Tag: Generative AI

  • Conference Whispers: Money 20/20 USA 2024

    Conference Whispers: Money 20/20 USA 2024

    Las Vegas, NV October 27-30

    Published: November 1, 2024                      ID: 2053

    Readers: November 2, 2024

    Analyst: Dr. Doreen Galli

    Photojournalist: Dr. Doreen Galli

    ABSTRACT

    Money 20/20 USA 2024 was held at the Venetian and boasted over 10,000 attendees from over 90 countries with 80% of attendees coming from the USA. The over 400 speakers and 300 exhibits were captured by TBW Advisors with over 340 minutes of video captured and posted. As the place where money does business, the event brings together the ecosystem of money spanning banks payments tech startups, and capital market. AI everywhere, cross bank collaboration and cross geography collaboration along with fighting fraud were the key themes throughout.

    Highlights

    • AI everywhere with particular focus on fight fraud along with cross bank and cross-border collaboration was discussed throughout the keynotes and the exhibits.

    Cautions

    • As with all new AI technology use cases, it is critical to verify the quality of the data used in training the models and identify any inherent biases. The desire is to increase accessibility of the fintech market as opposed to further facilitating biases and disenfranchisement.

    Conference Vibe

    After more than 340 minutes of taping, 29 videos, a few hundred shorts forthcoming, and over 50 fact checks, our coverage of the Money 20/20 USA 2024 closes. Money 20/20 USA had over 10,000 attendees, 400 speakers, and 300 exhibits full of vendors from around the world*. Nonetheless, there were no lines at registration to pick up one’s badge. An exciting note was shared during the press briefing that 47% of speakers were women in 2024 up from 11% in 2023. The conference provided a full breakfast for all attendees as well as some smaller stations with continental breakfast. If that wasn’t enough food, have no fear a full lunch was also available to all attendees right in the exhibit hall as well. Speakers graced one of 6 stages with a fan favorite being the Sentient stage featuring Money 20/20’s custom sentient robot, Aiana-live.

    Focus on the customer!

    No matter where in the world one resides, your life is impacted by fintech. Some experience significant inconveniences such as sending digital money to relatives across the globe only for those relatives to receive physical money. Cross border payments maintaining digital banking convenience was one of the examples shared in the distinguished panel on creating a new language for cross-border payments. This panel featured Ryan Zagone from Wise who presented his company’s solution. Other panelists included leaders from TBD – a block company, Bankaya and Vansary. A key to achieving customer desired functionality is continual modernization of payment platforms beyond migrating to the cloud. This panel included leaders from Wise, Bank of America, Deloitte, and Amazon. A session on Navigating the journey to the cloud featured leaders from Featurespace, AWS and T-Sys. The focus of this session was the need for collaboration amongst partners for the benefit of the customers. One part of the ecosystem cannot go to the cloud if critical components they depend on remain on premise. The migration journey is never truly completed. To ensure your product has solid APIs to easily integrate with the rest of the market, APImatic shared their product on the expo floor. APIMatic increases adoption by leveraging automation to ensure you complete the journey to usable APIs.

    One key ingredient every business requires is customers! The panel, “Small is the next big thing” emphasized the sheer magnitude of opportunity by serving small businesses which make up 44% of the US GDP. This panel featured leaders from Co-created, Penelope, and SMB Franchise Advisors. The emphasis was to encourage the creation of a one-stop shop, a single pane solution for all one’s financial needs for the SMB space. One method to extend the reach to additional customers includes embedded payments and private capital to expand the consumer credit space. A panel on this topic featured leaders from Jeffries, Milken Institute, Citi and Pagaya. The session emphasized the need for new risk rating models for those not currently served by the sector. In this regard, an AI risk decision engine for financial services by Bordo.ai was displayed in the expo hall.

    Once you have your customers, you want them to have an amazing experience. To facilitate a unified view of all customer activities on your platform, Mixpanel was one of the vendors on hand demonstrating their capabilities. This product along with the talk on hyper-personalization in the age of AI reminded us of our coverage of the Adobe Summit. If this is a passion area be sure to review this research as well as enjoy its related playlist.

    Trust

    Expanding on the hyper-personalization to serve customers, a fireside chat featured Fortune reporter Luisa Beltran interviewing PayPal’s Frank Keller. Titled, AI + Trust, the question of when too personalization becomes a creepy user experience was discussed. The one where you have a conversation on the phone then suddenly your computer has an advertisement for such a product. Part of the challenge with the trust question arises because the bad guys are organized, collaborate, and share information but the good guys do not. As discussed in the session “Fighting Fraud in an AI First World’, until the good teams collaborate, the issue will remain. This exciting panel featured leaders from Google, Mostly AI, BNY and Swift. This point was also emphasized in How AI Innovation Influences Trust and Safety panel. This panel featured leaders from JP Morgan, Walmart, Trulioo, and OpenAI. A key takeaway included that AI plus humans is creating new capabilities to try to counterbalance the aggressive progressive of the fraudsters leveraging AI in a coordinated fashion.

    Trust is a two-way street. For financial institutions attempting to establish trust with their customers, they may wish to leverage Inscribe.AI. This platform reviews all documents turned in by customers for signs of fraud leveraging generative AI. Maintaining compliance can also assist with maintaining trust. A highly automated intelligent solution for achieving compliance that is traceable, explainable, and auditable by Trisotech was on exhibit. As anyone who has played with early consumer editions of generative AI knows, true value of generative AI is not just the answer but understanding the why behind the generated answer. If, however, your organization is interested in leveraging behavioural AI to prevent fraud, Futurespace may be one of the products for your organization to evaluate.

    Nothing loses a customer’s trust like compromising their privacy and their data. Sometimes, no matter the steps taken, a company accidently leaves a backdoor open or misconfigures their environment compromising customer trust. Have no fear, Packetlabs and their white hats are here to offer their services. Remember: it is always better to hire white hats to find your security issues instead of finding out on the front page of the news.

    Finally, one of the more critical aspects of trust according to SEC Chair, Glen Gensler is the whistleblower program. This was one of the many topics discussed in this fireside chat.

    Identity

    We had a flashback to our coverage at Identiverse, as one might expect at any conference in a highly regulated space. The expo hall had some identity solutions on display. A true global identity solution can be difficult to find but Shufti shared their solution. Available across 240 countries validating over 10,000 document types with outcomes in over 150 languages, Shufti is based out of London.

    Another identity problem arises in Fintech around the use of credit cards. Is the person using the card really the person we issued the card to? Prove shared their solution that enables you to prove it is really you with only one small line added to the magnetic strip. Prove interestingly leverages the technology within smartphones today to enable the credit card to be a key. With a tap of your credit card to the phone, the phone can let the company know if it is really the card holder holding the official card making the charge.

    AI

    While very little of the conference did not involve AI, a key concern within Fintech involves using public models with their highly regulated data. Glean shared their product that consumes all your internal data to create a customer LLM for your organization. If your emphasis is one producing customer facing content from your own data, then Writer that leverages generative AI over your own data may be something to explore.

    One of the more creative talks on Generative AI was titled, “Killer GENAI Cake”. Emphasizing the parallels to how baking powder created new use cases for baking, GENAI will expedite fintech and related user experiences to the next level. Featuring leaders from Microsoft, iGenius, Growfin and Citizens. Questions addressed by this panel included what use cases could materialize in 2025 and beyond?

    Next Year’s Conference

    Next year’s Money 20/20 USA will be once again held at the Sands Convention Center on October 26-29, 2025.

    *When vendors’ names are shared as examples in this document, it is to provide a concrete example of what was on display at the conference, not an evaluation or recommendation. Evaluation and recommendation of these vendors are beyond the scope of this specific research document. Other examples products in the same category may have also been on display.

    ©2019-2025 TBW Advisors LLC. All rights reserved. TBW, Technical Business Whispers, Fact-based research and Advisory, Conference Whispers, Industry Whispers, Email Whispers, The Answer is always in the Whispers, Whisper Reports, Whisper Studies, Whisper Ranking , The Answer is always in the Whispers, and One Change a Month, are trademarks or registered trademarks of TBW Advisors LLC. This publication may not be reproduced or distributed in any form without TBW’s prior written permission. It consists of the opinions of TBW’s research organization which should not be construed as statements of fact. While the information contained in this publication has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, TBW disclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. TBW does not provide legal or investment advice and its research should not be construed or used as such. Your access and use of this publication are governed by the TBW Usage Policy. TBW research is produced independently by its research organization without influence or input from a third party. For further information, see Fact-based research publications on our website for more details.

  • ­­­Conference Whispers: InfoComm 2024

    ­­­Conference Whispers: InfoComm 2024

    Analyst: Dr. Doreen Galli

    Photographer: Dr. Doreen Galli

    ABSTRACT

    IC24, InfoComm 2024, spanned 7 days and welcomed 36,967 registered visitors from 125 countries. It is the premier event for AV professionals (71%) and their customers (29%). Held at Las Vegas Convention Center West and Central Halls in Las Vegas from June 8-14, IC24 had 833 exhibitors. Transparent Micro LED, Kinetic LED and LEDs in all shapes and sizes could be seen along with a highly interactive video boards in the 407,000 net square feet of exhibition space. After over 400 minutes of recording and 9 Vegas Loop rides, and some 35 factchecks, our coverage of IC24 ends.

    Conference Vibe

    One cannot help but notice you are at a true AV conference when attendees stand to geek out over the huge sign in the West Hall discussing how it is or how they would create such an item. Something we had not witnessed prior. IC24 is the premier event for AV professionals (71%) and IT professionals dealing with AV (29%). The 36,967 registered visitors from 125 countries had no significant wait time while registering as registration rarely had a line at all.

    Spanning seven days, IC24 leverages 407,000 square feet of exhibits* in the Las Vegas Convention Center West Hall and Central Hall. The two halls are connected by a connected hallway one could walk or  riding the Vegas Loop. If you chose the walking route – quite a view including one of Sphere can be seen. Due to construction, finding the Vegas Loop from Central Hall required a covered walking through a temporary hallway. A very formal ceremony was held to open Central Hall including a formal ribbon cutting. We also filmed Thursday’s Central Hall opening and tried out timelapse effect in Central Hall for the first time. If you got hungry, the show provided food or you could buy food in the food court in Central Hall or anywhere in West Hall’s food court. Our entire playlist of video research at InfoComm 24 is available at our YouTube Channel. Save the list to capture related shorts when they are released.

    The Latest LED Capabilities

    While CES has a large collection of LED screens, CES is consumer while IC24 is industrial! Thus the AV technology is beyond what one would see in a residential setting such as Samsung’s massive The Wall exhibit that transports you around the world or their transparent MicroLED display. The common theme wasn’t just different but more energy efficient while maintaining brightness such as the exhibit by Nanolumens. For Sony it is about every aspect of sustainability even down to the amount of ink used on the box. Shape is no longer a restriction as can be seen at Pixelflex exhibit. Straight out of Hollywood GCL shared their LED 7680 refresh rate technology as well as their Extended reality screen as used in many Hollywood films.

    One of the more exciting things we came across is the Kinetic LED technology. LG Business had their large Kinetic LED display on the main hall  of West Hall. From the side, you can see why it’s called kinetic.  Another smaller player, PJ-Link shared their Kinetic LED also used to play a game. From an angle, you can still see it operate by standing slightly to the side to appreciate its kinetic capabilities.

    *When vendors’ names are shared as examples in this document, it is to provide a concrete example of what was on display at the conference, not an evaluation or recommendation. Evaluation and recommendation of these vendors are beyond the scope of this specific research document. Other examples products in the same category may have also been on display.

    AV Tech

    As one would expect, there is also a lot of AV tech. Blackmagic Design, a favorite of many at NABSHOW shared their latest release, BlackMagic Replay, a new way of creating live action replays. This is sure to save a lot of AV engineers a lot of time. For those attempting to synchronize many devices connected across cables, a main stage in central hall had a demo on leveraging PTP to synchronize time. We received a full tour of the Belkin booth and saw all their offerings from basic power supply, family/team charging cabinets to secure switches. In the Trailblazer zone we came across HighSecLabs who shared their products specialized to secure AV peripherals.

    Interactive displays were a huge hit with many varieties on display. Multitaction shared their technology with built in touch technology called ClearSight Touch involving rear infrared providing amazing possibilities. The interactive, collaborative meeting technology integrated with teams, the trailblazer zone also featured NodesNow. Teams also hosted a keynote on revolutionizing the workspace. Meanwhile, Scott Josephson from Google shared his opinion on how to operate Google Meet at the enterprise level. Diversified also shared their vision for enhancing user experience through intelligent workspace transformations. One of the biggest use cases for all this AV tech is the universities. Jodie Penrod, CIO at Marshall University led a discussion on leveraging AI in the classroom. It was here we first discovered the well loved Catchbox – a toss-able mic that worked amazing except at the booth. It was so much fun that people went out of their way to ask questions. Q-sys led a talk on digital twins and generative AI in AV. If you haven’t gotten started with AI yet, Chi Hang Lo from UCLA shared his 10-point checklist. A deep dive on where to use generative AI in AV was provided by Senior Trainer, Juan Cuellar of Office Pro. If you were left with questions, a follow-up to a keynote was specifically a Q&A session including a discussion on how AI could be regulated.

    Next Year’s Conference

    InfoComm 2025 takes place June 7-13 (exhibits 11-14) at the Orange County Convention Center in Orlando, Florida.

    Corporate Headquarters

    2884 Grand Helios Way

    Henderson, NV 89052                                                    

    ©2019-2024 TBW Advisors LLC. All rights reserved. TBW, Conference Whispers, Industry Whispers, Vendor Whispers, Technical Business Whispers, Whisper Reports, Whisper Studies, Whisper Ranking, The Answer is always in the Whispers, and Fact-based Research and Advisory are trademarks or registered trademarks of TBW Advisors LLC. This publication may not be reproduced or distributed in any form without TBW’s prior written permission. It consists of the opinions of TBW’s research organization which should not be construed as statements of fact. While the information contained in this publication has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, TBW disclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of such information. TBW does not provide legal, or investment advice and its research should not be construed or used as such. Your access and use of this publication are governed by the TBW Usage Policy. TBW research is produced independently by its research organization without influence or input from a third party. For further information, see Fact-based research publications on our website for more details.

  • ­­­Conference Whispers: Customer Care Week LV 2024

    ­­­Conference Whispers: Customer Care Week LV 2024

    Analyst: Dr. Doreen Galli

    Photographer: Dr. Doreen Galli

    ABSTRACT

    After over 750 minutes of recording and two lengthy walks from Caesars to Caesars Forum, and some 30 factchecks, our coverage of 2024 Customer Care Week Las Vegas comes to a close. Customer Care Week was held at Caesars Forum in Las Vegas from June 3-6. It is the premier event for customer care professionals. It spans 4 days, 300 speakers in over 165 sessions, and 5000 onsite attendees. Attendees witnessed endless examples of customer care solutions be they entire platforms, components for a solution or a services company to deploy the solution.

    Analysis only available to clients at this time.

  • Conference Whispers: AI CON 2024

    Conference Whispers: AI CON 2024

    Photojournalist: Dr. Doreen Galli

    AI CON is a TECHWELL Event. Photographed with permission of TECHWELL. TBW Advisors LLC is not related TECHWELL.

    There is no written analysis for this event. Clients should book an inquiry for a discussion on the event.

  • Conference Whispers: Identiverse 2024

    Conference Whispers: Identiverse 2024

    Analyst: Dr. Doreen Galli

    Photographer: Dr. Doreen Galli

    ABSTRACT

    After over 1500 minutes of recording and 14 escalator rides, and some 35 factchecks, our coverage of 2024 Identiverse comes to a close. Identiverse was at Aria Hostel in Las Vegas from May 28-31. It is the premier event for identity professionals. It spans 4 days, 250 speakers on over 100 topics, 150 exhibitors and 3000 onsite attendees. Attendees witnessed endless examples of identity and privacy solutions including many jokes about SAML (it is NOT dead), examples of passwordless as well as talks about the value of identity.

    Conference Vibe

    After over 1500 minutes of recording and 14 escalator rides, and some 35 factchecks, our coverage of 2024 Identiverse comes to a close. Registration for the four-day event kicked off after the long holiday weekend. The event featured 250 speakers on over 100 topics, 150 exhibitors and 3000 onsite attendees. There was so much packed in it was impossible to catch all of the exhibits. They had sessions in the Joshua rooms as well as Marisopa rooms. Opening day was then capped by  a mighty keynote featuring John Whelan, President of the Cyber Risk Alliance and Andre Durand, CEO of Ping Identity and Founder of the Identiverse Conference. The event provided food for the attendees. We were able to capture breakfast Wednesday. The attendees did explicitly find me to let me know they were disappointed with the breakfast due to the lack of protein. I do understand the Microsoft Breakfast did feature sufficient protein.  Many attendees complimented the lunch which was served Wednesday as well as on Thursday. The exhibits* were open on Wednesday after the opening keynote. They were spread between two large rooms across from each other.

    Our entire playlist of video research at Identiverse is available at our YouTube Channel. Save the list to capture related shorts when they are released.

    Digital Identities

    As one might expect, Identiverse is all about identity. Much to my delight, an entire panel was presented on confidential computing. Confidential computing strength lies in multiparty computations among untrusted parties – something that occurs in the identity space quite often. The session immediately following was on digital identity where they pondered how one could achieve such an exchange – unfortunately those panelists did not attend the Confidential session. On the digital ID panel, it was exciting to see that California is live with a digital driver’s license. Many are still trying to get their real id into their wallet! Australian Bank was on stage for a keynote making the case for the Bank ID. Admittedly this talk created a bit of déjà vu to the days in the bid to become primary certificate authorities. There is no shortage of information to make the business case to adopt passwordless for your organization.

    More than Passwords

    Thursday morning’s keynote concluded with the Power of Passwordless sign-on. This session includes a number of guest speakers from the FIDO Alliance, Clarkson University, Bank of America and Amazon. The net result is that companies love it, their customers are more engaged, and the security posture is improved. Numerous examples of passwordless solutions were shown in the exhibits. AllAUthenticate shared their passwordless solution. Bringing blue collar workers who need to punch in and out into this century, Bio-Key displayed their product leveraging MFA Mellon RFID. If you would prefer your identity solution to eliminate any and all standing privileges, SGNL can get you there and help you stay in that security posture. Zluri is available to handle access control for all SaaS solutions. Aserto is an identity service that considers policy and relationship-based access control. If your service accounts are your pain point or you don’t even know how many you have of what – a start-up just out of stealth mode called Anetac may be someone you want to evaluate. If your organization’s problem is more about non-human identity issue, Natoma can assist in provisioning, deprovisioning and maintenance of non-human IDs. The word of the conference was service and non-human IDs is an area exploding with a reported over a dozen just announced at RSA.

    Google hosted an entire detailed workshop on Google Sign-On, Passkey and the use of FedFCM to deal with 3rd party cookies. It was exciting to see they are working to push privacy forward with browser.

    Identity in Practice

    An attention-grabbing keynote Thursday morning alerted to the Darkside of identity. Reminding all that identity is the most common entrance point for the uninvited. Another keynote reminded all attempting to forge a path in identity, that the most important thing is to just get going! Furthermore, pay attention to the point of no return. Identity and security are all about depth of defense, spend the effort when there is a big payout. Do not insist on 100% for each program as the last percentages take resources without improving security posture. It is far better to find a new program that will affect the remaining identities with the remaining resources.

    One often too difficult aspect of identity is customer onboarding. To that end, Strivacity specializes in the end user aspect of identity. If you challenge is too many identity services and you are having difficulty getting a complete picture, TenableOne provides a unified dashboard to see the entire threat attack surface. If your difficulty is all about connecting identity platforms to other sources and targets, Aquera Platform provides identity connector along with automation and governance in their solution. Saviynt provided a demonstration of their identity cloud with a visual display. RSA Shared their Unified Identity platform that is available on prem or in cloud for SAS saps as well as supporting SAML. Radiant Logic also provides an identity middleware heavily focusing on the data and metadata of identity. This point was also shared during John Pritchard of Radiant Logic’s keynote.

    There were options if one is seeking assistance with their identity solutions. AOH offers identity consulting spanning assessment, architecture, execution and maintenance. ProofID offers global managed identity services and are key partners with many of the top identity technology providers such as PING Identity.

    Cisco provided an in-depth workshop on defining and building an identity graph. It was very insightful, and the audience was glued to the screen. What caught our eye was the end when they said, “look at that picture – you know what that means. You know what that means you are supposed to do” Even in 2019 when I was at Gartner, augmented intelligence was present so hearing, “look at the picture” was surprising. More commonly is generative AI incorporated so it suggested actions based upon what is seen. Fortunately, Microsoft was there to bring it all back to 2024. There was an Microsoft Entra deep-dive by Nichole Peterson as well as a Microsoft Entra with Co-pilot demo that allowed attendees to zoom back to 2024.

    Next Year’s Conference

    Next year’s Identiverse is held June 3-6, 205. Furthermore, next year’s conference will be at Mandalay Bay.

     *When vendors’ names are shared as examples in this document, it is to provide a concrete example of what was on display at the conference, not an evaluation or recommendation. Evaluation and recommendation of these vendors are beyond the scope of this specific research document. Other examples products in the same category may have also been on display.                                

    ©2019-2024 TBW Advisors LLC. All rights reserved. TBW, Conference Whispers, Industry Whispers, Vendor Whispers, Technical Business Whispers, Whisper Reports, Whisper Studies, Whisper Ranking, The Answer is always in the Whispers, and Fact-based Research and Advisory are trademarks or registered trademarks of TBW Advisors LLC. This publication may not be reproduced or distributed in any form without TBW’s prior written permission. It consists of the opinions of TBW’s research organization which should not be construed as statements of fact. While the information contained in this publication has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, TBW disclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of such information. TBW does not provide legal, or investment advice and its research should not be construed or used as such. Your access and use of this publication are governed by the TBW Usage Policy. TBW research is produced independently by its research organization without influence or input from a third party. For further information, see Fact-based research publications on our website for more details.

  • Industry Whispers (SM): Generative AI & Deep Learning in Production – Lessons Learned

    Analyst: Dr. Doreen Galli

    Held May 24, 2024

    This webinar will feature a panel of engineers that have deployed deep learning and generative AI and their solution is in customers’ hands. You will be able to take away insights on the selection of technology, the process of realizing a solution, pitfalls, nightmares and what the panelists would do differently next time. 

    Can’t attend? Register and submit your question anyway, the answer will be on our YouTube channel.

    Research Code: 2045

    Omer Segal is the Head of AI at Pixellot, overseeing the AI group responsible for researching and developing automated sports production and automatic game highlights generation for Pixellot AI-automated sports camera systems. He has extensive leadership experience as CTO and R&D Director at companies in homeland security, mapping, and sports technology, where he oversaw the development of innovative AI applications. Omer’s project portfolio includes creating land vehicle and aerial mapping and navigation systems, AR applications for archaeological reconstructions, and athletes’ video analysis applications.

    Omer holds a BSc and an MSc in Electrical Engineering from Tel Aviv University, specializing in the application of advanced technologies such as deep learning, computer vision and signal processing.

    With 20 years of experience as a Character Technical Director, JC Leon bring expertise in motion capture and avatar creation for diverse productions. Originally focusing on rigging for films, commercials, and games, I transitioned to real-time motion capture and game engine rigging over the past five years. Integrating AI into motion capture and avatar systems has been a recent passion, alongside a commitment to exploring new technologies and their synergies. From rigging for TV shows like “The Flash” to contributing to 3D Bitmoji development and virtual concert setups, my journey reflects a dedication to innovation and collaboration in the ever-evolving landscape of AI and entertainment technology.

    Ziyuan(Zac) is the Chief Scientist at Birch.AI, where he spearheads the research and development of LLM and ASR models to automate healthcare call-center workflows. He is responsible for selecting and designing ML models, data processing, production system architecture, and deployment. With over 10 years of experience in speech recognition and natural language processing systems, Ziyuan has a proven track record of delivering production-ready systems for tasks such as classification, named entity recognition, and real-time transcription. Ziyuan holds a bachelor’s degree from Tsinghua University Beijing and a master’s degree from the Johns Hopkins University where he worked at the Center for Language and Speech Processing on projects that led to the creation of many open-source NLP and ASR toolkits

  • Conference Whispers: Smart Retail Tech Expo 2024

    Conference Whispers: Smart Retail Tech Expo 2024

    Las Vegas, NV April 24-25, 2024

    Published to clients: May 14, 2024                                        ID: 2043

    Published to Readers: May 15, 2024

    Published to Email Whispers: January 14, 2025

    Public: January 15th, 2025

    Analyst(s) and Photojournalist: Doreen Galli, PhD MBA

    ABSTRACT

    After 400 minutes of filming, 30 videos, countless shorts and over 30 factchecks, our coverage of this years’ Smart Retail Tech Expo 2024 closes. Smart Retail Tech Expo is part of 5 conferences held at once at the same time and place: White Label, Retail, Supply Chain and Logistics Expo, Smart Retail Tech, Ecommerce Packaging and Labelling and Com Business Live. It was held in Las Vegas from May 8 to May 9 at the South Lower Hall of the Las Vegas Convention Center (LVCC). The event featured 5 theaters with each featuring 4-5 talks each day for a total of 47 keynote sessions. With discussion on distribution and logistics and vendors for every step of the journey, one could launch a new business with the contacts from this event alone.

    Conference Vibe

    After 2 days of filming some 400 minutes of content, 30 videos with endless shorts coming and over 30 factchecks, our coverage of this years’ Smart Retail Tech Expo closes. The event is five events held at once all together. White Label, Retail, Supply chain and Logistics Expo, Smart Retail Tech, E-Commerce Packaging and Labelling and Com Business Live. With row after row of exhibits*, the event was made whole by the balanced combination of talks and exhibits. Even better, there was 15 minutes in between the talks so one could catch the exhibits. Furthermore, all theaters schedules were once again aligned in the event you wanted to switch theaters as well.

    The short two-day event packs a punch with 5 keynote theatres each featuring 4 or 5 talks a day for a whopping 47 sessions. The first day was supposed to be capped off by a presentation Presidential candidate Robert Kennedy but it was cancelled purportedly due to security concerns. We captured 30 videos that will result in a lot of great shorts so be sure to save the entire playlist of videos for Conference Whispers: Smart Retail Tech Expo. We were able to capture the walkabout of the entire conference right at the conference’s grand opening. If you are wondering what was to eat at the show, we have you covered with video of the food lines and menus.

    Keynotes

    The keynotes at this smaller event were quite impressive and featured talks from Google, AWS, Home Depot, Lenova, and ASCM (Association of Supply Chain Management) to name a few. Douglas Kent of ASCM (Association of Supply Chain Management) shared top supply chain trends during his keynote. Jesus Sanchez from Google show the many ways in which you can put Google AI to work for you for your retail solution. It is all about optimizing marketing expenses. He also shared the interesting statistic that 15% of all searches are unique. Amazon’s Justin Honaman shared the many ways AWS Gen AI is being leveraged for innovation in retail and CPG. Phil Pench of DHL ecommerce shared an interesting talk with the list of options for the end of the supply chain particularly for those importing goods.

    Home Depot’s Paul Ganz shared the ripple effect of failing a customer. He reminded all that you only get one chance to take care of your customer. That once the customer bought the product, you are handling their item – not yours and it should be treated as such. Chewy’s Debarati Das gave a detailed talk highlighting the complexities of inventory management in the context of the corporate goals and customer satisfaction requirements. There were many people waiting to speak with this speaker following the talk. Kevin Lawton of @thenewwarehouse examined the question of doing fulfillment from the retail location versus a warehouse. Admittedly, this talk reminded me of a patent I was awarded as an IBM Engineer on this exact topic in the heart of the dot com era.

    Exhibits

    While many of the exhibits focused on the White Label portion of the show were captured in the walkabout, there was no technology for us to cover. Nonetheless, we discovered quite a bit of tech to capture. If you need to make a professional video to sell your wares or any other services in getting your product to market, newegg was on display with media, sellingpilot, and marketplace. If you are not sure about the size of the object you are selling, vMeasure was on site. vMeasure leverages cameras, sensors and scales with some great AI /ML models to provide the size of the object.

    If one is selling something in a store, are instead display, Retail Media Management was there to share their digital signs and smart retail tags. One only needs to change the price online, and all price tags will automatically update. They are reported to have a 5-year battery life. Admittedly, we know days of batteries in such electronics is limited as glass can now capture energy from thin air as seen in our coverage at CES. Another digital sign company, Hongzhou had a smart menu kiosk on exhibit. This kiosk not only takes the order and payment but coordinates the order to the kitchen staff. Limited staff but want to open a pizza joint? Pzza has an automated solution to make commercial pizzas that only requires one employee to run the shop. This exhibit gave us flashbacks to the automatic stir fry tech we saw at CES, Techmagic. If you would like to bring home the bacon instead of serving it, Bacon Tech was on site with their staffing and employee management mobile application. If your retail business involves CBD, Argyle Payments was on hand to help you with your banking needs.

    To secure a retail space, many require video surveillance. LVT remote surveillance with their solar panel powered solution complete with simple intelligence was on the floor. This intelligence is leverages to identify objects in the video and notify as appropriate. Is your business is looking for warehouse space AND will create 10 jobs or more? Global Site Location Industries collaborates with municipalities around the country. This collaboration allows Global Site Location Industries to offer their assistance for free.

    If you warehouse scanners or other mobile technology is missing or you need an extra, ASR Tech was on site and can fix anything. If simply cannot find your products in your warehouse or want to monitor them through the supply chain, Lyngsoe Systems passive RFID has a solution for you. RFID has come a long way with stickers at just .05 each. We also heard about Cirro Fulfillment’s Smart robots as they were to enhance the supply chain. SRSI shared their automated storage and retrieval technology available in all 50 states. In fact, SRSI handles all technology available within the 4 walls of the warehouse. Goods was on display to remind you to focus on your business with their integrated solution handling inventory management, order management, and warehouse management.

    As a conference about logistics, there were many logistics companies! Fellowship logistics shared that they can reach 99% of the US in 2 days and 75% in 1 day. Meanwhile, ExFreight was sharing that they provide 100% online capabilities for their entire service logistics offering to 175 countries. C&C logistics serves all continental US and Mexico and can move anything from a single pallet to an entire warehouse.

    There were vendors on display with technology for every aspect of your retail business. Shopline intelligent offered a unified commerce platform. There was also a solution called iVision to automate customer loyalty. Admittedly, both solutions intelligence is not yet fully realized compared to many of the technologies analyzed at the Adobe Summit or even Fintech Meetup.

    Next Year’s Conference

    Smart Retail Tech Expo comes to Las Vegas every year. The next Smart Retail Tech Expo will occur April 16 and 17th, 2025, in Las Vegas, NV at the Las Vegas Convention Center.

    *When vendors’ names are shared as examples in this document, it is to provide a concrete example of what was on display at the conference, not an evaluation or recommendation. Evaluation and recommendation of these vendors are beyond the scope of this specific research document. Other examples products in the same category may have also been on display.

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    ©2019-2024 TBW Advisors LLC. All rights reserved. TBW, Conference Whispers, Industry Whispers, Vendor Whispers, Email Whispers, The Answers always in the Whispers, Technical Business Whispers, Whisper Reports, Whisper Studies, Whisper Ranking, Fact-based Research and Advisory, Galli’s Keys to Success, and One Change a Month, are trademarks or registered trademarks of TBW Advisors LLC. This publication may not be reproduced or distributed in any form without TBW’s prior written permission. It consists of the opinions of TBW’s research organization which should not be construed as statements of fact. While the information contained in this publication has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, TBW disclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of such information. TBW does not provide legal, or investment advice and its research should not be construed or used as such. Your access and use of this publication are governed by the TBW Usage Policy. TBW research is produced independently by its research organization without influence or input from a third party. For further information, see Fact-based research publications on our website for more details.

  • Conference Whispers: Call & Contact Center Expo Las Vegas 2024

    Conference Whispers: Call & Contact Center Expo Las Vegas 2024

    Analyst: Dr. Doreen Galli

    Photography: Dr. Doreen Galli

    ABSTRACT

    After 2 days of filming, 31 videos and 34 shorts and over 30 factchecks, our coverage of this years’ Call & Contact Center Expo Las Vegas 2024 ends. CCCLV24 was held in Las Vegas from April 24 and 25. The event was held in the Las Vegas Convention Center South Lower Hall. The event featured 4 theaters with each featuring 6 talks each day for a total of 48 keynote sessions. Attendees witnessed endless examples of how generative AI and deep learning are revolutionizing the Call and Contact Center industry.

    Conference Vibe

    After 2 days of filming, 31 videos and ~30 shorts and over 30 factchecks, our coverage of this years’ Call & Contact Center Expo Las Vegas, CCCLV24, ends. With row after row of exhibits*, the event was made whole by the balanced combination of talks and exhibits. Even better, there was 15 minutes in between the talks so one could catch the exhibits. Furthermore, all theaters  schedules were aligned in the event you wanted to switch theaters as well.

    The short two-day event is definitely mighty and packs a punch with 4 keynote theatres each featuring 6 talks a day for a whopping 48 sessions. That said, there were also 2 keynotes who were to bashful to be taped which is a highly unusual occurrence. Nonetheless, we captured quite a lot of great content in this year’s CCCLV24 playlist. In fact we also spun out over 30 shorts which are at the tail end of the playlist – in case you only want to catch the super good parts!. We were also able to capture a video of the food available. Overall, it seems the Las Vegas Convention Center hits the mark as there were just as many bragging about the food and prices as there were complaining. The Global Voice of Customer Experience, Dennis Wakabayashi, was interviewing on site and even shared his wisdom in a keynote. Fascinating to see how leveraging global call center talent can truly impact the world in which we live.

    Getting Ready for Exciting New Technologies

    Sahni Sanjeev’s keynote by eGain appropriately drove home the requirements for corporate data programs to be mature before attempting to dive into deep learning tools and techniques. A second keynote by Uniphone offered up an Enterprise AI blueprint with some very solid advice. Specifically, your knowledge management system should be used so that the data determines your first actions. One must act based on the customer pain points not the cool technology. Of course if you didn’t get to organize it yet, Robot.AI shared their solution on exhibit. Robot.ai is simply feed all your corporate data then provides a gen AI service to answer questions about all of it.

    A keynote reminder was given that one cannot use newest and greatest AI tools without thought to protect your customers. This keynote was provided by Private AI’s co-founder Patricia Thaine. In her talk, she detailed the various scenarios and considerations one must take to not end up on the news for an embarrassing compromise. It was a true sign of industry maturity to see a product such as Private AI on exhibit this year as well.

    Speaking of protection, a vendor we are familiar with, SecureLogix shared their patented solution to stopping call pumping and TDoS attacks and more. Call pumping wastes an incredible amount of money. During my tenure as a telephony strategist, every public 800 number examined suffered from a call pumping compromise. At one point, 85% of all DDOS attacks had concurrent TDOS attacks- meaning your customers cannot find you on the internet or call you regarding the issue. One modern security concern involves deepfakes, to that end Veridas was on hand with their solution to identify and stop vocal deep fakes!

    Conference Whispers: NAB Show 2024 featured translation and transcription services leveraged in editing and broadcast in a keynote as well as in exhibits. Microsoft featured their solution based on Open AI. TRINT featured their text to speech solution adopted across the industry. You may also recall in Conference Whispers: Adobe Summit we covered Transperfect and their 200 languages. For the first time ever, we found the technology that the UN decided to use expanding a ten-minute demonstration into usage for the entire day’s session. Of course, if their presentations was anything like the one at CCCLV24, we understand. Worldwide Tech Connections does text to text, text to speech, speech to text or speech to speech. They build their own grammar and vocabulary models and parse the entire sentence before translating. Of course, if you only needed a bilingual medical back office, Access Salud was there to help.

    Technologies for Agents

    Awaken’s keynote points out that Agent Experience is your Brand’s experience to your customers. To that end, there were many technologies available to improve Agent experience. You may recall FLOWIT from Conference Whispers: CES 2024 that uses Generative AI over employee satisfaction. They were also featured in an Industry Whispers webinar. CCCLV24 had a similar technology by Centrical focused on improving employee experience.  They focus on creating best-in-class employee experience for frontline agents specifically. evaluagent was on exhibit sharing how their technology can execute deep analysis of the conversation and summarize freeing up their agents.

    For organizations seeking to add AI to their agents and leave it to the agent’s discretion when and how they use AI, then Smile.cx was there for you! If you want to capture all the folklore in your organization and make it available to your agents, ScreenSteps exhibited. If you want to avoid handing agents a 200 page searchable PDF files, Drop Cowboy may have an answer for you. In another exhibit, Reddy.IO has AI for your agents and stated a system setup takes 5 minutes. If your agents have heavy accents make calls frustrating for them to communicate, Tomato.ai who was on stage last year, was on exhibit this year. We also featured Tomato.ai in an Industry Whispers earlier this year.

    Big Profiles was on exhibit to provide intelligent customer profiles that predict certain customer propensities such as churn, purchases, cross sales, and collections. Structurely shared their solution to text or call customers including an AI created voice. Observe.AI can digest all conversations with customers to identify moments of interest. If you would appreciate accurate granular sentiment analysis over all those communications, Sestek and their conversational AI and analytics was on exhibit.

    Technology Customers will enjoy

    If you are an individual who’s number is the Do Not Call registry, you will appreciate DNC’s solution. DNC to assist call centers in respecting the list by scrubbing it for numbers that they should not contact. Meera.ai enables a company to stop annoying customers by maintaining contact cadence for the organization. TNS was one of the many vendors present that can add a telephony identifier, ANI, to wireless outbound calls to the ANI of the company represented. For readers who absolutely despise IVR (Interactive Voice Response) systems, Talkr.ai shared their technology ready to make your corporate IVR system obsolete.

    If understanding your agent is critical, you will appreciate it if the agent calling has access to Tomato.ai, especially in the event they have a heavy accent. Likewise, if the company your calling is quite popular, you would appreciate if the company you are calling deployed Omilia – able to handle 6 million concurrent calls. If the company you do business with leverages Drop Cowboy, you may just get a custom voicemail. Drop Cowboy leverages deep learning capabilities to generate a voice to customize mass voicemails. Finally, for those of you that just hate filling out surveys after a speaking with a call center, Miarec has you covered. Miarec leveraged conversational intelligences to automatically score a call eliminating the requirement to survey the caller.

    Next Year’s Conference

    Call & Contact Center Expo comes to Las Vegas every year. The next CCCLV will occur April 16 and 17th, 2025, in Las Vegas, NV at the Las Vegas Convention Center.

    *When vendors’ names are shared as examples in this document, it is to provide a concrete example of what was on display at the conference, not an evaluation or recommendation. Evaluation and recommendation of these vendors are beyond the scope of this specific research document. Other examples products in the same category may have also been on display.

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    ©2019-2024 TBW Advisors LLC. All rights reserved. TBW, Conference Whispers, Industry Whispers, Vendor Whispers, Technical Business Whispers, Whisper Reports, Whisper Studies, Whisper Ranking and Fact-based Research and Advisory are trademarks or registered trademarks of TBW Advisors LLC. This publication may not be reproduced or distributed in any form without TBW’s prior written permission. It consists of the opinions of TBW’s research organization which should not be construed as statements of fact. While the information contained in this publication has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, TBW disclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of such information. TBW does not provide legal, or investment advice and its research should not be construed or used as such. Your access and use of this publication are governed by the TBW Usage Policy. TBW research is produced independently by its research organization without influence or input from a third party. For further information, see Fact-based research publications on our website for more details.

  • Conference Whispers: Internet 2.0 Conference 2024

    Conference Whispers: Internet 2.0 Conference 2024

    Published: April 3, 2024                   ID: 2040

    Analyst(s): Doreen Galli, PhD MBA

    ABSTRACT

    Internet 2.0 Conference is one of five conferences that makes up 2.0 Conferences. In total the conferences had seven hundred attendees over 3 days packed with solid keynotes. Attendees seemed to agree that small but mighty was a good description of the event. Common themes including where is society going with technology as well as how these changes will impact society.

    Highlights

    • Five conferences all in one meant this tiny conference packed a powerful punch.
    • This event was all keynotes with speakers rotating between the 5 shows.

    Cautions

    •  This conference packs the sessions back-to-back. One must plan on your own for bio and physical movement breaks to avoid excessive sedentary day.

    Conference Vibe

    As a member of the collection of strategy conferences that create 2.0 Conferences, Internet 2.0 and all the conferences could best be described as small but impactful.  The event took place at Caesars in Las Vegas in their Augusta rooms. All the attendees bragged about the amazing food both for breakfast and lunch. Readers may experience the entire Conference Whispers Internet 2.0 Conference playlist.

    Where are we going?

    The biggest theme at the conference focused on where innovation in technology is going to take us. One keynote on the evolution of intelligence had a panel discuss the paradigms that go beyond AI and ML This session also included an interested example of how Yazzmoney was leveraging blockchain. Specifically, they are helping Zambia government to tokenize cattle, minerals, wildlife and renewable energy. This enables the cattle ranchers, for example to access the value of the cattle. Another keynote with an all-male panel discussed how AR, VR and MR can revolutionize customer experience.  Michael Koch keynote was a great discussion on the evolution of work, life, and play. Michael Koch discussed how technology has changed and is going to continue to change even faster with wireless power closer on the horizon than we imagine. Parts of this keynote reminded us of the 100 years of innovation exhibit at CES. One of the fascination aspects of Michael Koch’s keynote was the discussion around moving from creative and getting the ideas to adoption and conversion. There was to be another keynote on AI that looked like great potential at the start. Unfortunately the speakers time was cut in half and the deck didn’t work, thus Gary Y. Wu went Beyond AI in his talk. Futurist writer Jeffrey James Seyferth shared his vision of tech nirvana with attendees.

    One thing all agreed on is there will be an adaptation that must occur. Cyber burnout was a real concern in the keynote on wearables, robot and IoT. That session hilariously drew the parallel of the conference attendees not having breaks in between all the sessions to describe how cyber burnout occurs. With all this change, technologist need to be great communicators. To that end, Archer Now CEO, Trung Q. Pham brought his keynote, “The art of Communication Jiujitsu” to meet the demand. Trung emphasized that we retain 90% of what we teach.

    Social, Cultural and Environmental Impact

    On the keynote titled, “Leveraging tech for environmental and social Impact” the panel emphasized doing the right thing should be rewarded. Vincent Allen from VA-AV industries discussed how new and smart spaces can increase diversity and equity in the global economy. Admittedly, due to the speakers background and slant, we were having flashbacks from our coverage of last year’s NABShow. An inspirational keynote that featured Dee Jones from L3C Esports organization was hosted by gameplay. It was fascinating to learn how they are using esports and gaming to change the lives of inner-city kids in Michigan.

    Several panellists mentioned the concern of impact around generative AI hallucinations. To that end, one panellist shared that hallucinations are to be expected as the technology is in its toddler phase of reasoning. An interesting second concern on generative AI was raised concerning the massive computational requirements for a simple answer is surely not good for the planet.

    Security

    We were able to catch one interesting keynote on security. David Ronn from Zecurity shared their on-premises and edge solution to ending ransomware that blocks and examines all commands outside of a simple read command.

    Next Year’s Conference

    2.0 Conferences 2025 conference will be held in Las Vegas, Nevada at Caesars in April of 2025.

    *When vendors’ names are shared as examples in this document, it is to provide a concrete example of what was on display at the conference, not an evaluation or recommendation. Evaluation and recommendation of these vendors are beyond the scope of this specific research document. Other examples products in the same category may have also been on display.

    ©2019-20204 TBW Advisors LLC. All rights reserved. TBW, Conference Whispers, Technical Business Whispers, Whisper Reports, Whisper Studies, Whisper Rankings and Fact-based Research and Advisory are trademarks or registered trademarks of TBW Advisors LLC. This publication may not be reproduced or distributed in any form without TBW’s prior written permission. It consists of the opinions of TBW’s research organization which should not be construed as statements of fact. While the information contained in this publication has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, TBW disclaims all warranties as to the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of such information. TBW does not provide legal or investment advice and its research should not be construed or used as such. Your access and use of this publication are governed by the TBW Usage Policy. TBW research is produced independently by its research organization without influence or input from a third party. For further information, see Fact-based research publications on our website for more details.