When I’m handling a dozen tickets about the same issue, I reach for a pre‑written template—either one created by the team or one I’ve saved from previous cases. The advantage is obvious: I stop re‑typing the same sentence over and over, I can verify in seconds whether the problem originates on the customer’s side or ours, and I can dispatch a correct answer instantly when the issue is on our end.
However, a canned reply can fall flat the moment the customer has suffered poor service (which can happen from time to time), demands an apology, needs a detailed explanation (have issue with RTFM aka Read The Freaking Manual and Rules of Program), or is entitled to a modest compensation. In those situations I abandon the generic text and compose a personal note. I retain the familiar structure—greeting, sign‑off, reference to policy—but I inject a sincere explanation (and with RTFM trick to people read that what they missed as we all lot of times click on “I accept” on installation of applications/games), a brief apology where appropriate, and, when justified, a goodwill gesture.
In practice I blend the two approaches: a solid base that guarantees consistency, topped with a tailored paragraph that proves I’ve actually read the ticket and care about the outcome. I often pull relevant excerpts from older documentation or CRM records, tweak the wording just enough to make it feel fresh, and send it out. This hybrid method gives the customer a clear, uniform message while preserving a handy reference for future, similar queries.
Bottom line: Use canned replies for efficiency, but never let them replace the human touch when the situation calls for it. Leverage AI for quick “dirty” drafts—whether you need a rapid translation, a first‑pass rewrite, or a template in the customer’s language—but do it responsibly. Choose privacy‑focused AI tools or operate in private mode so that sensitive data stays protected. Treat the technology as a helper, not a replacement, and keep the personal, accountable voice at the core of every interaction.