Interesting point about an AI person assistant. Here's my question for you... how do you know that's not what I'm trying to do?
Put another way, the "digital personal assistant" market would be almost impossible to directly break into considering Apple, Amazon, Google, and Microsoft all have versions.
Interesting point about an AI person assistant. Here's my question for you... how do you know that's not what I'm trying to do?
Put another way, the "digital personal assistant" market would be almost impossible to directly break into considering Apple, Amazon, Google, and Microsoft all have versions.
If I wanted to break into that market, I wouldn't launch yet-another digital assistant. I'd find a tiny little task I could help people with (like, for example, automatically sending follow-up emails for them), get a good foundation of customers, and then I'd slowly expand. Maybe next I help with scheduling dental appointments. Then I'm booking summer camp for kids. Eventually, I've become everyone's go-to, AI-powered digital assistant without anyone realizing that was the plan all along.
I'm not saying it's what I'm trying to do. But I'm also not saying it isn't...
Agreed. You have to enable in a very precise vertical with a clearly defined use case. As you mention the heavy lifting is being done by others, so it is really UI/UX and packaging/marketing. On dental, medical, therapy (and other appointments that are scheduled), cancelled appointments are costly (non recoverable time) and an AI can fill with others who would love to jump the line. Historically analysis clearly shows the monetary benefit to the provider. I do not think it will just happen, it needs dedicated B2B sales and bespoke solutions need to be avoided, otherwise you become a systems integrator.
Interesting point about an AI person assistant. Here's my question for you... how do you know that's not what I'm trying to do?
Put another way, the "digital personal assistant" market would be almost impossible to directly break into considering Apple, Amazon, Google, and Microsoft all have versions.
If I wanted to break into that market, I wouldn't launch yet-another digital assistant. I'd find a tiny little task I could help people with (like, for example, automatically sending follow-up emails for them), get a good foundation of customers, and then I'd slowly expand. Maybe next I help with scheduling dental appointments. Then I'm booking summer camp for kids. Eventually, I've become everyone's go-to, AI-powered digital assistant without anyone realizing that was the plan all along.
I'm not saying it's what I'm trying to do. But I'm also not saying it isn't...
Agreed. You have to enable in a very precise vertical with a clearly defined use case. As you mention the heavy lifting is being done by others, so it is really UI/UX and packaging/marketing. On dental, medical, therapy (and other appointments that are scheduled), cancelled appointments are costly (non recoverable time) and an AI can fill with others who would love to jump the line. Historically analysis clearly shows the monetary benefit to the provider. I do not think it will just happen, it needs dedicated B2B sales and bespoke solutions need to be avoided, otherwise you become a systems integrator.