CX Leaders Roundtable Recap on Personalization

We sat down with a group of CX leaders across industries. Different titles. Different tools. Same problems.
Around the table: executives and directors from CX, retail, SaaS, and more. Some with substantial resources, others making do with much less.
Everyone's under pressure to prove ROI. Everyone's juggling AI. Everyone's trying to meet sky-high customer expectations while stuck with legacy systems implemented years ago.
Here's what came out of the conversation.
1. AI Is Useful, but Not the Savior
The group agreed: AI is helpful—but only when scoped and supervised.
It works best when it:
Handles repetitive tasks (think: tagging, routing, summarizing)
Surfaces trends that would take humans days to find
Automates responses to common questions
But no one saw AI as a silver bullet. It still struggles with nuance, context, and edge cases. Human oversight remains essential, especially when the stakes are high.
2. CX Has to Prove Its Worth—Fast
Every exec in the room felt the pressure: CX programs are under the microscope.
Leadership wants:
Faster proof of ROI
Tighter alignment with business outcomes
Less fluff, more impact
This isn't the era of feel-good NPS charts. It's the era of "What's the business case?" One participant mentioned they now frame all initiatives in terms of revenue impact rather than satisfaction scores—even though they're measuring the same things.
3. Expectations Are Sky-High
Customers want fast, personal, seamless—and they expect you to know them already.
Everyone seemed to face the same blockers:
Siloed systems (one company has double-digit customer databases that don't communicate)
Fragmented data (another can't connect in-store and online identities for most customers)
Org structures that slow down fixes
No one had it totally figured out. But everyone's trying. Some leaders have optimism about recent projects that get them closer to a single view of the customer.
4. The Human Handshake Still Matters
Even in AI-forward orgs, the takeaway was clear: humans still play a critical role.
The challenge is making the AI-to-human handoff feel invisible. One company built an escalation system that transfers customers from bot to agent with full context, no repeating information needed.
5. Data Chaos Is a Universal Pain Point
If there was one unanimous theme: data is a mess.
Disjointed systems, missing context, lack of a single customer view. The head nodding around the table was vigorous when discussing the challenges of reconciling multiple "sources of truth" for basic customer information.
There was an amusing moment when everyone started one-upping each other about their data nightmares. The consensus? Every company thinks they have the messiest data, and they might all be right.
Most teams are moving toward consolidation—but slowly. Several are working on master data management projects measured in years, not months. Everyone's trying to unify, clean, and make sense of their data before layering more tech on top.
As the session wrapped up, there was a palpable sense of camaraderie. Different industries, same battles. And a shared commitment to fighting for the customer in organizations that sometimes forget that's why they exist in the first place.