Close Menu
The Financial News 247The Financial News 247
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Companies
  • Investing
  • Markets
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech
  • More
    • Opinion
    • Climate
    • Web Stories
    • Spotlight
    • Press Release
What's On
Elon Musk’s SpaceX mulling merger with Tesla or xAI: report

Elon Musk’s SpaceX mulling merger with Tesla or xAI: report

January 29, 2026
Another App Store For Robots Launches, Will Have ‘Thousands Of Apps’

Another App Store For Robots Launches, Will Have ‘Thousands Of Apps’

January 29, 2026
Why The NHL’s Top American Scorers Missed The Cut

Why The NHL’s Top American Scorers Missed The Cut

January 29, 2026
Amazon could invest up to B in OpenAI: report

Amazon could invest up to $50B in OpenAI: report

January 29, 2026
Netflix’s Murder Mystery Is A Major Letdown

Netflix’s Murder Mystery Is A Major Letdown

January 29, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
The Financial News 247The Financial News 247
Demo
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Companies
  • Investing
  • Markets
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech
  • More
    • Opinion
    • Climate
    • Web Stories
    • Spotlight
    • Press Release
The Financial News 247The Financial News 247
Home » Agentic AI is transforming customer service — from Memorial Sloan Kettering to Saudia Airlines

Agentic AI is transforming customer service — from Memorial Sloan Kettering to Saudia Airlines

By News RoomDecember 15, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Telegram Reddit Email Tumblr
Agentic AI is transforming customer service — from Memorial Sloan Kettering to Saudia Airlines
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Many have negative associations when it comes to customer service provided by artificial intelligence, but Chetan Dube insists it can be done right.

The 59-year-old billionaire AI pioneer is the CEO of Quant, an innovative forerunner in the development and deployment of increasingly sophisticated digital employees, otherwise known as chatbots. 

Chetan Dube is the CEO of Quant, a leader in the development and deployment of digital employees, or chatbots. He previously spent years building Amelia, which was acquired for $80 million and pushed his net worth to an estimated at $2.4 billion.

“The reason why [people get] upset with chatbots is because they cannot get the job done, they waste your time,” Dube told NYNext. “But that was yesterday … Digital beings are coming into parity with the way humans think.”

McKinsey estimates that AI will handle between 50% and 70% of customer-service interactions by 2030, and Quant is already powering a significant share.

The company’s chat bots provide post operative care to cancer patients at Memorial Sloan Kettering, helping manage follow-up appointments, coordinating medications and navigating insurance claims.

“We have a digital health care concierge that is 24/7, continuously monitoring your wellness program, your diet, how many steps you’re walking, consulting with providers to ensure coverage claims get processed and eligibility is honored,” said Dube, who sold his previous AI company, Amelia, for $80 million in 2024. “Of course, you can get that qualified care from a human, but it’s a very, very expensive proposition.”

Agentic AI’s ability to take action on a user’s behalf makes it distinctly different from generative AI.

The firm’s agents are also supplying customer support services for one of America’s largest utility providers, Pennsylvania Power & Light (PPL); fast food chains such as Pizza Pizza and Saudia Airlines. Bu, Dube believes that hospitals are where the full promise of agentic AI comes into focus.

At Memorial Sloan Kettering, Quant’s agentic AI acts as a 24/7 concierge — tracking symptoms, coordinating appointments and helping patients navigate non-clinical care.

The agents never forgets a patient’s history and can perform the most tedious tasks — medication refills, monitoring of recovery metrics — indefinitely.

Such advantages make agentic AI immediately attractive to employers, but whether the systems can be preferable for the people on the other end of the line is a more nuanced question. People, especially those dealing with serious medical issues, want empathy and understanding

Quant’s technology is getting closer to demonstrating those qualities, not through better scripts, but by imitating how people actually think.

The agents use what Dube calls “active reasoning” to break down messy, emotional, multi-variable questions into their smaller “atomic” components, the same way a person instinctively does. 

Quant’s customer service representatives appear to users in a manner that resembles popular chatbots like OpenAI’s ChatGPT or Google’s Gemini.

If, for example, a patient messages to say they’re feeling new side effects, need to move a follow-up appointment and just received a confusing insurance notice, Quant’s agents deconstruct every part of the query — symptoms to monitor, scheduling changes, claims questions — before reconstructing the logic to generate an action plan.

“This is technology adapting to humans,” Dube said. “Humans should not be adapting to technology.”

Active reasoning is paired with what he calls “temporal imaging” — a deepening memory of each person with each interaction. With a growing map of preferences, frustrations, needs and emotional cues, the goal is to make each conversation feel like it’s contributing to an evolving relationship.

Quant’s agentic AI helps Saudia Airlines by rerouting lost luggage automatically — locating bags, updating travelers and arranging delivery without human intervention. Agents can also provide booking assistance or coordinate travel logistics.

According to a Quant spokesperson, the firm’s agents successfully resolve 76% of inbound queries. That’s six points higher than the agentic AI industry’s 70% average, though still short of the 84% success rate of a human representative. Anything a Quant bot can’t resolve is routed to a real person.

In other applications, however — such as with utilities-related queries at PPL — Dube says Quant’s digital agents already outperform humans in customer-satisfaction scores. He sees that as evidence of the industry’s approach toward the infamous “Turing horizon,” the point at which interactions with machines become indistinguishable from those with people.

Chetan Dube tells NYNext’s Will Zimmerman that, in some applications, Quant’s agents receive higher performance indicators than human customer service representatives.

This story is part of NYNext, an indispensable insider insight into the innovations, moonshots and political chess moves that matter most to NYC’s power players (and those who aspire to be).


“The magnitude of this [shift will be] tremendous — we’re looking at 70% service-work displacement by 2030,” said Dube, who is also building an agentic AI career counselor for workers who stand to be displaced by the technologies he’s developing, set for launch in 2026.

“It is here and it is happening,” he concluded. “We cannot turn away from this kind of efficiency.”

Send NYNext a tip at [email protected].

artificial intelligence Business chatbots customer service nynext NYNext Interview
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related News

Elon Musk’s SpaceX mulling merger with Tesla or xAI: report

Elon Musk’s SpaceX mulling merger with Tesla or xAI: report

January 29, 2026
Amazon could invest up to B in OpenAI: report

Amazon could invest up to $50B in OpenAI: report

January 29, 2026
Apple iPhone sales hit record B as CEO Tim Cook calls demand ‘staggering’

Apple iPhone sales hit record $85B as CEO Tim Cook calls demand ‘staggering’

January 29, 2026
Elon Musk’s SpaceX in merger talks with xAI ahead of potential blockbuster IPO: report

Elon Musk’s SpaceX in merger talks with xAI ahead of potential blockbuster IPO: report

January 29, 2026
Viral Reddit post mocking  grilled cheese helped sink Bay Area shop, owner says

Viral Reddit post mocking $22 grilled cheese helped sink Bay Area shop, owner says

January 29, 2026
Starbucks CEO lays out long-term growth plan, aims to open thousands of new stores

Starbucks CEO lays out long-term growth plan, aims to open thousands of new stores

January 29, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss
Another App Store For Robots Launches, Will Have ‘Thousands Of Apps’

Another App Store For Robots Launches, Will Have ‘Thousands Of Apps’

Tech January 29, 2026

In December of last year Unitree launched the world’s first app store for robots. Now…

Why The NHL’s Top American Scorers Missed The Cut

Why The NHL’s Top American Scorers Missed The Cut

January 29, 2026
Amazon could invest up to B in OpenAI: report

Amazon could invest up to $50B in OpenAI: report

January 29, 2026
Netflix’s Murder Mystery Is A Major Letdown

Netflix’s Murder Mystery Is A Major Letdown

January 29, 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Our Picks
‘Bridgerton’ Season 4 Part 1 Ending Explained—Does Benedict Find His Lady In Silver?

‘Bridgerton’ Season 4 Part 1 Ending Explained—Does Benedict Find His Lady In Silver?

January 29, 2026
Apple iPhone sales hit record B as CEO Tim Cook calls demand ‘staggering’

Apple iPhone sales hit record $85B as CEO Tim Cook calls demand ‘staggering’

January 29, 2026
‘God Of War’ Just Cast A ‘Princess Bride’ Actor As Its Next Norse God

‘God Of War’ Just Cast A ‘Princess Bride’ Actor As Its Next Norse God

January 29, 2026
Will AI Help Consumers Find The Streaming Content They Want To Watch?

Will AI Help Consumers Find The Streaming Content They Want To Watch?

January 29, 2026
The Financial News 247
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
© 2026 The Financial 247. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.