A great AI voice experience doesn’t avoid humans—it knows exactly when and how to bring them in. Human handover is the process of transferring a call from an AI voice agent to a human agent with minimal friction, full context, and clear expectations. Done well, it boosts task success, protects brand trust, and keeps compliance intact.
When to trigger handover?
Use explicit, measurable triggers instead of guesswork:
- Low confidence: ASR/NLU confidence below threshold for a critical slot or intent.
- Repeated failure: n no-matches/no-inputs, or circular dialog detected.
- High risk/regulatory: cancellations, complaints, identity/fraud, payments, health/legal.
- Negative sentiment or distress: anger, confusion, or vulnerable-customer signals.
- Time/effort caps: max turns or time elapsed without resolution.
- Business rules: VIP accounts, high-value orders, outage scenarios.
- System issues: degraded latency, upstream errors, tools unavailable.
What type of handover
- Warm transfer: the bot introduces the case to a human, passes context, and stays on the line until the agent joins. Best for complex or emotional cases.
- Cold transfer: the bot transfers directly to a queue or skill without a live intro. Faster, less resource-intensive.
- Scheduled callback: offer time slots when queues are long or after hours.
- Async escalation: switch to SMS/email/web form for document upload, long alphanumerics, or identity flows.
Routing and queueing
- Skills-based: route to the right team (billing, tech, sales, language).
- Priority: VIPs, churn risk, safety-critical cases.
- Operating hours: route by calendar; after hours offer callback or voicemail-to-ticket.
- RONA handling: if the agent doesn’t answer, retry or move to backup skill.
- Overflow/burst: throttle with virtual queueing and estimated wait time.
Preserving context. Carry everything the human needs so customers don’t repeat themselves:
- Transcript to date, with timestamps and confidence.
- Extracted entities: name, account, order ID, issue summary, last actions taken.
- Authentication status and method (KBA, OTP, caller ID match).
- Sentiment, language/locale, and device/telephony metadata.
- Active tickets, CRM profile, and prior interactions.
Caller experience (UX)
- Clear announcement: “I’ll connect you to a specialist who can help with your billing question.”
- Set expectations: estimated wait time; offer callback and keep their place in queue.
- Avoid repetition: “I’ll share our conversation so you don’t need to repeat details.”
- Graceful failure: if transfer fails, apologize, create a ticket, provide reference number, and offer follow-up.
Staffing and SLAs
- Define target SLAs (e.g., 80/20: 80% of calls answered in 20 seconds).
- Schedule for peaks; use virtual queues and callbacks to smooth demand.
- Train agents on AI summaries, how to verify/override entities, and how to close the loop back to the bot’s knowledge base.
Cost and risk considerations
- Every transfer adds telephony/agent minutes; reduce unnecessary escalations with better confidence calibration and targeted clarifications.
- Protect against outages with fallbacks to callback/ticket.
- Regularly review escalation samples to improve prompts, vocabularies, and tools.
Human handover is not a failure—it’s a core capability. By defining clear triggers, preserving context, routing smartly, protecting privacy, and measuring outcomes, you turn escalation into a smooth, trust-building moment. The result is a voice experience that feels competent, compassionate, and complete.