home Customer Experience The accelerated customer journey – How AI is compressing time

The accelerated customer journey – How AI is compressing time

Artificial intelligence hasn’t just improved the customer journey. It has compressed it, fragmented it, and partially handed control to algorithms. Yet while investment surges, results lag. MIT research found that 95% of generative AI pilots have failed to deliver measurable P&L impact. At the same time, Zendesk reports that 83% of consumers believe customer experience should be better than it is today.

We are no longer managing linear funnels or even omnichannel journeys. We are managing an ecosystem of machine influenced decisions, off-platform commerce, predictive service, and rising customer expectations all moving faster than most operating models can handle.

AI is accelerating opportunity. It is also accelerating risk. The question isn’t whether AI will reshape customer experience (CX). It already has. The question is whether your organisation’s strategy, governance and commercial discipline are keeping pace.

The journey has been compressed

Customers increasingly begin with AI generated answers, curated feeds, community recommendations and algorithm-driven suggestions. In many cases, they are shown a summary not your website.

Marketing leaders are no longer competing solely for search ranking. They are competing for algorithmic inclusion. Commerce is increasingly off-platform, social commerce is set to hit over $100B in 2026 according to a recent Forbes article. From embedded social shopping to marketplace ecosystems and in-app transactions, the journey often completes before a customer reaches your owned channels. AI-driven recommendation engines shape not only what is seen but what is purchased. Service is now predictive and automated. AI agents triage queries, resolve simple requests, and escalate only when required. But as AI becomes a participant in the journey, expectations rise. AI has raised the bar. Customers now expect immediacy, personalisation and seamless continuity across channels. Speed has improved however trust has not automatically followed.

What’s changed and why it matters

AI is amplifying both excellence and incompetence. Many organisations are experimenting. Fewer are seeing measurable commercial return. In fact, 95%[JM6]  of generative AI pilots have failed to deliver measurable P&L impact. The issue is not the technology. It is the operating model around it. AI initiatives are often: Tool-led rather than customer led, Siloed within marketing, product or IT, measured on engagement, not impact.  Deployed without clear accountability. Meanwhile, customers judge AI differently than businesses deploy it. They don’t evaluate sophistication. They evaluate lived experience. Was it faster? Was it fair? Did it respect me?

As the Customer Experience Professionals Association (CXPA) notes, customers embrace AI when it enhances their journey but reject it when it feels cold or poorly designed. At the same time, trust and personalisation have become central drivers of loyalty. Integrity and Personalisation are now among the most influential drivers of customer experience, accounting for nearly 40% of CX impact in KPMG’s latest Customer Experience Excellence research. AI can enhance both. Or undermine both.

What hasn’t changed

Despite the acceleration, some fundamentals remain constant. Not all moments are equal. Certain interactions carry disproportionate weight:

The first trust building interaction

The first automated service experience

The first failure

The renewal or churn decision

AI does not remove the need for prioritisation. It makes it more critical. Because when scaled poorly, small problems become systemic. I worked recently with a retail brand where I uncovered an automation agent delivering over 30,000 “off-brand” experiences to customers each month. This is why marketing leadership in the AI era is less about experimentation and more about disciplined orchestration.

From journey maps to journey systems

Journey mapping remains one of the most powerful tools for understanding customer experience. What has changed is the nature of the journey itself. Customer journeys are no longer just sequences of human touchpoints. Algorithms recommend, AI agents respond, and predictive models trigger lifecycle engagement. Machines are now active participants in the experience. This means the journey is no longer a static diagram. It is a dynamic system that must be orchestrated and governed across data, technology and teams.

The ACTIVATE Framework™

Through working with growth-stage and enterprise brands, I’ve found that successful AI enabled CX transformation consistently follows a structured path.

A – Audit the real journey

Most organisations map the journey they think exists. Few map the journey customers are experiencing. That means including things like AI-influenced discovery, off platform purchasing, automated service loops and data driven personalisation triggers.

Machines must be included in your journey architecture. If you don’t map algorithmic touchpoints, you cannot manage them.

 C – Clarify moments of disproportionate Importance

Not every touchpoint deserves equal investment. Use data to identify high churn friction points, moments influencing trust, service interactions driving cost to serve and triggers impacting retention.

Prioritisation separates transformation from experimentation.

T – Triage AI opportunities

AI use cases are abundant. Strategic focus is not. Before deploying, ask things like, does this reduce friction? Might this increase trust? Does this improve retention or revenue? What is the risk if it fails at scale? Avoid the pilot trap. The failure rate of AI pilots is not a technology problem, it is a prioritisation problem.

I – Integrate data, CX and marketing

AI fails in silos. Marketing automation, service platforms, CRM, loyalty programs and digital analytics must connect. Contextual intelligence depends on unified data. High performing organisations are more likely to leverage AI for predictive analytics and optimisation at scale, not as isolated experiments, but as integrated capabilities. Experience orchestration must replace campaign orchestration.

V – Validate through commercial metrics

Vanity metrics will not secure executive confidence. Move beyond open rates, click-through rates and standalone NPS. Track retention lift, cost-to-serve reduction, first-contact resolution impact, revenue per customer and lifetime value improvement.

CMOs who tie AI initiatives to commercial performance gain strategic influence.

A – Assign accountability

AI governance is not optional. Without clear ownership, initiatives stall or grow without cohesion. Assign: End-to-end journey owners, a commercial sponsor, AI governance oversight. Governance is what separates pilots from payback.

T – Test in priority journeys

Do not deploy AI everywhere at once. Start where friction is highest, volume is greatest, commercial upside is measurable. Scale only when outcomes are proven.

E – Embed the human overlay

Automation should remove friction, not empathy. Customers still want human escalation when complexity or emotion increases. Research consistently shows generational differences in AI comfort, particularly among older cohorts who prioritise human interaction. AI should enhance human capability, not replace human judgment. The brands that win will design blended systems where technology handles efficiency and humans handle complexity.

Leading CX in the AI era

The temptation in the AI era is to chase innovation. The discipline required is to architect coherence.

The organisations that succeed will not be those who deploy the most AI tools. They will be those who:

Redesign their operating model around customer impact, prioritise moments that matter commercially, embed governance before scale, align AI initiatives to revenue, retention and efficiency.

AI accelerates everything. Including bad strategy. For CMOs and GMs Marketing, the role has evolved from campaign leader to experience architect. The customer still needs to be at the centre. The difference now is that the system surrounding them is faster, more complex, and partially autonomous. Your job is to ensure it is coherent, accountable, and commercially aligned. Because in the AI era, growth will not come from automation alone. It will come from disciplined orchestration.

James McIntyre

Principal Consultant for JMCX

  James helps organisations accelerate retention, loyalty and revenue growth by diagnosing customer experience challenges and optimising lifecycle and marketing strategy. He bridges data, design and delivery to turn insight into measurable commercial outcomes, providing senior expertise without full-time overhead.