Trends on Tuesday: The Digital Interface — Without a Face — Is Coming Fast
The seemingly sci-fi world envisioned in the movie Her is very close to becoming our reality. Several new developments merging hardware, artificial intelligence technology, chatbots and persistent audio assistants are now available, with software developer kits to expand the platforms.
Kirillm, iStock, Thinkstock
Amazon was first to market with their Echo device, and since have added the Echo Dot, both using their voice assistant “Alexa” to allow users to play music, buy goods from Amazon, call for a cab, check the weather and other tasks—all just using their voice commands.
Google has been working on parts of the market but made a big leap forward in October, adding several devices on the new Google Assistant platform. Google Assistant is an enhanced, audio-driven version of Google Now, their early mobile phone audio and visual card-based assistant. Google Assistant is currently only available on Google’s new line of devices, including their new Pixel phones and Google Home, a speaker device very similar to Echo that uses audio commands to play music, control home appliances, manage tasks and more.
Both of these home platforms, and the growth from Google into the mobile space, are going to make this become more mainstream for Americans, especially with developer kits getting released to expand both Amazon and (coming in December) Google’s hardware capabilities. Government agencies can start thinking about how they might be able to optimize their content and experiences for these platforms. (If you’re wondering, Apple has Siri but hasn’t released any similar hardware around voice commands.)
Most of the actions currently on the voice-command platforms are utility driven (which is how much of early mobile adoption was driven, through utility-driven activities). Experian released market research in September about Amazon Echo users, examining how they use the device in their daily lives. Some of the top Echo tasks users have tried included:
- Set a timer—84.9%
- Play a song—82.4%
- Read the news—66.0%
- Set an alarm—64.2%
- Check the time—61.6%
- Tell a joke—60.4%
- Control smart lights—45.9%
- Add item to shopping list—45.3%
- Connect to paid music service—40.9%
- Provide the traffic—36.5%
Similarly, the five most repeated actions were playing a song (34%), controlling smart lights (30.8%), setting a timer (24.5%) connecting to a paid music service (18.2%) and reading the news (17%).
The majority of Echo users also continue using the device after purchase, even after its novelty wears off. The report said 39% of respondents use it more since the purchase, 48.4% say they use it the same, and only 12.6% say they use it less, which is quite good for a totally new technology device. Starting a new vertical category like that can take time to grow adoption, but it appears voice assistant tools are showing high utility value for users, and that will likely continue as we move out of the innovators and early adopters stage into the devices becoming more mainstream with Google’s new platform.
Also, as AI, chatbots (like the 15,000+ on Facebook), and voice-to-text commands continue to evolve, the range of services available on these new platforms is going to exponentially expand—and very quickly. As William Gibson said, “The future is here, it’s just not evenly distributed.”
You can read more about the Experian Amazon Echo research and share this blog post with your co-workers to start envisioning if there are potential future opportunities for your government digital services and content to be integrated into these interface-less digital experiences.
All references to specific brands, products, and/or companies are used only for illustrative purposes and do not imply endorsement by the U.S. federal government or any federal government agency.