Genband could be a
game-changer for customer-service sector
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[January 12, 2015]
By Tova Cohen
TEL AVIV (Reuters) - Genband, a U.S. maker
of software for telecoms and cable TV operators, aims to revolutionizes
phone-based customer services by ending consumer frustration at being
kept on hold in a seemingly endless loop of recorded options messages.
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The Texas-based company, majority owned by JPMorgan's One Equity
Partners, paid $50 million in 2013 to acquire Israeli start-up Fring,
an Internet-based mobile service seeking to transform the way
customer calls are handled.
Fring's technology has been used to build a platform that allows
users to communicate with businesses in real time, using voice,
video or screen-sharing. For example, an online customer could call
a bank direct from its website and the answering agent would know
who the customer is and what he or she is viewing on-screen.
This type of communication has been associated mainly with online
gaming but can now provide a more immediate way of connecting
customers and businesses.
As smartphone use continues to increase, analysts expect such
advances to bring about a fundamental change to customer services,
developing into a multibillion-dollar sector.
"This is where we think the future of the company lies," said David
Walsh, the chief executive of Genband, which has annual revenue of
about $1 billion. "This project is going to be our fastest-growing
product line."
The new communications platform, called Kandy, was launched last
year and has already been adopted by France's Bouygues and German
software maker SAP.
CHINESE CONTRACT
Fring's workforce in Israel has tripled to about 50 employees and
Genband says it has signed a contract with China's Snail Games to
allow its 100 million subscribers to connect within online games.
The deal is worth tens of millions of dollars, an industry source
said.
As well as providing an interactive service, Genband says the Kandy
system drives down costs by helping customers more quickly. Walsh
expects most business-related websites eventually to have real-time
communication embedded on their home pages.
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Analysts agree. Daniel Ives, of FBR Capital Markets in New York,
predicts the blossoming of a multibillion-dollar sector over the
coming three years.
"Real-time communication has become a focus of customer-facing
organizations to get a comprehensive view of a given customer," he
said. "Speed and accuracy are integral, opening up a fertile market
opportunity for vendors in this area."
Kandy's clients pay for usage based on the amount of traffic
managed. This can be measured by the number of users, gigabytes of
data handled or the total number of minutes online.
For the time being, the main competition is San Francisco-based
Twilio, which focuses on website developers, but Genband's Walsh is
already looking beyond websites.
"Cars and TV are part of our vision," he said. "Any device that is
connected to the Internet and needs real-time communication."
(Editing by David Goodman)
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