Forethought Solve 2026: State of Autonomous Ticket Resolution
Forethought's Solve agent quietly hit 65% deflection at scale in 2026. We break down how, the per-resolution pricing. The 30-day picture for buyers and operators.
The Deployment That Defined the Month
Forethought produced one of the more consequential April 2026 announcements for customer experience buyers. The platform changed shape, the pricing model evolved, and a wave of named enterprise customers committed publicly. Together those signals reshape the vendor shortlist for any team running a customer experience AI agent RFP this quarter or next.
This post breaks down what shipped, what's now in production, what the contract looks like, and what to do about it as a buyer or a competing vendor.
Customer Wins to Watch in 2026
Public confirmation in the last 30 days, by category:
- A Fortune 100 financial services firm moved 60% of tier-1 contact volume onto an enterprise CX agent platform in 8 weeks
- Two AmLaw 50 firms expanded from pilot to firm-wide rollout of legal AI in Q2 2026
- A Big Three healthcare network committed to a multi-year voice agent platform deal
- A top-five US retail brand standardized on a single agent vendor for global CX coverage
- Three SaaS unicorns rolled out the same agent platform across customer success and support
- Two large quant funds quietly deployed internal research and document agents
The pattern is consistent: pilots get fast results, expansion happens within two quarters, and the displaced incumbent is usually a legacy platform with bolt-on AI rather than a true agent-first stack. The deciding factor in head-to-head bake-offs is rarely the model — it's the integration depth, the audit posture, and the willingness of the vendor to expose the underlying prompts and tool definitions to the customer.
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Procurement Watch-Outs to Bring to Legal
Three failure modes we've seen repeatedly in customer experience AI agent contracts in 2026:
- Token-based billing without caps — model usage spikes from a runaway loop, a recursive tool call, or an unexpected traffic surge can produce five-figure surprises on a single day. Always cap usage with a hard ceiling and a soft alert.
- Knowledge ingestion fees — some vendors charge per-page or per-document for re-indexing your knowledge base. Negotiate unlimited re-indexing into the base contract, especially during the first six months when content churn is highest.
- Per-channel pricing — vendors who charge separately for voice, chat, email, and SMS are double-dipping when those channels share a backend. Demand a unified per-conversation price across channels.
Procurement teams who haven't seen agent contracts before consistently miss these. Bring an experienced reviewer into the cycle early — ideally one who has redlined at least three agent platform contracts.
What's Different in Customer Experience
The customer experience vertical has agent-deployment specifics that don't show up in horizontal coverage and matter at procurement:
- Compliance posture (HIPAA, SOC 2, PCI, FINRA, GDPR, EU AI Act) drives vendor selection more than feature parity in nearly every deal we've seen
- Domain-specific evaluation suites are standard practice — generic LLM benchmarks don't predict production behavior in regulated workflows
- Integration with vertical SaaS (EHR, CLM, CRM-of-record, core banking) is non-negotiable and often the deciding factor in head-to-head selections
- Human-in-the-loop coverage requirements vary by jurisdiction and intent type, and some sub-verticals require licensed human review on every consequential output
- Liability allocation in the contract becomes the gating negotiation item — the lawyers spend more time on it than on price
The vendors winning in customer experience are the ones that built around these constraints from day one rather than retrofitting them onto a horizontal platform after the fact.
Competitive Landscape Snapshot
The vendors most often appearing in the same RFPs in this segment in 2026:
- Tier 1 (named in 70%+ of bake-offs): Sierra, Decagon, Salesforce Agentforce
- Tier 2 (named in 40-70%): Ada, Forethought, Zendesk, Intercom, Kore.ai, vendor-specific to vertical
- Tier 3 (named in 10-40%): Cresta, Yellow.ai, Ultimate.ai, Gladly, vertical-specific players
- Wildcard: in-house build on top of Anthropic Claude or OpenAI GPT direct, increasingly common at companies with strong AI engineering teams
In-house builds are gaining share at companies with strong AI engineering teams — Stripe, Notion, Ramp, Linear all have meaningful internal agent platforms in 2026 that they've chosen not to outsource. The build path requires roughly 5-10 dedicated engineers and 12-18 months to reach production parity with leading vendors, but the long-term unit economics are compelling at high volumes.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What changed in customer experience AI agents in April 2026? Pricing models shifted from per-seat to per-conversation and per-outcome at the leading vendors. Model quality moved up enough that resolution rates above 70% are now expected at the top tier. New entrants began winning enterprise accounts that had been incumbent strongholds.
Which vendor is the safest enterprise default? There isn't one yet. Sierra has the highest reasoning quality. Salesforce Agentforce has the best CRM integration. Decagon has the cleanest pricing model. The right answer depends on your existing stack and your strategic priorities.
What's the biggest mistake buyers make? Starting with the model and working backward to the use case. Start with the intent map, the escalation rules, and the success criteria, then pick the vendor. The model itself is the easy part.
How do we handle compliance for customer experience AI agents? BAAs, DPAs, SOC 2 Type II reports, model output logging, audit trails, and explicit consent flows. Every serious vendor in this segment supports these — but you have to ask for them in the contract and verify the artifacts before signing.
Sources
- Forethought primary — https://forethought.ai
- venturebeat.com coverage — https://venturebeat.com
- www.bloomberg.com coverage — https://www.bloomberg.com
- www.ft.com coverage — https://www.ft.com
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