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ZDNET’s key takeaways
- AI is transforming customer experience across the enterprise.
- CX excellence requires seamless coordination across operations.
- The workforce includes agentic AIs that augment human capabilities.
Last week, I spent several days in Vienna, Austria, attending the NiCE Analyst Summit 2025. The summit is now an annual forum bringing together industry analysts like me, NiCE executive leadership, partners, and customers. As expected, this year’s core theme centered on how AI is transforming customer experience (CX), not just in the contact center but across the entire enterprise.
The setting felt fitting. Vienna is often known as the city of music, with orchestras that seamlessly blend hundreds of instruments. In many ways, that spirit of orchestration defined the event itself. Delivering great CX today isn’t about playing a single note well. It’s about uniting every business function – from the contact center to sales, marketing, mid-office, and back-office operations – into one synchronized symphony.
NiCE’s leadership emphasized their mission to help companies master this orchestration in an AI-first CX world.
Speed, authenticity, and purpose
CEO Scott Russell opened the summit by reminding the audience that “Speed is a choice.” He emphasized that speed doesn’t mean rushing but moving decisively with intent and agility. He linked that concept to authenticity, explaining that, for NiCE, success means ensuring words align with actions across every customer and partner interaction.
Russell and other company leaders at the event shared their analysis of how the contact center market is evolving. According to the company’s perspective, two parallel trends are converging: contact center as a service (CCaaS) providers are expanding from the front office into broader customer experience orchestration, while systems of record (for example, CRM and CDP) are extending forward from the mid and back office. The result is the emergence of what NiCE calls a Customer Experience Platform (CEP), a unified platform that orchestrates experiences across all customer touchpoints and internal departments.
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This strategic positioning reflects a broader market reality that Aberdeen’s research has consistently validated: CX excellence requires seamless coordination across front, middle, and back-office operations. As companies continue to increase the number of channels in their CX channel mix – Aberdeen’s research shows a more than twofold increase between 2010 and 2024 – the complexity of delivering contextual, personalized interactions has grown exponentially.
Russell outlined three strategic priorities guiding NiCE’s transformation into an AI-first CX platform:
- Focused CX innovation
- Being great to do business with
- Speed in execution
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Owning the point of engagement
Jeff Comstock, president of product and technology, and the most recent addition to the company executive leadership team, spoke about the need for organizations to own the point of customer engagement, whether humans, self-service tools, or AI systems manage those interactions. He emphasized that controlling the engagement layer and the underlying data is now a strategic imperative.
This perspective aligns with Aberdeen’s research, which shows that CX leaders outperform peers by connecting customer, operational, and workforce data into a unified strategy and workflow to deliver hyper-personalized experiences. Comstock positioned NiCE’s CX platform as a foundation for orchestrating customer engagement across the entire enterprise.
From conversational AI to agentic AI
Earlier this year, NiCE acquired Cognigy in a deal reportedly valued at almost $1 billion, representing one of the most significant acquisitions in the CX space in 2025. NiCE’s chief AI officer, Phil Heltewigh, most recently the co-founder and CEO of Cognigy, joined the summit, along with Cognigy leaders, to discuss the company’s AI journey. He said Cognigy’s approach has evolved from early conversational AI to a mature agentic AI platform that enables autonomous collaboration between multiple AI agents.
Heltewigh described agentic AI as a reinvention of how businesses and customers interact, where AI can reason, collaborate, and act independently while remaining governed and explainable. In his words, “AI is now melting the organizational chart.” Tasks that once sat in different departments can now flow freely across them, enabling faster resolutions and seamless experiences.
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What makes NiCE’s approach notable is its AI-ready and vendor-agnostic architecture, which gives enterprises the flexibility to build and scale AI innovation across multiple models and systems.
Building an AI-ready data foundation
David Gustafson, head of platform strategy, emphasized that every effective AI initiative begins with AI-ready data. He described NiCE’s data architecture as one that unifies customer engagement data across the front, mid, and back office, enabling real-time insights while maintaining strong governance and ethical standards.
He explained that leading organizations are shifting from prompt engineering to context engineering, designing AI systems that draw on comprehensive, contextual customer information rather than isolated datasets. This data-centric approach ensures AI models deliver accurate, transparent, and personalized experiences that scale responsibly.
Orchestrating workflows like a symphony
When Tim Harris, head of workflow orchestration, took to the stage, his message connected perfectly with the event’s theme and Vienna. He explained that automation delivers full value only when it’s intelligently orchestrated, comparing orchestration to conducting a symphony.
In a well-composed performance, every instrument plays its role at the right moment. Similarly, in a high-performing organization, AI and automation tools are instruments designed to enhance productivity and precision. But the beauty of the outcome depends on the conductor, represented by business leaders who set the tempo and direction, and the musicians, represented by employees who bring those tools to life.
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Harris’s analogy underscored that while AI can power each section of the enterprise, from contact center to sales, marketing, and back office, the orchestration of these elements produces harmony. He outlined five building blocks of NiCE’s Workflow Orchestrator: 1. automate every step, 2. optimize resources, 3. augment intelligence, 4. unify systems, and 5. accelerate value.
In his view, the future of CX is one where technology performs seamlessly under human direction, creating experiences as cohesive and emotionally resonant as a well-conducted symphony that delights its audience, the customer.
Workforce engagement in the AI era
Omri Hayner, general manager for workforce engagement management (WEM), explored how AI reshapes workforce dynamics. He positioned WEM as the foundation for operational excellence across all customer touchpoints.
NiCE’s AI-first WEM experience includes AI copilots for supervisors, cognitive-load optimization for managers, and AI-driven insights for compliance and performance improvement. Hayner said the workforce now extends beyond people. The workforce includes intelligent systems that augment human capability, and agents will remain the backbone of CX, with AI enriching their value and strategic use.
This trend mirrors a broader industry shift: organizations are recognizing that measuring performance in a hybrid workforce requires new KPIs that track human and AI collaboration.
Turning insights into action
Brett Foreman, head of advanced analytics, emphasized that data and insights only matter when they lead to measurable business outcomes. He outlined NiCE’s approach to creating AI-ready data, infusing domain expertise, and translating historical success patterns into replicable AI-driven results.
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Carmit D’Andrea, director of AI and data management, demonstrated Enlighten Actions, where companies use AI models to analyze which interactions can be automated and focus on the decisions that can boost CX outcomes. She demonstrated how users can query the system, asking why average handle time is rising, and instantly receive AI-generated insights and recommendations to address the issue.
Together, their sessions highlighted NiCE’s shift from interaction management to AI-enabled engagement orchestration, closing the loop between data and results.
Partner and customer perspectives
The summit’s partner panel, featuring executives from AWS, Accenture, and Bell Integration, reinforced the suggestion that successful AI adoption begins with a clarity of purpose. The discussion centered on outcomes, not technology, as the primary driver of success. There was an in-depth discussion about AI strategy and investment decisions being made at the C-suite level and then mandated for implementation throughout the business.
This approach aligns with Aberdeen’s recent survey on AI in the Workplace, which highlighted that executive leadership across organizations must empower their workforce with the tools and knowledge they need to exploit their AI investments.
Customer stories from Fulton Bank and 211 LA demonstrated how AI-first CX strategies have improved responsiveness, efficiency, and personalization. These examples reflected a trend across Aberdeen’s CX research: organizations realizing the most substantial returns are those that treat AI as a collaborative force, not a replacement for human expertise.
Why this transformation matters
The strategic direction NiCE outlined during the analyst summit reflects broader market dynamics reshaping the entire CX technology landscape. The traditional boundaries between CCaaS, UCaaS, CPaaS, CRM, and workforce engagement platforms are blurring, driven by customer demand for integrated, AI-enhanced experiences and by enterprises seeking to ease the management of multiple point solutions.
NiCE’s positioning as an AI-first CEP, strengthened by the Cognigy acquisition and strategic partnerships with major technology platforms, such as AWS, ServiceNow, Salesforce, and Snowflake, represents a significant competitive move. By expanding beyond traditional contact center use cases into workflow orchestration across front, middle, and back-office operations, NiCE is directly addressing one of the most persistent challenges CX leaders face: breaking down organizational silos that prevent seamless customer experiences.
The emphasis on AI-ready data is particularly noteworthy. As agentic AI initiatives become more prevalent, the quality and accessibility of CX data will increasingly differentiate successful implementations from those that struggle to deliver value. Companies that have invested in capturing high-fidelity, omnichannel interaction data will be better positioned to train and deploy AI agents that truly understand customer context and intent.
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For CX and contact center leaders evaluating their technology strategies, NiCE’s vision raises essential questions worth considering:
- Are your current platforms positioned to orchestrate experiences across all customer touchpoints and back-office processes?
- Do you have the data foundation necessary to support sophisticated AI applications?
- And importantly, does your technology vendor share your vision for how AI should enhance, rather than replace, human expertise in delivering exceptional experiences?
As Russell emphasized multiple times throughout the summit, being great at customer experience starts with being great to do business with, and this capability requires platforms that are flexible, interoperable, and built for the rapid pace of change that defines the CX landscape.
Artificial Intelligence
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