-->

Panel Dishes on the Advantages of Hosted, Managed, and SaaSed Speech

Article Featured Image

NEW YORK — SpeechTEK 2009's closing keynote panel agreed broadly that one of the main advantages of solutions and services available as hosted, managed services, or software as a service (SaaS) is speed of deployment, but also warned that sufficient attention must be paid to the implementation.

“Talk to people about their experience with speech, and you’ll get very mixed results,” said Jamie Bertasi, senior vice president of enterprise at Microsoft’s Tellme Networks. “We can be fast all we want, but if it doesn’t work—whatever the reasons are that things go wrong—we’re not and our clients are not going to achieve their goals.”

In her estimation, systems that still move callers through the call flow in a very serial manner miss the point entirely. She stressed good design that helps users achieve their goals quickly.

According to R.J. Auburn, chief technology officer at Voxeo, one of the big advantages of managed services and SaaS is the ability to provide redundancy—even in a hybrid on-premises implementation. A business that experiences seasonal traffic spikes and has on-premises ports for its contact center can, for instance, rent extra ports from a vendor like Voxeo to cover those periods when there is overflow. It can use its own ports the rest of the year, possibly saving itself some money and affording itself some of the control of on-premises.

SaaS models also allow enterprises to leverage technologies that would be too complex and expensive to implement exclusively. Paul Watson, general manager of multichannel and self-care solutions at Convergys, pointed specifically to speaker verification as one example. Often complex and requiring prohibitive capital investment for licensing, infrastructure, and training, voice biometrics becomes more manageable when handled through a SaaS model, Watson said. They are, moreover, quicker to implement.

Bertasi said one of the biggest advantages of SaaS and managed solutions is the ability to tune a system with every call, quickly and efficiently, letting a system become more powerful at every stage after deployment.

Voxify’s executive vice president, Daniel Reed, agreed, adding that in a managed services environment vendors can use “aggregate data for the benefit of individuals.” With each deployment, at least ostensibly, it becomes more competent and capable.

Auburn added that technology updates and the ability to keep systems evergreen with the latest updates and platforms in a hosted environment also provide tremendous advantages. “There are a lot of old, scary boxes sitting in basements [for 10 years at a time],” Auburn adds, speaking about older contact centers running on legacy hardware and competing with newer, easier systems. “Having the technology move forward is very, very valuable.”

Despite the panel’s consensus on some matters, the stage also saw its share of occasional digs. Speaking to an audience of potential customers, panelists vied to push their messages and wares within the allotted time constraints. In one exchange, as Watson had begun to wrap up an overview of Convergys’s port-share, Auburn pointedly asked how many of the company’s ports were VoiceXML-enabled. Watson replied that he didn’t have an exact figure, but that the number was more than 50 percent. The exchange was polite but also illustrative of how competitive the hosted space can be with a multiplicity of vendors and plans from which to choose.

SpeechTek Covers
Free
for qualified subscribers
Subscribe Now Current Issue Past Issues