While most focus on human-to-computer interactions, Crisp.ai's founder argues that significant unsolved challenges and opportunities exist in using AI to improve human-to-human communication. This includes real-time enhancements like making a speaker's audio sound studio-quality with a single click, which directly boosts conversation productivity.

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The goal of "always-on" engagement is a seamless, contextual relationship. The best model is interacting with a friend: you can switch from text to a phone call, and they'll remember the context and anticipate your needs. This is the new standard AI should enable for brands.

Don't worry if customers know they're talking to an AI. As long as the agent is helpful, provides value, and creates a smooth experience, people don't mind. In many cases, a responsive, value-adding AI is preferable to a slow or mediocre human interaction. The focus should be on quality of service, not on hiding the AI.

Expensive user research often sits unused in documents. By ingesting this static data, you can create interactive AI chatbot personas. This allows product and marketing teams to "talk to" their customers in real-time to test ad copy, features, and messaging, making research continuously actionable.

For professionals who find phone calls demanding and texting too superficial for relationship building, voice memos offer an effective middle ground. This asynchronous communication method allows for the nuance and personality of voice, fostering a deeper connection without the pressure of a real-time conversation.

The magic of ChatGPT's voice mode in a car is that it feels like another person in the conversation. Conversely, Meta's AI glasses failed when translating a menu because they acted like a screen reader, ignoring the human context of how people actually read menus. Context is everything for voice.

The most significant near-term impact of voice AI will be in call centers. Rather than simply replacing agents, the technology will first elevate their effectiveness and productivity. Concurrently, voice bots will handle initial queries, solving the common pain point of long wait times and improving overall customer experience.

A tangible way to implement a "more human" AI strategy is to use automation to free up employee time from repetitive tasks. This saved time should then be deliberately reallocated to high-value, human-centric activities, such as providing personalized customer consultations, that technology cannot replicate.

A common objection to voice AI is its robotic nature. However, current tools can clone voices, replicate human intonation, cadence, and even use slang. The speaker claims that 97% of people outside the AI industry cannot tell the difference, making it a viable front-line tool for customer interaction.

To avoid robotic content, use “humanization prompting.” This involves uploading transcripts of your natural speech (from interviews or voice notes) to a custom GPT’s knowledge base, training it to adopt your unique cadence, vocabulary, and style.

Despite the focus on text interfaces, voice is the most effective entry point for AI into the enterprise. Because every company already has voice-based workflows (phone calls), AI voice agents can be inserted seamlessly to automate tasks. This use case is scaling faster than passive "scribe" tools.