AWS has teased a preview of a new CX offering: the Salesforce Contact Center with Amazon Connect.
The solution embeds channels from Amazon Connect within Salesforce Service Cloud.
So, instead of integrating two separate platforms, businesses can leverage a unified offering for CCaaS and CRM.
Excited to share more, Pasquale DeMaio, VP of Amazon Connect, posted on LinkedIn: “The upcoming preview of Salesforce Contact Center with Amazon Connect takes our partnership to new heights.
This groundbreaking offering will natively integrate digital channels like chat, SMS, video, and web calling, alongside voice capabilities, directly into the Salesforce CRM interface, providing agents with a unified and streamlined experience.
Expect this offering to evolve, as AWS could later embed several other tools from Amazon Connect into Service Cloud and further extend its capabilities. Those may include Connect’s case management, workforce optimization (WFO), and reporting solutions.
Nevertheless, this announcement already provides several tangible benefits, especially for Salesforce-centric businesses leveraging Data Cloud, the CRM leader’s customer data platform (CDP).
How Will the Salesforce Contact Center with Amazon Connect Benefit Customers?
By hosting all customer support conversations within Service Cloud, businesses may send richer, high-fidelity customer signals to Salesforce Data Cloud.
That does two significant things. First, it makes more service data accessible to other departments that leverage Salesforce’s CRM apps. In doing so, businesses may address a common customer complaint: not being recognized across business silos.
Second, with more data in Data Cloud, CX teams can enrich their AI deployments across the Salesforce platform. That may include implementations of the recently announced Agentforce agents.
Rebecca Wetteman, CEO & Principal Analyst at Valoir, picked up on these points and shared several other benefits CX teams may realize through a unified CCaaS-CRM platform.
“As companies look to leverage customer interaction data across all channels for AI-driven insights and automation, such pre-built integrations and combined features will accelerate time to value,” she told CX Today.
Customers may also reduce any ongoing management burden while taking advantage of capabilities like Agentforce to drive more intelligent AI-driven interactions.
These benefits may prove particularly alluring to mid-market, fast-moving enterprises that wish to excel in multi-channel engagement.
Many of these brands may already leverage the Service Cloud Voice with Amazon Connect integration. Altogether, 1,000 companies currently do, with 100,000 contact center agents utilizing it.
With this next evolution of the integration, Natalia Leon, Senior Manager of Strategic Partnerships at Salesforce, hopes to build on that impressive shared customer base.
At Dreamforce 2024, she also highlighted the potential of the Salesforce Contact Center with Amazon Connect offering to enhance contact center agent experiences. She said:
This gives agents a seamless, unified experience, making them more productive through AI and enabling personalized, efficient service.
Similar benefits are also available via the CX Cloud from Genesys and Salesforce, which dropped late last year.
Moreover, Salesforce recently launched a Bring Your Own Channel for CCaaS pilot program to deliver similar integrated offerings with other high-profile contact center tech providers. Indeed, Five9 and Vonage are reportedly part of that program.
Nevertheless, AWS and Salesforce have a history of joint innovation across various products, dating back to 2016.
As such, expect the Salesforce Contact Center with Amazon Connect to gain traction after December’s re:Invent conference, where AWS is likely to formally unveil the offering.
The Future of CCaaS and CRM Integrations
Collaborations between CCaaS and CRM vendors often center on giving customers more choice.
They will declare: “Businesses can use either of our channels, routing engines, AI solutions, etc.”
Yet, the pendulum now seems to be swinging back the other way as customers crave more guidance. They don’t necessarily want to make that many choices.
Instead, many would prefer their CCaaS and CRM vendors to play nicely together and offer more hands-on support to help them optimize their customer service environments.
Salesforce has recognized that through these new-wave partnerships, in addition to releasing solutions like My Service Journey. That ensures Service Cloud customers understand everything available to them.
Of course, many have long speculated that Salesforce may release its own CCaaS platform and cut out its contact center partners altogether.
However, its co-innovation approach will allow it to boost many already fruitful partnerships.
After all, its CCaaS partners are actively delivering more value and data to Service Cloud.
Indeed, many may now think: how can we innovate in a way that won’t overlap with Salesforce’s roadmap but instead augment it? The more this trend takes hold, the better for Salesforce.
Finally, the CRM leader won’t need to overstretch, invest in costly endeavors like building a voice platform, and maintain its margins.
Salesforce rival ServiceNow seems to be thinking similarly, recently announcing the Unified Experience from Genesys and ServiceNow.
Yet, many others may follow Salesforce’s lead and take the CX space into a new era of co-innovation between CCaaS and CRM providers.