Recent Posts - page 172

  • CAT ScanXV: Coping with the “Terrible 2000s”: CAT’s Prospects in 2006

    Half way through the first decade of the new millennium, it’s time to take stock of the factors that have had the greatest influence on Conversational Access Technologies’ (CAT’s) progress into enterprise and service provider IT infrastructures. To use the terminology made popular by the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) back in the 1980s, CAT is a ‘problem child’. Compared to its data center technology peers, CAT has not performed up to its potential in a marketplace that is characterized by both size and growth.

  • Conversational Access Technologies: Forecasting Application-Driven Growth

    After reaching $800 million in 2005, enterprise spending on hardware, software and services to support automated handling of telephone based transactions, queries and interactions (primarily voice-based) will exceed $2.5 billion by 2009.

  • Enhanced Content Lands Amp’d for INFONXX

    Super-hip, mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) Amp’d selected INFONXX as its directory assistance provider, rather than a similar service from Verizon’s captive LiveSource service. The selection vaults the INFONXX into a new level of the service delivery ecosystem.

  • Intervoice Acquires Edify: Better Positioned for “The Road Ahead”

    However, the purchase price of Edify shows that little or no premium can be attached to players that are essentially serving a niche in an already niche market.

  • Biometric Use Cases: Choosing the Right Biometric for the Job

    Featured Research Speaker Verification has received short shrift from security mavens, largely because it has been ill-positioned by the speech processing community and has been subject to misplaced concern over its relative “strength” compared with more expensive, hardware-intensive alternatives. In… Read More ›

  • Speech Recognition 2005: Return on Investment Study

    Automated speech technologies continue to deliver cost savings and crucial business metrics. This Web-based study finds an 80% positive ROI for companies utilizing automated speech technologies, with payback periods averaging less than one year.

  • CAT ScanXIV: ROI’s New Look

    It is no secret that the billion-dollar interactive voice response (IVR) business was built on cost savings strategies resulting from “call diversion” and “agent attrition.” Investment in voice response units (VRUs) was justified by savings resulting from reductions in force in the call center. The math was simple: A call handled “in the IVR” costs less than a dollar, while live agent handling costs in excess of $4.00.

  • Speech plus Search equals New Business Possibilities (S+S=NBP)

    Search service providers like Yahoo!, want to use emerging audio search technologies to mine the ever-growing repository of spoken media, ranging from Internet radio to podcasts. Unless the current vendors can build a compelling business case, the search engines are poised to displace directory assistance vendors for on-demand, 411-type services.

  • Excell Agent Services

    Excell Agent Services, a historic innovator in wholesale directory assistance, is being purchased by Texas-based OSC, a provider of directory assistance and CRM services.

  • VoIP Keeps Things Interesting at eBay

    Skype provides the Internet’s largest auction house with a proven, scalable platform for Voice over IP (VoIP). Links with PayPal for billing and application development and automated speech hosting resources (Tellme, Voxeo and VoxPilot) signal a small-business package that could rival any toll free carrier’s enhanced services offerings.