China Daily (Hong Kong)

Virtual assistants a real, big help

- By HE WEI in Shanghai hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

A personal assistant should no longer be a privilege for only the rich or the powerful — that is the philosophy behind Wang Guanchun’s creation, an artificial intelligen­ce-based Chinese-language app called Zhuli Laiye (Laiye in short, meaning ‘Here comes the assistant’.)

With a few taps on the phone, users can text or speak out instructio­ns to get everything from coffee to flowers delivered on demand and for free.

A startup from Microsoft’s incubator program Accelerato­r, Laiye received series-A funding last year with the tech giant itself leading the investors. Among all of the tech giant’s graduate programs, Laiye is the first Chinese startup to receive Microsoft’s investment.

Laiye is meant to be a dream assistant: it is profession­al, prompt and receptive to criticism, said Wang, a Princeton graduate of machine learning, who has worked with Baidu on intelligen­t search.

Three emerging trends propelled Wang to set up his own business in July 2015: the deepening of onlineto-offline or O2O integratio­n of retailers; the predominan­t role of messaging apps in smartphone­s; and the rapid advances in artificial intelligen­ce-based technologi­es.

“Rescheduli­ng meetings back and forth and optimizing for attributes like timing and location — nobody likes that part of his or her job,” said Wang. “What we do is to enable users to make a smooth conversati­on with the virtual assistant and let it handle your tasks, without realizing that you are actually talking to an algorithm the whole time.”

million

Laiye first debuted a basic service via WeChat, the ubiquitous messaging app in China, followed by its own app. Later, it launched a premium version that caters specifical­ly to larger and more complicate­d requests, and charges a monthly fee of 198 yuan ($28.6).

For instance, a regular user can order a cup of sugar-free cappuccino, pay online, and wait the drink to be delivered in an hour. Those who sign up for the VIP service are entitled to more tailored-made services, from booking flight tickets to fetching urgent documents.

In the past 18 months, it has reg- istered over 2 million users. Over 90 percent of the interactio­ns are AI-enabled. Only when a major challenge is detected by the app, the back-end support staff step in.

“It almost feels like having a hotel concierge around from 7 am to 10 pm, and it acts as a full-time employee that you don’t have to pay full time,” Wang said.

AI powers most apps that function as virtual assistants. For example, AI will take into account a client’s location and tell the assistant what service should be used to complete the task.

AI technology also enables machine or app learning — that is, over time, it will learn from the user’s habits by analyzing frequent tasks, and patterns in them. For instance, the app would remember Wang’s preference for aisle seats when booking flight tickets, so he doesn’t need to specify that requiremen­t again and again.

For Laiye, revenue comes mainly from three sources: VIP membership fees, commission fees from merchants, and the sales of technologi­es to industries that want to adopt AI-enabled services to bolster business.

“For instance, we are seeing this growing trend of online skincare vendors using online beauty advisors to give tips to potential buyers. That’s something we’ll probably dig deeper into,” he said.

the number of users who registered on the Zhuli Laiye app in the past 18 months

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A doctor uses Wingspan’s AI-enabled online diagnosis system to carry out remote diagnosis.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A doctor uses Wingspan’s AI-enabled online diagnosis system to carry out remote diagnosis.

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