Symantec’s Nathan: ‘I Am Not A Real Person’

David F. Carr | May 04, 2012

Nathan freely admits he is a virtual agent, not a real person, but he still makes Symantec technical support a little friendlier.

Ask Symantec’s Nathan for advice on installing a Norton anti-virus product, or moving it to another machine, or interpreting an error message, and he seems to have an answer to everything. Ask him an existential question and you can also count on a straight answer.

You: Are you real?

Nathan: I’m not a real person. I’m a virtual agent, created by VirtuOz. I understand you are asking about installing. Please choose an option below …

As a virtual agent, Nathan is represented by a profile photo, but the man you’re seeing is just a model. Although communicating him is presented somewhat like live chat with a customer service agent, it’s more like talking to a search engine–a search engine that’s smart enough to ask some follow-up questions before offering you links to the content most likely to answer your question.

“We wanted our search box to have a personality–a good, friendly feeling,” Stefan Osthaus, VP of worldwide support and customer experience at Symantec Corporation, said in an interview. ”

This is intent-based search. When you come in, we can understand what you want by asking a clarifying question and then give you really nice search results.” As such, it’s really more an aide to self-service than a replacement for support personnel, he said.

“We’re not replacing talented people with a headset on their head. We’re replacing our search box,” he said.

Although the user interface text makes it clear that Nathan is a virtual agent, Symantec might replace the photo with a cartoon avatar “to be more up front that it’s not a real person,” Osthaus said. “The way it is now leaves room for misinterpretation, and we don’t want that.”

Nathan appears on the Norton support site for Symantec’s consumer antivirus and PC management products (although so far not the PC Tools product line).

Symantec created Nathan with help from VirtuOz, which likeCodeBaby and several other firms specializes in creating these characters. Online service suite firms such as eGain also have introduced virtual agent offerings.

One way VirtuOz aims to distinguish itself is by “by channeling consistent, high-quality user experiences,” said Pam Kostka, chief marketing officer for VirtuOz. The virtual agents are designed to make interacting with an automated system friendlier, but the software also can be set up with rules or triggers to recognize when the users are expressing frustration and route them to a different channel. The most common alternative is live chat with a human, although click-to-call integration also is possible, she said.

Virtual agents usually are positioned on product or product support pages. VirtuOz also is developing a series of micro-agents focused on answering specific types of questions, such as shipping status on an order. Agents can be added to a company Facebook page, although so far Facebook’s rules do not allow artificial people to respond to customer conversations.

The real key to the software is not the avatar but the behind-the-scenes technology for natural-language processing and predicting the user intent behind a question, Koska said. Agents for different customers might differ in “the level of response capabilities” depending on what information or systems they have access to and the business purpose for which they are deployed, she said. Often, the goal is guided navigation through a website or a support knowledge base, as is the case at Symantec. At another customer, EBay, agents can take “proxy actions” on behalf of the user, such as canceling a bid.

 

Another anti-virus player, Kapersky Lab, uses a VirtuOz agent for both sales and support. VirtuOz also has brought the Michelin Man to life as a brand ambassador for the tire company.

Osthaus said Symantec has seen good results from Nathan, helping it boost customer satisfaction and allowing people to get answers more quickly. However, success wasn’t immediate. “When we first integrated him into the website and switched him on, we saw dissatisfaction–he was cute, but stupid. He did not have the underlying intelligence to answer all the right Norton questions.”

That was in February 2011, and after “a little bit of tweaking,” the results got better, Osthaus said. “It started to shine about a month after implementation and has improved ever since. Now, he can even sell you something. He’s not only a support agent anymore.”

Follow David F. Carr on Twitter @davidfcarr. The BrainYard is @thebyard andfacebook.com/thebyard

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CodeBaby Announces New Customers and Highlights Industry Leading Solution Studio 4.2 during ASTD, 2012
Company now serves over 300 eLearning Customers

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – May 7, 2012 – CodeBaby, a leading provider of eLearning solutions, will exhibit its top selling product Studio at ASTD 2012, May 6-9 in Denver, Colorado. The company’s booth number is #131 and it will be staffed with a full sales and executive team to introduce show attendees to its products and services. In addition, CodeBaby will announce global entities Toys R Us and Qualcomm as two new eLearning customers.

CodeBaby Studio makes it easy to produce and implement high-quality interactive avatars. Its characters integrate with existing learning management systems (LMS) or courseware to deliver impactful eLearning content. CodeBaby characters are rendered as Flash® or .avi files and can be easily converted to the emerging HTML5 video standard. These cross-platform formats are ideal for the various LMS and courseware applications on the market today. Studio features a convenient drag-and-drop interface with hundreds of animations to enhance eLearning applications. Character motions and gestures can be easily added to the production timeline for more engaging eLearning content.

“We are excited to announce two global giants as new CodeBaby eLearning customers: Toys R Us and Qualcomm,” said Dennis McGuire, CodeBaby CEO. “Their adoption of our solution is further proof that we are on the cutting edge of eLearning solutions.” “CodeBaby Studio continues to provide users with the most efficient way to engage learners and maximize learning outcomes,” added McGuire.
With a diverse selection of high quality digital characters, over 300 realistic drag-and-drop animations, and automatic lip-syncing that accommodates recordings in any language, CodeBaby Studio 4.2 makes producing eLearning application scenes fun, fast & easy.

CodeBaby Studio 4.2 Features:
• Four new senior motion capture characters, with fluid animations
• Standard characters with over 300 gestures
• Imports MP3 and WAV audio formats
• Easy drag and drop feature
• Windows XP, Windows Vista, and Windows 7 compatible
• Automatic lip-sync and auto-animate
• Multiple character interactions and scenes
• Closed-captioning
• Ability to swap characters on the fly

Many of CodeBaby’s other existing eLearning customers are industry leaders: Ogilvy & Mather, Dominos Pizza, Unisys, University of Arizona, American Express Canada, IBM Canada, Lockheed Martin, US Bank and Verizon.

About CodeBaby:
CodeBaby is a privately held Internet software company with offices in Colorado Springs, Colo. and Edmonton, Alberta. Its cutting edge technology enables companies to quickly and easily create high-quality; realistic digital character conversations that engage eLearners to optimize results. For more information, visit: www.codebaby.com

About ASTD:
ASTD (American Society for Training & Development) is the world’s largest association dedicated to workplace learning and performance professionals. ASTD’s members come from more than 100 countries and connect locally in more than 128 U.S. chapters and with more than 20 international partners. Members work in thousands of organizations of all sizes, in government, as independent consultants, and suppliers. Started in 1943, in recent years ASTD has widened the profession’s focus to link learning and performance to individual and organizational results, and is a sought-after voice on critical public policy issues. For more information, visit: http://www.astdconference.org

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ISSN 1932-8214
May 2012

CodeBaby and Red Shift to provide speech interaction with online characters
Combines Red Shift speech recognition and CodeBaby interactive digital characters

Red Shift Company has internally developed speech recognition technology that has been used in supporting interaction with digital characters, what the company calls “virtual personalities” (SSN,September 2009, p. 29). The company has previously said that its speech recognition is based on biologically salient components of speech, extracting features closer to the way the ear works, claiming it is different than processing used by other speech recognition software (e.g., using mel cepstrum coefficients).

Red Shift’s RASR speech recognition is a software product that enables speech recognition through a web browser. Red Shift announced in April that it has entered into a strategic partnership with CodeBaby, a provider of online customer experience solutions to allow speech recognition in communicating with
CodeBaby’s 3D interactive digital characters—web based “personal assistants” that today operate within Web browsers on PCs, with potential future plans to move to mobile devices. The characters (CIVAs,CodeBaby Interactive Virtual Assistants) are designed to engage online customers and eLearners, and the company indicates that its solution is being used by Fortune 1000 companies as well as midsized clients. (“3D” refers to rendering with a 3D look and not the type of 3D that requires specialized glasses.)

CodeBaby analytics allow clients to track and tune conversations to achieve results that include lead capture, cross-sell/upsell, customer service, online learning, and other web tasks, according to the company. The joint solution will allow users to engage in two-way voice conversations with the avatars. Previously, interaction with the CodeBaby digital characters was through text or pointing and clicking. The speech recognition is performed in the network.

Wally Griffin, CEO, and Joel Nyquist, product manager, Red Shift, along with Tony Delollis, CTO, CodeBaby, explained the joint effort in an interview with Bill Meisel. Delollis indicated that there are at least two specific requests for proposals from large companies that they are currently addressing. A typical application addressed by the joint solution might be a kiosk at a travel site such as a train station where customers could check schedules and buy tickets.

The interaction with the avatars in a typical kiosk application tends to be highly structured, with a series of questions (a “tree”), thus allowing the speech recognition to be focused at each node of the tree and thus more accurate. Because there is a screen, the structuring is less annoying than in an IVR system that prompts vocally for all the options, Delollis noted, since all choices are presented immediately on the screen, and the customer can speak or click a choice immediately. The engaging “personality” of the 3D characters also encourages the customer to continue with the automation. The voice response of the digital characters is recorded by actors, maintaining the personality of the avatars. The speech recognition, in addition to allowing a more conversational interaction, also satisfies ADA (accessibility) requirements. Griffin noted that CodeBaby’s trees tend to be relatively “flat” and are designed not to frustrate.

The companies plan to encourage customer interaction with speech-enabled virtual assistants on general PCs as well as kiosks, motivating PC users to use a microphone by the potential entertainment value and ease-of-use of the avatars. Still later, CodeBay and Red Shift plan on moving to mobile devices, although today’s mobile browsers inhibit the use of speech interaction, they indicated. A specialized app may be required in the short term for
mobile deployment.

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In this video blog series, Mark Johnson speaks with attendees of Ad Tech held in San Francisco, April 12-14, 2012. In this video, Mark discusses with Dennis McGuire, CEO of Codebaby, the following questions:

  1. Loyalty 360 believes that loyalty is the most important facet to consider in any marketing strategy, yet how can one create loyalty when so many technologies are focused on mass acquisition of customers that may or not be aligned effectively with the product offering?
  2. Experience drives engagement and engagement drives loyalty, yet at every part of the communication channel, people should feel engaged. What are the challenges you see in today’s environment with multi-channel communication programs for today’s marketers and how do they effectively address this opportunity?
  3. Give us a high level overview of your product and how it helps drive more effective engagement and therefore better marketing outcomes.
  4. The “cauldron” call for today’s marketing strategist is engagement. Define engagement for your brand and how your product can drive audience engagement.
  5. Loyalty 360 believes in the process of expectation matching, the belief that a consumer’s expectation is based on their lifecycle and where they are and how they engage with you; brands struggle with this dynamic and this idea yet want to put it into practice; What is your advice to marketers?
  6. Six qualities that define engagement – value, efficiency, trust, consistency, relevance and control – Which term do you think the market finds the easiest to implement and what term is the most difficult to implement?

www.loyalty360.org

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CodeBaby® and Red Shift announce partnership

 Collaboration ensures ease of use for consumers when accessing voice recognition technology to communicate with 3D digital characters

Louisville, Colo. (April 10, 2012) – Red Shift Company, a leader in the voice recognition development segment, has entered into a strategic partnership with CodeBaby a leading provider of online customer experience solutions.  With this agreement, Red Shift customers are now able to utilize the company’s proprietary voice recognition technology when interacting with CodeBaby’s 3D interactive digital characters.

This represents a first-to-market initiative enabling users to engage in two way voice conversations with 3D digital characters.

“CodeBaby is a recognized leader in delivering superior web based virtual assistants in the growing online self service marketplace,” said  Wally Griffin, CEO of Red Shift “ Combining CodeBaby capabilities with Red Shift’s superior voice recognition products in the presence of noise creates a partnership that is a first and results in a uniquely patentable methodology for integrating voice recognition with existing web browser technology.”

With the growing popularity of voice recognition personal assistants such as Apple’s Siri, the industry is at a tipping point with early adapters and holds the potential for exponential growth in the future. Voice recognition technologies increasingly permit users to substitute more natural vocal communications with computers and mobile devices instead of typing on a key board.

“We are extremely excited by this new partnership” said Dennis McGuire, CEO of CodeBaby “I look forward to customers taking advantage of the many online results our 3D digital characters drive when combined with Red Shift’s voice recognition offerings.”

About Red Shift:

Red Shift, LLC is a Delaware limited liability company based in Louisville, Colorado formed in 2002 to create and commercialize a revolutionary new line of voice recognition products built on biomimicry principles that model human hearing and speech.  Its’ proprietary  RASR Browser Speech Recognition – RASRTM software product is a first-of-its-kind technology that enables speech recognition through a web browser by adding a natural and accurate human voice to computer interface enhancing communications with self service web based virtual customer agents.  For more information: http://www.redshiftcompany.com/

About CodeBaby:
CodeBaby is a privately held Internet software company whose leading-edge technology enables companies to quickly and easily create high-quality, realistic digital character conversations that engage online customers and eLearners to optimize results. These customized and interactive conversations are creating value for a rapidly growing number of Fortune 1000 companies as well as mid-sized clients. With extensive analytics, CodeBaby allows clients to track and tune Conversations to achieve dramatic results that include lead capture, cross-sell / upsell, customer service, online learning, and other web tasks. For more information: http://www.codebaby.com

 

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CodeBaby extends characters’ reach to mobile devices

CodeBabies are hitting the road.

CodeBaby, the Colorado Springs-based developer of digital characters for sales, electronic learning and customer service, has begun a pilot program with a health care company it declined to identify to use the three-dimensional characters on smartphones, tablet computers and other mobile devices. CodeBaby spent the past two years adapting its characters for mobile use, using open-source HTML5 video software so the characters can be used on any mobile operating system, including those used by iPhones and iPads made by Apple.

“More and more people are accessing information from tablets. … It’s vital that we make our service available in the mobile market,” CodeBaby CEO Dennis McGuire said. “In two or three years a majority of devices will be mobile and we are the first in the markets we serve to be able to do this.”

CodeBaby demonstrated its new mobile capabilities on iPads during the ad:tech San Francisco digital marketing and technology conference that ended Wednesday. The company said its technology can also be used on tablet computers such as Amazon.com’s Kindle, Samsung’s Galaxy and many others.

Privately held CodeBaby employs about 30 people in downtown Colorado Springs to develop the characters, which it calls virtual assistants. The company was started in Canada by founders of a video gaming firm in 2001, but didn’t create its first product until 2004 and moved its headquarters to the Springs in 2007. Customers include the city of Colorado Springs, Pikes Peak Community College, Provident Lending Corp., Net  Nanny and Medtronic.

Contact Wayne Heilman: 636-0234 Twitter @wayneheilman
Facebook Wayne Heilman

Read more: http://www.gazette.com/articles/characters-136245-mobile-codebaby.html#ixzz1rC4wYWnF

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CodeBaby goes Mobile!

by Sarah McCartney on April 5, 2012

CodeBaby announces first-ever mobile 3D interactive digital characters for HTML5

Product demos available now 

Colorado Springs, Colo. (April 3, 2012) – CodeBaby, a leading provider of Online Customer Experience solutions has announced its 3D virtual assistant technology is now available for the rapidly growing mobile device arena.  CodeBaby solutions drive increased website conversions while enhancing the online user experience in the consumer driven marketplace.

 

CodeBaby’s 3D, interactive characters are the first-ever to be implemented on mobile devices through the emerging HTML5 video standards.

The decision to convert and streamline CodeBaby digital characters to operate on mobile devices stemmed from customer demand, as well as the company’s ongoing role as an innovative leader in the online site search, optimization and online customer experience markets.

“More and more, people are accessing information from tablets over PCs. In order for our clients to further leverage their online customer engagement and continue benefitting from the CodeBaby customer experience, it’s vital that we make our service available in the mobile market,” explained CodeBaby CEO Dennis McGuire.

According to Gartner Group: overall in 2011, tablet computer sales globally topped 63 million devices, an increase of 261% over the previous year. Due to the growth of these sales and the amount of real estate found on their displays, CodeBaby has rolled-out its HTML5-based software on all consumer tablets including iPad, Samsung, Kindle amongst many others.

CodeBaby’s architecture for its HTML5-based digital characters has been in development for 24 months.  The first customer pilot program is set to begin during the second quarter of 2012. The company recently held in-person iPad demos at San Francisco’s Moscone Center during ad:tech 2012, April 3-4 2012.

About CodeBaby:

CodeBaby is a privately held Internet software company whose leading-edge technology enables companies to quickly and easily create high-quality, realistic digital character conversations that engage online customers and eLearners to optimize results. These customized and interactive conversations are creating value for a rapidly growing number of Fortune 1000 companies as well as mid-sized clients. With extensive analytics, CodeBaby allows clients to track and tune Conversations to achieve dramatic results that include lead capture, cross-sell / upsell, customer service, online learning, and other web tasks. For more information: http://codebaby.com

 

 

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CodeBaby announces first-ever mobile 3D interactive digital characters for HTML5

Product demos available now and in-person at ad:tech SF 2012, April 3-4 

Topics: 3-d, 3-D characters, 3-D interactive characters, CodeBaby, customer service, customer service and e-commerce, HTML5, iPad, mobile commerce, tablets

(April 1, 2012) – CodeBaby, a leading provider of Online Customer Experience solutions has announced its 3D virtual assistant technology is now available for the rapidly growing mobile device arena. CodeBaby solutions drive increased website conversions while enhancing the online user experience in the consumer driven marketplace.

CodeBaby’s 3D, interactive characters are the first-ever to be implemented on mobile devices through the emerging HTML5 video standards.

The decision to convert and streamline CodeBaby digital characters to operate on mobile devices stemmed from customer demand, as well as the company’s ongoing role as an innovative leader in the online site search, optimization and online customer experience markets.

“More and more, people are accessing information from tablets over PCs. In order for our clients to further leverage their online customer engagement and continue benefitting from the CodeBaby customer experience, it’s vital that we make our service available in the mobile market,” explained CodeBaby CEO Dennis McGuire.

According to Gartner Group: overall in 2011, tablet computer sales globally topped 63 million devices, an increase of 261% over the previous year. Due to the growth of these sales and the amount of real estate found on their displays, CodeBaby has rolled-out its HTML5-based software on all consumer tablets including iPad, Samsung, Kindle amongst many others.

CodeBaby’s architecture for its HTML5-based digital characters has been in development for 24 months. The first customer pilot program is set to begin during the second quarter of 2012. The company will offer in-person iPad demos at San Francisco’s Moscone Center during ad:tech 2012, April 3-4 2012.

About CodeBaby:

CodeBaby is a privately held Internet software company whose leading-edge technology enables companies to quickly and easily create high-quality, realistic digital character conversations that engage online customers and eLearners to optimize results. These customized and interactive conversations are creating value for a rapidly growing number of Fortune 1000 companies as well as mid-sized clients. With extensive analytics, CodeBaby allows clients to track and tune Conversations to achieve dramatic results that include lead capture, cross-sell / upsell, customer service, online learning, and other web tasks. For more information: http://codebaby.com

Next in Mobile Commerce:

www.internetretailer.com/2012/04/02/codebaby-announces-first-ever-mobile-3d-interactive-characters 1/2

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By Lindsay Powers, USA TODAY

Someone has broken into your car. Glass is everywhere, your radio is gone, and there is no evidence to suggest who has done it.

Alarming and inconvenient as that may be, it is not considered a police emergency. And, in a time of shrinking resources, some police departments are turning to a new kind of officer to help out in non-emergency crimes.

The online talking, animated Virtual Officer aims to guide people who choose to file a non-emergency crime report on a police department’s website rather than by phone or in person. It can also assist with basic site navigation with the help of a pop-up menu.

Although it would be ideal to “have a face-to-face interaction,” Lt. Mohammad Rafaqat of the Reno Police Department said, the software should help the department — currently facing staffing shortages — avoid reviewing a report multiple times and help its site users avoid frustration.

Among other functions, Reno’s Virtual Officer, which was introduced earlier this year, informs individuals if they need to report to a different police department or that the crime is serious and needs to be reported in person, two main errors that Rafaqat said are often found in online reports.

In North Carolina, the Winston-Salem Police Department currently “employs” Virtual Officer, which it has named Officer Maria Evans. Benjamin Tuttle, an information systems analyst, said CodeBaby, the company that developed the software, asked him what he wanted to name the character, and he pulled a name out of thin air.

Since the program was added in May 2011, Tuttle said, there have been fewer e-mails and calls from people with questions about the website, including how to file a crime report. The site lists crimes such as aggressive driving, identity theft and stolen property that can be reported online.

CodeBaby is currently in discussion with several departments interested in adding Virtual Officer to their websites, said Joshua Steinfeld, director of public relations. Though the cost varies among departments, the software requires a roughly $500 monthly licensing fee after a $1,000 set-up cost, Steinfeld said.

The Colorado Springs Police Department, the first to use Virtual Officer in 2009, removed it after about two years because of budget cuts. Yet Lt. Patricia Feese said that, while it was in use, it enhanced the online reporting process.

Darrel Stephens, executive director of the Major Cities Chiefs Police Association, said more police departments have taken advantage of their websites in light of budget cuts in recent years, and that something like Virtual Officer may cause “people to be more comfortable with reporting online.”

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River Runners is First Rafting Company to Hire Virtual River Guide to Assist White Water Enthusiasts

CodeBaby Technology Ensures Error Free Adventure Planning for Vacationers

Buena Vista, Colo. (March 1, 2012) — Recently, River Runners introduced a custom-made ‘virtual river guide’  to engage and assist customers on the company’s website. The interactive river guide ensures that Colorado white water rafting enthusiasts are able to uncover the perfect rafting adventure with ease.

To engage with the new tool, site visitors must first click on the green ‘GO’ icon found on the company’s main landing page. After that, customers are led to the virtual river guide who appears on the bottom ride side of the website.

“With spring approaching, many people from across the world will begin planning their white water adventures through our website.” said Scott Peterson, River Runners Marketing Director. “We want to ensure they have a seamless experience and our virtual guide will supply them with this.”

River Runners offers many wonderful rafting options including trips down the world-renowned Royal Gorge and overnight adventures at the Riverside Rafting Resort in Buena Vista, Colo.

The new virtual river guide assists customers as they decide if they want to take on an extreme rafting experience, plan a family-friendly adventure, organize an overnight trip or even a relaxing stay at the company’s resort.

Additionally, the guide explains all the safety requirements rafters need to know before embarking on the trip of a lifetime.

“With so many great options to choose from, we are pleased to be the first company in our market to offer customers an interactive guide to help plan the perfect rafting get-away,” added Peterson.

River Runners’ virtual river guide was developed by technology leader CodeBaby.

 

About River Runners:

River Runners is one of Colorado’s favorite white water rafting companies – offering the best white water rafting trips on the Arkansas River in Colorado since 1972. With three fully staffed offices, a riverside campground, private launch site and public Riverside Grill, River Runners’ extensive facilities, quality rafting equipment and river guiding experience is unrivaled by any other rafting outfitter in Colorado.

About CodeBaby:

CodeBaby is a privately held Internet software company whose leading-edge technology enables companies to quickly and easily create high-quality, realistic digital character conversations that engage online customers and eLearners to optimize results. These customized and interactive conversations are creating value for a rapidly growing number of Fortune 1000 companies as well as mid-sized clients. With extensive analytics, CodeBaby allows clients to track and tune Conversations to achieve dramatic results that include lead capture, cross-sell / upsell, customer service, online learning, and other web tasks. For more information: http://www.codebaby.com

 

Media Contact:

Joshua Steinfeld
CodeBaby Public Relations
Office: 339-225-1581
Joshua.Steinfeld@codebaby.com

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