Xconomy San Francisco

VirtuOz Says Virtual Agents are “Siri for the Enterprise”

Wade Roush1/12/12Comments (2)

2011 was a very big year for natural language processing (NLP)—the science of teaching computers to communicate with humans in plain English (or French, or Japanese). First IBM’s Watson beat Jeopardy champions Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter. Then Apple captivated mobile consumers with the iPhone 4S, which included an enhanced version of Siri, the voice-driven assistant born at Menlo Park, CA-based SRI International. Suddenly, the idea that computers might be just as good as humans at carrying out certain types of requests seemed a lot less far-fetched.

For companies trying to win corporate and consumer adoption of their own NLP technologies, this is a long-awaited moment. And one of the firms that thinks 2012 could be the year this market really takes off is VirtuOz, a Paris-born company that moved its headquarters to Emeryville, CA, in 2009.

Fresh off a $7 million extension of its Series B funding round last June, VirtuOz wants to conquer the worlds of online marketing, sales, and support with its virtual agents—personal question-answering systems designed to help customers get the information they want faster. The company has already picked up a few big clients. If you go to Symantec’s support pages, for example, you’ll meet Nathan, an expert on installing and troubleshooting the company’s antivirus products. AT&T has Charlie, PayPal has Sarah, video game rental site Gamefly has Ryan, and Michelin has—well, the Michelin Man. All are powered by VirtuOz.

VirtuOz CEO Steve Adams

CEO Steve Adams says his aim is to double the company’s client base in 2012. That’s a plausible goal, if research firm Gartner is correct in its prediction that 15 percent of the Fortune 1000 will be using virtual agents on their websites within the next three years. “We think we can get the lion’s share of that business,” Adams says.

VirtuOz is the brainchild of Ecole Polytechnique graduate Alexandre Lebrun and co-founders Callixte Cauchois and Laurent Landowski. Back in the mid-2000s, Lebrun believed that the day was fast approaching when computers would be able to understand humans simply from their speech or writing. “Alex would tell you that the ultimate evolution of the technology is going to be the personal virtual assistant who drives both our business lives and our personal lives,” says Adams. But as a near-term commercial application, Lebrun decided to focus on a more limited idea, the virtual agent—a system that sits within a company’s website and represent its brand in real-time communications with consumers.

In its simplest form, a virtual agent isn’t much more than a fancy search engine that can parse natural-language queries and find preformulated answers, the way the original Ask Jeeves did. But Lebrun and his cofounders wanted to go a couple of steps farther. First, they thought a virtual agent should be able to detect and respond to a user’s actual intent. If an auction site visitor types “I want to cancel my bid,” for example, they thought the agent should be able to deduce that they’re talking about a specific bid in an active auction, and show them what to do. That meant designing virtual agent software that could be tied deeply into a company’s knowledge bases and website functions.

Second, Lebrun and his co-founders wanted interactions with their agents to feel like conversations, with a personality at the other end who can recognize tone and mood and ask clarifying questions. That’s why VirtuOz gives most of its agents names and faces. Sometimes they’re photos of models, as with Symantec’s Nathan (see upper right), but usually they’re cartoon renditions. If this brings to mind images of Microsoft’s infamous Bob and Clippy, forget that comparison—VirtuOz’s characters are much less nosey.

For the first four years of its life, VirtuOz focused on the French, German, and U.K. markets. Travel companies and wireless carriers … Next Page »

Wade Roush is Xconomy's chief correspondent and editor of Xconomy San Francisco. You can e-mail him at wroush@xconomy.com or follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/wroush.

Single PageCurrently on Page: 1 2

Add Your Thoughts

You will have 10 minutes to edit your post after you press publish.

Comments may be edited for clarity and length, rejected, or deleted.
By clicking "Publish," you are agreeing to these Terms and Conditions.

Links to This Post

  • Latest Virtual Assistant Business News « Want to Build a Virtual Business? Don't know how?

    1/19/12 3:41 am

    [...] VirtuOz Says Virtual Agents have been “Siri for the Enterprise” “Alex would discuss it we which the idealisation expansion of the record is starting to be the personal virtual assistant who drives both the business lives as well as the personal lives,” says Adams. But as the near-term blurb application, Lebrun motionless to concentration … Read some-more upon Xconomy [...]

  • Latest Virtual Assistant Business News | Work From Home? Get Business Credibility Using Virtual Companies

    1/29/12 8:06 pm

    [...] VirtuOz Says Virtual Agents have been “Siri for a Enterprise” “Alex would discuss it we that a idealisation expansion of a record is starting to be a personal practical partner who drives both a blurb operation lives as well as a personal lives,” says Adams. But as a near-term blurb application, Lebrun motionless to concentration … Read some-more upon Xconomy [...]

    

Business, life sciences, and technology news — covering Boston, Seattle, San Diego, Detroit, San Francisco, New York and beyond.

© 2007-2012, Xconomy, Inc. Xconomy is a registered service mark of Xconomy, Inc. All rights reserved.

Site produced by Andrew Koyfman with design from Rob Hunter.