Nuance Communications Inc. said it will provide speech-recognition technology for an ad-sponsored directory assistance service provided by Jingle Networks Inc.
Jingle, which powers the 1-800-FREE-411 offering, said it will integrate Nuance’s technology to enable users to search for local business listings by voice. Jingle claims to have the nation’s largest advertiser-paid directory assistance service in the nation, generating more than 20 million calls a month.
“Automated voice search quality is rising and costs are dropping,” analyst Matt Booth of The Kelsey Group said in a statement provided by the two companies. “Voice search reduces the per-call cost, and with query costs dropping, we are at the cusp of a cost threshold where proven ad models can profitably service queries.”
Nuance earlier this week received antitrust approval for its $293 million acquisition of VoiceSignal Technologies Inc., a fellow developer of speech-recognition software. The deal is expected to close within the next two weeks.
Meanwhile, V-Enable Inc. notched a customer win for its white-label voice-activated search offering. MetroPCS Communications Inc. said it will use V-Enable technology to power a directory-assistance service providing local residential and commercial listings, maps and driving directions.
The Dallas-based carrier will offer the service free to its high-end subscribers paying $45 or more per month.
Nuance snares Jingle deal, V-Enable hooks MetroPCS
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