Cisco Doubles Down on AI-Powered Contact Center at WebexOne 2025

From AI quality management to Salesforce and Epic integrations, Cisco’s WebexOne reveals the next chapter in customer experience.

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Published: September 30, 2025

Rob Scott

Rob Scott

San Diego, CA — At WebexOne 2025 this week, Cisco unveiled a series of major enhancements to its customer experience portfolio, pushing deeper into AI-powered quality management, agent assistance, and cross-industry integrations.

The announcements underscore Cisco’s strategy to position Webex Contact Center as a platform where AI agents and human agents work side by side — with supervisors given the tools to oversee both.

“AI is the key to delivering amazing customer experiences at scale”

Said Jeetu Patel, President and Chief Product Officer at Cisco. “As AI and human agents increasingly collaborate, businesses need platforms designed to deliver quality experiences while moving faster than ever.”


More WebexOne 2025 News


AI Quality Management: Coaching Humans and Machines

Launching in early 2026, Webex AI Quality Management (QM) gives supervisors a unified view across their workforce — whether it’s people or AI agents.

Unlike traditional tools that focus on compliance, Cisco says AI QM will deliver:

  • AI-assisted scoring and real-time insights
  • Personalised coaching for human agents
  • Performance optimisation recommendations for AI agents

The aim: a single platform where leaders can identify successes, reduce AI adoption risks, and continuously raise customer experience standards.


From Deployment to Impact: AI Agents at Work

Webex AI Agent and Cisco AI Assistant are now generally available for both cloud and on-premises customers, with beta support for 50+ languages arriving later this year.

Key highlights include:

  • Autonomous resolutions: Customers can fulfil intent through self-service, with Webex AI Agents connecting securely to third-party systems. Multi-agent collaboration via MCP and A2A protocols is planned for 2026.
  • Smarter human assistance: Cisco AI Assistant supports live agents with transcription, suggested responses, and wrap-up summaries.

Customers are already reporting tangible results:

  • CarShield has automated 66% of pre-call screenings and cut claim onboarding times by 90%.
  • BancFirst has modernised customer interactions through Webex integrations across departments.
  • Columbia Bank has used Topic Analytics to uncover call trends, with 20% of general questions identified as loan-related and routed more efficiently.

Multi-agent collaboration via MCP (Model Context Protocol) and A2A (Agent-to-Agent) protocols may sound technical, but it’s one of the biggest shifts in how AI will operate inside the enterprise. Rather than working in isolation, AI agents from different vendors and platforms will be able to talk to each other, share context, and coordinate tasks securely.

For CX leaders, this means a Webex AI Agent could pull data from a Salesforce Agent, trigger an AWS Lex workflow, and even coordinate with a third-party service bot — all in real time and without human handoffs. Cisco is taking a leadership stance here by embedding multi-agent orchestration powered by AGNTCY, ensuring that these cross-agent interactions remain secure, verified, and under enterprise control.

The significance is simple: instead of buying one “super AI,” businesses can plug into an ecosystem of specialised agents that work together — accelerating automation while keeping the contact centre agile.


Salesforce, AWS and Epic: Deep Industry Integrations

Cisco also announced expanded integrations to connect the contact centre with critical business apps:

  • Salesforce: A deeper Service Cloud Voice integration lets organisations manage every interaction directly inside Salesforce with Webex AI.
  • AWS: Amazon Lex integration brings conversational AI virtual agents into Webex Contact Center and Enterprise deployments.
  • Epic: Healthcare providers can now surface EHR data directly within Webex Contact Center to deliver more tailored patient experiences.

Expanding to New Markets

Cisco confirmed plans to grow Webex services into India (Q2 2026) with new data centres in Mumbai and Chennai, followed by Saudi Arabia.

These expansions promise lower latency, stronger compliance, and improved reliability for enterprises operating in highly regulated markets.


Broader Themes: Connected Intelligence in Focus

Beyond the product announcements, Cisco used WebexOne 2025 to paint a bigger picture of where the contact centre is heading.

Cisco’s Connected Intelligence vision aligns with the shift from AI that merely answers to AI that acts. By enabling Webex AI Agents to interact with third-party systems and even other AI agents via open protocols, Cisco is pushing toward a model where autonomous agents can complete tasks, not just surface information.

At the same time, “AI washing” remains a growing concern for CX leaders, with many wary of inflated claims. Cisco counters this scepticism by pointing to tangible outcomes — such as CarShield’s 66% containment rate and BancFirst’s streamlined service — as proof that Webex AI is already driving measurable results. For buyers, adoption rates, production-ready integrations, and oversight tools are clear signals that substance is outweighing spin.

Finally, Cisco’s open ecosystem approach stood out. By partnering with platforms like Salesforce, AWS, and Epic, Cisco avoids forcing customers into rip-and-replace strategies. Instead, it positions Webex as an orchestration layer across existing investments, helping organisations modernise faster while lowering risk and maintaining flexibility.

Why It Matters

Now, let’s be honest — the world of AI is so thick with hype you can barely move without tripping over another vendor promising “revolutionary” bots. But what Cisco seems to be nudging us towards at WebexOne is something a little more grounded. It’s less about shiny chat interfaces and more about the plumbing — governance, integrations, and results you can actually measure.

And here’s the intriguing bit: Cisco isn’t just saying, “Here’s a clever bot.” They’re saying, “Here’s how humans and machines can be coached, scored, and stitched together into a system that doesn’t just work, but improves over time.” It’s an almost paternal vision of AI — firm but fair supervision, clear rules of engagement, and a focus on substance over sizzle.

For businesses battling fragmented systems and customers who expect the world yesterday, this feels less like marketing fluff and more like Cisco trying to step into the role of trusted referee in a very noisy game.


CX Today is reporting live from WebexOne 2025 in San Diego — stay tuned for exclusive interviews, major announcements, and in-depth analysis throughout the event.

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