Reports

The ‘411’ on Mobile Directory Assistance: New Consumer Survey Findings

This is a transformative period for directory assistance (DA) service providers and callers alike. Call volumes are skewing toward mobile devices and competitive threats exist in the form of mobile Internet search, downloadable mapping applications and free DA alternatives. These competitive challenges raise strategic and tactical questions for mobile carriers and their service providers (about pricing and content) in the near term. The findings of a new Local Mobile Search consumer survey, sponsored by V-Enable, present a snapshot of mobile DA usage and of an industry very much in transition.

Voice Biometrics Market Potential Study: Applications Review and Assessment

The market for voice biometrics-based authentication software is starting to mature. The technology has proven its efficacy and value as the basis of password reset applications for enterprise Help Desk, leading to tens of millions of dollars in recurring revenue. Yet the market will reach a positive inflection point as “customer-facing” deployments grow to support secure, phone-based access to financial services, e-government and electronic payments.

Conversational Access To Unified Communications

Unified communications (UC) is the merger of social software with enterprise IT, voice processing and call processing resources to support employee productivity and overall business objectives. Adoption has accelerated recently by successful packaging, marketing and go-to-market strategies primarily by three firms that have the greatest impact in setting the overall form, function and direction of enterprise computing and communications: Cisco, IBM and Microsoft. This report evaluates their unification efforts and those of major partners in call processing and contact center automation.

Speech-Enabled Mobile Search: Delivery Models for Information, Entertainment and Services

This report explores the evolution and transition from “traditional” wireless directory assistance (DA), where the revenue is supplied by consumers on a pay-per-use basis, to a “free,” potentially ad-supported model we’re calling speech-enabled mobile search (SEMS). In 2006, wireless carriers, device makers, mobile subscribers and advertisers combined to spend more than $4 billion on resources that used spoken words to extend the ability to search onto mobile devices. By 2010, that dollar value will exceed $7.5 billion.

Analytics and Reporting for Phone-Based Self-Service

With the sharp public eye on customer satisfaction, businesses need better and faster ways to tune phone self-service resources. A new generation of monitoring and reporting systems supports closer links to business intelligence and analytics. Determining suitability of new solutions hinges on compatibility with existing performance management resources, flexibility for accommodating multiple constituencies within the enterprise and out-of-the box capabilities, in terms of providing pre-formatted reports.

Voice Biometrics in 2007: Scaling Up for the Mass Market

Even with a potential FFIEC mandate for phone-based multifactor authentication on the horizon and the insidious cost of fraud continuing to rise, the question remains: Are voice biometrics ready for mass adoption? All directional indicators point to “Yes,” as does a growing roster of implementers and prospects. Speaker verification solutions have the potential to raise customer satisfaction while conforming to the strictures of “strong” authentication. A multitude of solutions providers are emerging to support two-factor authentication for telephone banking that remains cost-effective by leveraging existing CRM, Web services and security infrastructures.

CAT Foundations 2007: Making Speech Matter

In an era of tepid IT spending growth (a modest 5%-7% for 2007, according to most estimates), speech-enabled self-service and associated application software and services is growing in excess of 20%. Much of the growth is a reflection of top management’s heavy involvement in technology purchases. Executives now find that a higher return on investment (ROI) and lower total cost of ownership (TCO) result from effectively deploying self-service resources that leverage IP-telephony and Web services investments, extending speech processing access over traditional telephones and mobile devices.

Voice ASP Best Practices, Edition 2.0

Research findings based on a series of executive interviews coupled with a thorough literature review to identify “best practices” exhibited among providers of hosted or managed automated speech processing. Opus Research identifies what’s working now regarding real-world implementations focusing on the Five ‘Ps’ common to business analysis: Pricing, Promotion, Product, Partnerships and Personnel. In this report, we highlight techniques which correlate both with business success and customer satisfaction.

Voice Biometric Update: New Demand Drives Caller Authentication

Voice biometric technology providers are in position to vie for a share of the market created by the need to provide user authentication for online- and phone-based commerce. Opus Research expects rapid growth for voice-based caller authentication, anticipating large-scale, customer-facing implementations among financial institutions, insurance companies, government agencies and customer care.