools designed to facilitate human-like interactions in the support function. In contrast to a standard chatbot that has a static and static Q&A or list of answers, AI Agents rely on natural language processing (NLP), machine learning (ML), and analytical processing of real-time data to assess intent and manage context, and even customer sentiment.
For example, rather than providing a link to a frequently asked questions (FAQ) document when responding to the phrase "I lost my order," the AI Agent is able to identify the issue, such as confirming how to access the order information in real time, and provide other relevant information in addition to the order history. This contextual knowledge enables businesses to provide different conversations versus one generic answer.
In addition, AI Agents are always learning. With every interaction, AI Agents identify trends, improve replies, and become adept at recognizing new requests. AI Agents can also function on a range of different platforms, such as chat, email, social media, and even voice, while maintaining brand experience. Customer Service AI Agents are meant to provide augmentation to Customer Support for queries such as a password reset, order history, and simple troubleshooting queries, while freeing up Human Support to deal with complex inquiries that require negotiation skills, empathy, and/or decision-making skills.
AI agents may appear simple to customers, responding instantly and accurately, but their operations involve several advanced processes running in the background:
Intent Recognition
AI agents don’t just match keywords; they identify the actual purpose behind a query. For example, when a customer says “my payment failed,” the system distinguishes whether it’s a billing error, card issue, or network delay.
Context Awareness
The agents keep track of customer history and previous conversations, so users no longer need to repeat information. This allows the interactions to become more fluid and personalized.
Omnichannel Integration
Today's customers can often switch between chat, email, social channels, and applications, all in a single transaction. AI agents ensure that data is consistent across all of those channels, allowing for seamless organizational experiences.
Smart Escalation
When requests become too complex, AI agents seamlessly transfer those requests to human representatives. Importantly, these AI agents present the context alongside the request so that the human agent can resolve the issue without further prompting.
These combined functions explain why AI Agents in Customer Services are not just faster but also smarter, helping businesses deliver consistent and efficient customer support at scale.
Adopting AI agents in customer service is no longer just a trend; it’s becoming a necessity for businesses that want to stay competitive. While the idea sounds futuristic, the real value comes from very practical benefits.
Let’s have a look at the benefits of AI agents in customer service:
1. Faster Response Times and 24/7 Availability
Waiting is one of the biggest annoyances for consumers. Traditional customer service is limited due to business hours and limited human agents. However, AI agents solve this problem. They are always available, responding to customers' inquiries instantly, so customers do not have to wait in line.
2. Cost Savings and Easy Scalability
A constant expense in customer service is hiring and training human support agents. Even during the most expensive holiday shopping season, costs can be elevated. AI agents solve this problem as well. They can manage several thousand customer inquiries at once without excessive costs.
This means that businesses can save on labor costs while consistently processing consumer inquiries. And, with time, those savings can be redeployed in other areas, like product development or improving customer experience. In other words, AI is scalable without the subsequent cost involved.
3. Customized Customer Experiences
Today's consumers do not want the same old answers; instead, they expect brands to know them. Personal AI agents accomplish this via data: past purchase behavior, browsing behavior, or even intent in messages. AI can provide tailored recommendations or responses based on this information.
For example, if a customer regularly orders skincare products, the AI will proactively suggest items related to the products or notify the customer about filler timeframes. That personalization makes it an interactive relationship instead of a simple exchange, and it is typically an increase in sales through cross-selling and up-selling.
4. Enhanced Employee Productivity
Customer success teams spend most of their time helping customers reset passwords, update shipping, or answering basic FAQs about a product. AI can help eliminate those processes to enable human teams to help with the cases that need empathy, judgment, or complex problem-solving.
This benefits the resolution, but also improves job satisfaction for the human employee. Instead of feeling stuck with tedious support processes, the agent will feel they played a role in building or maintaining a relationship with the customer, which ultimately improves the brand.
5. Consistent Multi-Channel Support
Today's customers reach out via various platforms - live chat, email, social media, and voice assistants. The challenge for brands is to ensure consistent responses across all of these touchpoints. AI agents are intended to interface with different communication channels while allowing for consistent responses when customers ask questions.
6. Data-Driven Insights for Business Growth
All customer engagements that an AI agent has are logged and tracked. Rather than being lost in call logs or emails, reported engagement data can be broken down into actionable insights. Brands can see common frustrations, or complaints repeatedly mentioned, or emerging needs.
For example, if a large volume of customers is inquiring about late product deliveries, dashboards can identify this, alerting businesses to possible supply chain problems to fix before they snowball.
The tasks that Artificial Intelligence Agents will play a role in Customer Services are rapidly changing, and organizations that embrace this technology early may be able to seize an important strategic advantage. AI agents in customer service will play a role beyond simple routine task automation, to an expected predictive, intelligent, and human-like role in customer service.
1. Reactive to Proactive Support
These AI agents will not wait to be asked when things go wrong - they will anticipate the customer’s needs. These AI systems will scan and analyze the customer transaction history and summarize the customer’s behavior. By making proactive recommendations and sending loss reminders, these systems will prevent problems from becoming persistent.
*2. Emotional Intelligence and Personalization *
The next generation of AI agents will evolve beyond features such as using the customer's name; instead, they will interpret emotion and tone to make real-time suggestions in the messaging. If a stressed customer contacts support, the AI will suggest more empathetic responses, guiding the conversation toward a calm, task-driven conclusion. Even though the assistance is via messaging, it feels human, real, and helpful.
3. Voice and Conversational Interfaces
Voice-based artificial intelligence is poised to increase in usage, permitting customers to interact naturally by using phones, smart speakers, or in-vehicle assistants. This is not just easier to use for the customer but also provides additional accessibility and reduces customer resolution times.
4. AI as a Partner, Not a Replacement
AI agents will provide value as research assistants to human staff instead of replacing them. AI agents can summarize and inform agents of past interactions, recommend responses to the customer, and provide contextual information to agents dealing with complicated issues, thus freeing the human agent to deal with unique situations. This allows for conversation flow and efficiency while maintaining the relationship that customers value the most.
5. Ethical AI and Trust
As writing AI takes on more responsibility, businesses will have to provide ethical transparency and fairness in performing alongside human agents. Businesses will need to explain or justify how they made their decisions, provide protection of customer data, and reduce bias in their interactions with the customer. The companies that seek to provide ethical AI will establish a sense of loyalty and credibility in the marketplace.
While AI Agents in Customer Services bring numerous benefits, implementing them is not without challenges. Understanding these obstacles is crucial for businesses to maximize value while avoiding pitfalls.
1. Data Protection and Security
Every day, AI agents deal with highly sensitive customer data. This may consist of a person's identity, contact details, and purchase history. Businesses should also comply with various regulations, such as the GDPR or CCPA. In order to retain a customer’s trust, protecting that data with secure systems and encryption is crucial.
2. Keeping the Human Touch
AI capabilities lend well to taking on some routine tasks with efficient automation, but customers still desire empathy and a caring nature. Too much AI can lead to robotic interaction. Effective implementation of AI decides how much or how little to use it if the circumstances become complex or emotionally charged.
3. Integrating with Existing Systems
Many companies are running digital operations using legacy platforms or a plethora of software tools. Integrating AI agents with existing CRM, ERP, or communication systems is an operation in itself. To mitigate operational disruption issues, make sure to set proper plans and roll them out in phases.
4. Customer Trust and Transparency
Customers must know when they're interacting with AI and how decisions are made by AI agents. By explaining the overall role of AI in any service or product being deployed, consumers are more likely to trust AI, feel less frustrated, or, at best, be skeptical.
5. Continuous Monitoring and Improvement
AI agents improve over time, but they require ongoing training, monitoring, and updates. Regular performance reviews and feedback loops ensure the system evolves alongside changing customer expectations and business goals.
By acknowledging these considerations, businesses can implement AI agents effectively, leveraging their advantages while maintaining high customer satisfaction and operational efficiency.
Implementing AI Agents in Customer Services requires careful planning to ensure smooth adoption and maximum ROI. Here’s a step-by-step approach:
1. Identify Pain Points and Goals
Analyze your current support operations. Which tasks consume the most time? Which queries are repetitive?
Define clear goals: faster response, reduced costs, better personalization, or all three.
2. Start with a Pilot Program
Launch AI agents in a specific channel or department first.
Monitor performance and gather customer feedback before scaling across the organization.
3. Choose the Right Solution
Evaluate vendors based on integration capabilities, AI sophistication, and customization options.
Ensure the platform can handle your business’s specific industry needs and expected volume.
4. Train Your Human Agents
Educate staff on how AI agents work, when to intervene, and how to collaborate with them.
Focus human resources on complex cases that require empathy or critical thinking.
5. Monitor, Optimize, and Evolve
Continuously track AI performance metrics, customer satisfaction, and response times.
Use insights to refine the system, update knowledge bases, and improve personalization.
By following these steps, businesses can adopt AI agents efficiently, minimize disruption, and maximize the benefits of automation and intelligence in customer support.
AI agents are no longer just a future vision; they are shaping the competitive edge of businesses today. Companies that implement AI thoughtfully deliver faster responses, provide personalized experiences, and build stronger customer loyalty, while freeing human teams to focus on complex, high-value interactions.
In today’s fast-paced market, where customers expect instant and meaningful engagement, AI has become essential. The real winners will be businesses that embrace AI as a trusted partner, combining its efficiency with human empathy to create unmatched customer experiences.
2025-11-10 17:09:39
2025-11-10 17:08:58
In an era where smartphones dominate nearly every aspect of our lives, businesses can no longer afford to treat mobile design as an afterthought. Whether you’re building a customer self-service platform, an employee intranet, or a B2B partner portal, adopting a mobile-first design strategy is no longer optional — it’s essential.
Mobile-first portal design ensures that your digital platform is optimized for smaller screens first, then expanded to larger devices like tablets and desktops. This approach not only enhances accessibility but also directly impacts user satisfaction, engagement, and business success.
In this article, we’ll explore what mobile-first design means, why it’s crucial for modern web portals, and how businesses can effectively implement it.
Mobile-first design is a web design philosophy that prioritizes the mobile user experience from the very beginning of the development process. Instead of designing for desktops and then scaling down, designers start with the smallest screen (mobile) and progressively enhance the design for larger screens.
This concept, introduced by Google’s former design lead Luke Wroblewski, follows the principle of progressive enhancement — ensuring that the core features work perfectly on mobile devices and then adding more complex functionalities for desktops.
In the context of web portal development, a mobile-first approach means:
• Designing layouts, navigation, and interactions that are optimized for touch interfaces.
• Prioritizing essential content and minimizing clutter.
• Ensuring fast load times even on slower mobile networks.
• Building responsive interfaces that adapt seamlessly to any screen size.
Why Mobile-First Design Matters More Than Ever
The digital landscape has undergone a massive shift toward mobile. According to Statista, over 60% of global web traffic now comes from mobile devices, and users expect the same level of performance on their phones as they do on desktop computers.
Let’s look at the key reasons why a mobile-first portal design is crucial:
The Majority of Users Are Mobile
The simplest reason to adopt mobile-first design is that your audience is already there. Whether your users are employees checking dashboards, customers tracking orders, or partners accessing data on the go — most will interact with your portal via smartphones.
If your portal isn’t optimized for mobile, you risk frustrating users with slow loading, tiny buttons, or misaligned layouts — all of which lead to higher bounce rates and reduced engagement.
A mobile-first portal ensures that your users have a seamless experience, regardless of their device.
Improved User Experience (UX)
Mobile-first design forces businesses to focus on simplicity, clarity, and functionality. Because smaller screens offer less space, designers must prioritize what matters most — ensuring that every feature serves a purpose.
Key UX improvements include:
• Streamlined navigation: Simple menus and intuitive icons make it easier for users to find what they need.
• Faster performance: Lightweight, optimized designs reduce page load times.
• Touch-friendly interfaces: Larger buttons and gestures improve usability.
When users can easily complete tasks without zooming, scrolling excessively, or waiting for pages to load, they’re more likely to return — and stay engaged.
Better SEO and Higher Google Rankings
Google’s mobile-first indexing means that the search engine primarily uses the mobile version of your site for ranking and indexing. If your web portal isn’t optimized for mobile, it may rank lower in search results — even if your desktop version looks perfect.
Mobile-friendly portals benefit from:
• Faster page speeds (a key SEO ranking factor).
• Better user engagement metrics (like longer session durations).
• Lower bounce rates.
In short, mobile-first design doesn’t just improve user experience — it directly boosts your portal’s visibility and discoverability online.
Faster Loading Times and Better Performance
Mobile users expect instant results. Studies show that if a page takes longer than three seconds to load, more than half of users will abandon it.
A mobile-first design prioritizes performance optimization from the start. This includes:
• Minimizing HTTP requests.
• Using compressed images and lightweight frameworks.
• Implementing caching and content delivery networks (CDNs).
• Reducing or deferring non-critical JavaScript.
By focusing on performance early, you ensure that your portal runs smoothly on both mobile networks and desktop broadband connections.
Enhanced Accessibility and Inclusivity
Mobile-first design naturally encourages accessibility because it focuses on simplicity and readability. Features like larger fonts, clear contrast, and well-structured layouts benefit users of all abilities.
Additionally, designing for mobile ensures compatibility with assistive technologies, such as screen readers and voice input. This inclusivity is especially valuable for organizations aiming to meet accessibility standards like WCAG (Web Content Accessibility Guidelines).
Scalability for Future Growth
A mobile-first approach ensures your portal is future-ready. As new devices emerge — from foldable phones to wearables — mobile-friendly frameworks make it easier to adapt.
Responsive, modular designs built using modern technologies like React, Vue.js, or Bootstrap allow seamless scalability. As your business grows, your portal can easily evolve without needing a complete redesign.
Increased Engagement and Retention
A smooth mobile experience keeps users coming back. When your portal loads quickly, looks good, and functions seamlessly, users are more likely to engage frequently.
For example:
• Employees stay productive when accessing tools on mobile devices.
• Customers can interact with your services anytime, improving satisfaction.
• Partners can collaborate easily without being tied to desktops.
The result is higher engagement, retention, and overall portal success.
How to Implement Mobile-First Portal Design Effectively
Building a mobile-first web portal requires strategic planning and technical precision. Here’s how to do it right:
Start with User Research
Understand how your audience uses mobile devices. Identify their goals, preferred devices, and pain points. This data will shape your design priorities — ensuring your portal delivers real value.
Define Core Functionalities
Focus on essential features that mobile users need most. Instead of cramming everything into small screens, highlight the top tasks and gradually enhance them for larger screens.
Use Responsive Design Principles
Responsive frameworks like Bootstrap or Tailwind CSS automatically adapt layouts to different screen sizes. Use fluid grids, flexible images, and breakpoints to ensure consistency across devices.
Optimize Performance
Minimize heavy scripts, compress media files, and use lazy loading to boost speed. Google’s PageSpeed Insights can help you evaluate and improve your portal’s performance.
Prioritize Touch and Gesture Controls
Design for thumbs, not cursors. Make buttons large enough to tap easily and ensure adequate spacing between interactive elements to avoid accidental clicks.
Test Across Devices and Platforms
Thoroughly test your portal on multiple devices, operating systems, and browsers. Tools like BrowserStack or Lambdatest help identify issues early in development.
Continuously Improve Through Analytics
Track user behavior with analytics tools. Monitor metrics like bounce rate, session duration, and click paths to identify bottlenecks and opportunities for improvement.
Real-World Examples of Mobile-First Portals
• Customer Self-Service Portals: Telecom and utility companies use mobile-first designs to let users pay bills or track usage effortlessly on their phones.
• Employee Intranets: Businesses provide employees with mobile dashboards for attendance tracking, HR updates, and communication.
• E-commerce Platforms: Retailers optimize for mobile checkouts to reduce cart abandonment and boost conversions.
Across industries, mobile-first portals are delivering better engagement and ROI.
In today’s mobile-driven economy, a mobile-first portal design isn’t just a design choice — it’s a business strategy. It ensures that your platform reaches users wherever they are, delivers seamless experiences, and remains future-ready in a rapidly evolving digital landscape.
By prioritizing mobile from the start, you’ll create a portal that’s fast, intuitive, and accessible — setting the foundation for higher engagement, stronger customer relationships, and long-term business growth.
If you’re planning to develop a responsive, high-performing business portal, partnering with an experienced web portal development company can help you design mobile-first experiences that truly stand out.
2025-11-10 17:07:12
Bringing your minimum viable product (MVP) to life requires more than just a brilliant idea. The backbone of any successful tech startup often lies in its technical co-founders and early team members. Here's how you can find the right partners for your journey.
First, clearly outline what specific skills and expertise are required to develop your MVP. Do you need someone with front-end experience, a back-end wizard, or perhaps both? Knowing what you're looking for will make it easier to identify potential co-founders who can fill these gaps.
Platforms like LeKlub-AI can be invaluable in your search. By using sophisticated AI matching capabilities, LeKlub-AI connects entrepreneurs with potential co-founders whose skills and goals align with yours, saving you time and increasing your chances of finding a perfect match.
Engage with your network and attend industry events to meet potential co-founders. When you find someone promising, communicate openly about your vision, values, and expectations. Look for compatibility not just in skills but also in work ethic and long-term goals.
Finding the right technical co-founder is crucial for building a strong foundation for your MVP. By defining your needs, leveraging AI matching, and actively networking, you can assemble a team that drives your startup towards success.
Ready to find your perfect technical co-founder? Try LeKlub-AI today and take the first step towards building your dream team.