Twilio Programmable Video is back from the dead
Twilio Programmable Video is back. Twilio decided not to sunset this service. Here’s where their new focus lies and what it means to you and to the industry.
Read MoreAmerican Express shows the way for the future of communication.
Enterprise Connect 2015 was a rather sad event. While I enjoyed it immensely, it was mostly filled with vendors who are unaware of what goes on around them (around being outside of their Unified Communication comfort zone). That's a story for another time though.
I want to share with you the best session I had at Enterprise Connect. At the Conference within a Conference part, which was WebRTC on the first day, the Real-World WebRTC Deployments session had Brian Barnes - Vice President, World Service & Global Credit Administration Technology at American Express.
He shared his thoughts wisdom with the listeners about their recent deployment of a self service video support capability within their mobile app.
The system is based on CafeX technology and Cisco.
The CafeX AMEX demo at a WebRTC meetup in Boston (available on YouTube)
AMEX is looking to offer customers service in their channel of choice - the omnichannel story for AMEX isn't one about starting a session on one channel (phone) and then switching to continue the interaction on another channel (web) - it is about giving the selection to the customer of picking up his channel, but with the belief the customer will continue to use that channel for the whole interaction instead of switching.
So AMEX set about taking WebRTC, embedding it in their iPad app and soft launching it. Not making too much buzz or advertising it. Just making it available for those who "find" it. They wanted to look at those who use it and see their complete customer journey.
They estimated 8% of the sessions won't connect, due to this being an IP based technology. That is what they experienced in their production later on as well. 92% success rate was better than nothing for them.
Brian gave rapid fire statistics about the service. I didn't capture it all, but here are a few things I did write down:
Why did AMEX do this if it is used so little? There were a few reasons he gave on stage.
AMEX will probably be using this experience and knowledge they gain when they move forward. Brian stressed the point of having to focus on the WHY - the business case - not the technology. I fully agree. There are too many vendors out there building stuff with WebRTC without really thinking the business case through, not understanding if and how much value it brings.
WebRTC wasn't really mentioned in his speech, and yet, this is only possible with WebRTC as a technology:
Twilio Programmable Video is back. Twilio decided not to sunset this service. Here’s where their new focus lies and what it means to you and to the industry.
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