Blog – The most exciting opportunity in AI isn’t automation – it’s empathy

By Amani Darr

When AI is discussed in most circles, even outside of affordability and vulnerability, the conversation often drifts towards replacement:

  • Will technology replace human conversations?
  • Will automation replace specialist teams?
  • Will digital journeys replace empathy?

I’m not convinced these are the right questions.

The more interesting question is whether technology can help organisations understand customers better, and in doing so, create the conditions for better support.

Because in affordability and vulnerability support, understanding has always been the challenge.

“Vulnerability” is what it is to be fundamentally human

At the recent Vulnerability Registration Service Conference, Lord Chris Holmes MBE described vulnerability as part of the human condition.

That framing matters – Vulnerability isn’t an exception or a customer segment. It isn’t “something that only happens to other people”, rather it’s part of the reality of being human.

People move in and out of vulnerable circumstances throughout their lives. Financial shocks, health conditions, caring responsibilities, bereavement, relationship breakdowns – all of these can affect someone’s ability to engage, make decisions, or cope with financial pressure.

The challenge for organisations isn’t deciding between technology and people, it’s understanding how technology can help people support people better.

The hidden opportunity in customer conversations

Historically, organisations have had a relatively narrow window into the lives of customers’ circumstances – a routine phone call, an affordability assessment, a disclosure, a support interaction.

Today, that’s changing.

Customers are increasingly comfortable engaging with conversational technologies. Not because they want less human support, but because they want more flexibility over how and when they engage.

Many people find it easier to explain difficult situations in their own words, at their own pace, without the pressure of a real-time conversation.

And when that happens, something important shifts – they often tell us more.

Not just what has happened, but the context around it – the pressures, the changes, and the circumstances that sit behind the surface-level outcome.

This is where conversational AI becomes more than an efficiency tool. It creates the opportunity to build richer insight at scale.

The industry’s growing focus on “Tell Us Once” reflects this shift – a recognition that customer understanding has value beyond the moment it is captured.

The challenge is no longer whether organisations can collect this information, it’s whether they can turn it into something useful.

For years, affordability and vulnerability support has relied on relatively limited snapshots – an assessment, a disclosure, a note on an account.

Today, organisations have the opportunity to understand far more about the circumstances sitting behind those outcomes.

The opportunity is not simply collecting more information, it’s building better understanding from what customers are already telling us.

Affordability, AI and earlier support

Some of the most important signals are not explicitly declared by customers at all. They emerge through changing affordability, increasing expenditure, reduced financial resilience, and the context customers naturally share when explaining their circumstances.

Affordability isn’t static, and neither are the lives behind it.

A household that was coping comfortably six months ago may be under pressure today – not because of a single event, but because a series of smaller changes have gradually reduced their financial resilience.

When organisations combine affordability data with richer customer context, they gain a far clearer picture of how circumstances are evolving over time, rather than relying solely on snapshots or isolated interactions.

This is where solutions like Inicio’s come in.

Used responsibly, AI can help surface patterns, preserve context and support earlier identification of emerging affordability pressure.

That doesn’t replace human judgement – it strengthens it, by giving human teams better visibility of the realities customers are already describing.

A human-led digital future

The conversation around AI often centres on efficiency:

  • How many calls can be avoided.
  • How many processes can be automated.
  • How much cost can be removed.

Whilst these are valid questions, in affordability and vulnerability support, they’re not the most important ones.

A more important question is whether technology helps us understand customers more effectively, because better understanding leads to better decisions. Better decisions lead to better interventions, and better interventions create better outcomes.

The future isn’t human or digital. It’s human-led and digitally enabled:

  • Where automation reduces friction.
  • Where customers don’t have to repeatedly explain their circumstances.
  • Where affordability is understood as something dynamic rather than static; and
  • Where technology creates more space for empathy, not less.

The most exciting opportunity in AI isn’t replacing human support.

It’s helping us deliver it more effectively.

Amani Darr - Head of Customer Success