For account holders, the message is part of the product.A fraud alert can be technically correct, and still trigger panic if it’s slow or difficult to act on. A billing issue can be resolved accurately, and still generate repeat calls if the customer sees inconsistent updates across channels. These misfires don’t just affect satisfaction: They increase cost to serve, complaints, and churn.The Harris Poll found that while 77% of banking customers in the U.S. say they trust their institution to communicate important updates clearly, more than half (54%) report at least one communication-related frustration in the past year. Common pain points cluster around waiting for updates, unclear next steps, and difficulty getting support—the moments where timing and clarity are non-negotiable.Now that many banks are scaling AI across customer communications, they can provide clear, timely updates in the moments that reinforce trust. Achieving consistency at scale, however, requires well-governed AI processes behind every interaction.Where AI Helps, and Where It Shouldn’t Act AloneCustomer comfort with AI follows a similar pattern. In banking, 68% of customers are comfortable with AI assisting in at least one part of their experience. Comfort is highest for explain-and-alert use cases (transactions, billing questions, fraud/security alerts). But comfort drops sharply when AI recommends next financial steps, or takes actions like submitting payments on their behalf.For banks, these comfort thresholds point to a clear operational requirement: AI must be governed not just by capability, but by defined roles aligned to where customers trust it to act.This informs a three-tier model for customer-facing AI:Inform / Explain: AI can summarize what’s happening, why it matters, and what the customer should expect next—using approved data and language.Recommend: AI can suggest next steps, but it must provide a clear path to a human and avoid making binding commitments.Act: Any action that moves money, changes account state, or finalizes an outcome must remain gated by explicit approval and audit controls.This isn’t just about customer preference. It helps keep AI deployments defensible from a risk and compliance standpoint. Banks that succeed here set up an explicit review path for customer-facing AI language, plus logging that records what the model saw, what it said, and why it escalated.A Better Fraud Experience, by DesignFraud resolution is a clear example of how the model works.Suppose a customer should receive a text message: “We’ve noticed unusual activity on your account.”Inform / Explain:The first alert sets the tone and removes uncertainty, using approved data. The message clearly identifies the transaction and what happens next:“We detected a $127.45 charge at Store X ending in 1234 at 11:42 p.m. We’ve flagged it for review. Please confirm if this was you.”Recommend:When the customer responds, AI interprets the message and determines the next step. A clear confirmation (“Yes”) is recognized as non-fraud, and the system confirms resolution with a brief follow-up.If the response suggests potential fraud (“No”) or uncertainty (“Not sure”), the system advances to clarification, asking a follow-up question to gather the necessary detail. Based on the exchange, AI determines whether the issue can be resolved through messaging or should be escalated. Throughout, follow-ups can move into authenticated channels as needed to verify identity securely.Act:If the situation escalates, AI stops short of acting. Any step that moves money, blocks an account, or finalizes a resolution is gated by explicit approval and human oversight.Escalation triggers include repeated ambiguity, negative language, dispute signals, or high-value transactions. When a human agent steps in, they see the flagged transaction plus full conversation and channel history, so resolution continues instead of restarting.The Shift: From Capability to ControlWith the right use of AI, banks can bring clarity, speed, and confidence to more high-stakes customer moments. Delivering that experience consistently requires well-defined guardrails—ensuring interactions stay accurate, routing is seamless, and escalation happens quickly when needed.Yes#AIBanking #DigitalTransformationBrandon SailorsVP, CX Strategic AccountsCSG08 Jun, 2026