Customer Service Weekly AI News
October 13 - October 21, 2025This week brought major news about how artificial intelligence agents are transforming customer service across the globe. From shopping to tech support, AI is changing how companies help their customers every single day.
Walmart and OpenAI announced a groundbreaking partnership that will change how people shop. Starting soon, customers can use ChatGPT to shop for anything at Walmart or Sam's Club just by having a conversation. You can ask the AI to help you plan meals, restock your kitchen, or find new products. The AI will help you shop and complete your purchase through something called Instant Checkout. Walmart's CEO, Doug McMillon, explained that shopping online has been the same for many years—you type something in a search box and look at long lists. But that is about to change with AI that understands what you want and helps in a more natural way. This is called agentic commerce, which means AI that can plan ahead and predict what customers might need before they even ask.
Salesforce, a technology company, shared impressive results from using AI in their own customer service department. The company is saving about $100 million per year by using AI tools. Salesforce makes a product called Agentforce that can do customer service work and handle early sales conversations. To show other businesses how well it works, Salesforce talks about how they use it themselves. This proves that AI agents can handle real work and save companies huge amounts of money while still helping customers well.
In India, AI agents are making even bigger changes to customer service jobs. Indian startups like LimeChat have created AI systems that handle up to 80% of customer service conversations. This means that 8 out of every 10 times someone asks for help, an AI agent answers instead of a human. This change is affecting India's huge technology industry, which is worth $283 billion. While some workers are losing jobs, companies say the AI makes service better and faster. They are also starting programs to teach workers new skills in AI and automation. This shows how AI agents can do a lot of customer service work, but it also raises important questions about jobs and training.
Gartner, a research company that studies business technology, released important findings about AI in customer service. They asked 265 service and support leaders from different industries in April and May 2025. The results show that 77% of leaders feel pressure from their bosses to start using AI. Even more impressive, 75% said their budgets for AI projects increased compared to last year. Most leaders plan to hire five new workers just to manage AI projects in the next year. Keith McIntosh from Gartner explained that leaders want AI to help with many goals: working more efficiently, giving customers better experiences, finding new sales opportunities, and adding value to the business.
Gartner found four main ways AI helps customer service. First, Agent Enablement means AI helps human workers by giving them quick summaries, fast answers, and suggestions for what to do next. This lets workers focus on connecting with customers instead of searching for information. Second, Low-Effort Self-Service means customers can use AI chatbots and smart search tools to solve problems by themselves quickly. Third, Automating Operations Support means AI handles behind-the-scenes work like analyzing data, creating help articles, and checking quality. Fourth, Agentic AI is the newest and most advanced type. These AI agents can handle complicated work all by themselves, doing multiple steps without human help.
Slack, the workplace chat app, announced it is turning its Slackbot into a smarter AI assistant. The new version can answer questions in normal language, summarize conversations, build plans for marketing campaigns, and organize calendars. It works inside Slack and uses information from your team's conversations and files. Salesforce, which owns Slack, is already using it with 70,000 employees. This tool helps teams work together faster by automating routine tasks.
Research from other companies supports these trends. According to Intercom, 77% of support teams think AI will make customers expect faster response times. By 2025, customers want answers in minutes, not hours. AI makes this possible by handling simple questions automatically while humans focus on harder problems. Another study by PwC found that 72% of consumers expect companies to understand their unique needs in real-time. AI agents can do this by learning about each customer and adjusting how they communicate.
All these developments point to a future where AI agents work alongside humans to provide better customer service. Companies are saving money, customers are getting faster help, and the technology keeps getting smarter. However, it is important to remember that workers need training for new roles as AI takes over routine tasks. The goal is not to replace people entirely, but to let AI handle repetitive work so humans can focus on complex problems that need empathy and creative thinking.