Picture this: Over 11,000 7-Eleven stores across Thailand, a dream landscape for those who enjoy both slurpees and questionable snacks. Enter CP All, the lone knight in shining armor (or plastic cashier’s apron) tasked with operating these convenience empires. Recently, they decided that dealing with millions of customers might just be easier with a dash of AI magic sprinkled atop their call centers.
Powered by the NVIDIA conversational AI platform—because who doesn’t love a corporate buzzword?—the Bangkok-based company has equipped its customer service bots with the linguistic prowess to respond to FAQs and track orders. These bots boast a Thai-speaking accuracy of 97 percent, which, let’s be honest, is far better than the average tourist trying to pronounce “pad thai.” Areoll Wu, the deputy general manager, is probably still recovering from the team’s initial attempts at doing this without tech assistance.
Innovation isn’t just a fancy word at CP All; it’s practically written in neon lights. They partner with various industry groups and national agencies in a grand awards program that’s essentially an annual gathering where they clap for themselves—who doesn’t love a good pat on the back?
Keeping Up With the Calls: A Comedy of Errors
Speaking of clapping, CP All’s call centers must feel like they’re starring in a never-ending episode of “How Many Calls Can We Handle?” In a typical day, nearly 250,000 calls flood in—an impressive number unless you’re the staff member on the receiving end, desperately sipping coffee as if it were the elixir of life. Kritima Klomnoi, a project manager at Gosoft, shares that cutting down on hold times is crucial. “If you’re keeping customers waiting, you might as well hand them a book to read,” she quips.
Thanks to their shiny new AI technologies, CP All has managed to reduce the burden on human agents by a staggering 60 percent—essentially freeing up time for employees to tackle the unique, complex problems that a simple bot wouldn’t dare touch. Could that involve arguing with customers about whether or not they mixed up their slushies? We can’t say for sure.
Thanks to automatic speech recognition services, calls are transcribed in real-time, which is great—if you can ignore the occasional “What did you just say?” pause. As the AI comprehends a query through the intelligent FAQ system, it serves answers with the flair of a stand-up comedian—if stand-up comedians were also programming geniuses.
Adapting to the Thai Language: A Herculean Task
Now, let’s address the elephant in the room: the Thai language. Turns out, getting a computer to understand it isn’t as easy as programming a vending machine. Standard Thai features a mind-boggling concoction of consonants, vowels, tones, and other elements that could confuse even the most expert linguists. Wu candidly admits that their journey didn’t begin with smooth sailing.
But fear not! Thanks to the NVIDIA NeMo framework, CP All wrestled this linguistic beast into submission. “The toolkit’s pretrained models made everything way less terrifying,” Wu proclaimed, likely still shaking from the initial effort. The result? A Thai language model with an accuracy rating that’s more impressive than your average student’s statistics project.
As they look toward the future, CP All figures it’s time to launch their AI talents into even more business domains—and scale up to millions of concurrent sessions. It’s as if they’ve decided the sky’s the limit, but let’s not forget the real goal here: making sure every customer knows they can get their slurpy fix—as long as they manage to get through to a human before they lose all hope!
For those dying to know more about CP All’s remarkable journey through the labyrinth of AI, don’t forget to attend their panel at GTC, running March 21-24. Pack a snack, you’ll likely be there a while!