Generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) is gaining traction among U.S. consumers across all age groups, according to a new PYMNTS Intelligence report, even as enthusiasm cools for voice assistants.
The study, titled “GenAI and Voice Assistants: Adoption and Trust Across Generations,” reveals changing consumer preferences concerning GenAI indicating a shift toward newer technologies while trust in older voice assistant technology declines. This trend, ironically observed among the initial proponents of voice assistants, prompts questions about the enduring appeal of technologies in a rapidly innovating landscape.
The PYMNTS special report, which surveyed 2,721 U.S. consumers between June 5 and June 21, 2024, examined consumer habits and opinions regarding both voice assistants and GenAI. The findings highlight a decrease in consumer confidence concerning the future capabilities of voice assistants, with the percentage believing they will become as smart and reliable as humans falling from 73% in March 2023 to 60% in June 2024. This erosion of trust is particularly pronounced among millennials and bridge millennials.
Concurrently, GenAI has experienced significant adoption, with 34% of U.S. consumers having used it in the 90 days preceding the survey. The report suggests that the perceived lack of advancement and dependability in voice assistants is contributing to this change, particularly as consumers hold high expectations for technological progress.
Key data points from the report include:
The PYMNTS report underscores the enduring perceived value of GenAI for tasks like information retrieval, maintaining a stable 63% utility rating among U.S. consumers.
The study highlights distinct generational patterns in technology adoption, with zillennials, as digital natives, showing a greater propensity to integrate new tools like GenAI into their daily lives.
However, the observed decline in trust surrounding voice assistants serves as a lesson about the necessity of consistent performance and reliability for the sustained adoption of any novel technology.
The report’s methodology involved a census-balanced survey of 2,721 U.S. consumers, with an oversampling of the zillennial generation to enable more in-depth analysis.
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