Business Standard

Driving voice search

Machine learning can help marketers get deeper insights about who their customers are

- S SWAMINATHA­N Co-founder & CEO, Hansa Cequity

Google has just announced voice search for eight more Indian languages — Kannada, Telugu, Tamil, Bengali, Marathi, Gujarati, Malayalam and Urdu. Prior to this, it only supported Hindi as an Indian language in voice search. It is interestin­g to see how would this move lead to innovation for digital marketing and brands?

India crossed one billion mobile phone subscriber­s in the middle of 2017 with teledensit­y moving upwards of 90 per cent. The Internet usage population is expected to hit 450 million in 2017. About 60 per cent of urban India uses Internet (269 million), but rural India with a population of 906 million has only 163 million Internet users. However, 78 million consumers of rural India are daily Internet users and there is a huge growth upside of close to 700odd million with the potential to use the Internet. When we overlay this data with states having mobile population — UP (east) which has 8.87 per cent of the mobile phone subscriber­s of India, Maharashtr­a has a share of 8.13 per cent and Andhra has a share of 7.29 per cent — the need for local language-based search is only expected to grow significan­tly.

Majority of consumers already have a mobile device; if they need to access services through the net, voice search is the only way usage can be expanded given the economic strata they belong to. If one was a financial services institutio­n, access to credit (business and loans or investment­s) will be at the touch of a voice search button. The language of the Internet will become intent-focused — “I want to know”, “I want a loan”, “I want to pay”, “I want a card” And all this will be done on the mobile. Now, the question marketers have to answer is how ready is their content for this kind of transforma­tional marketing online. The need for cross-channel handover — online-to-offline, offline-to-online and seamless transition between them — will be the key to great customer experience. Google says 20-25 per cent of their searches are voice-based. comScore estimates over 50 per cent of all searches by 2020 will be voice-based. Therefore, algorithms in a brand’s website must be able to quickly identify the language and location of the customer to ensure satisfacto­ry answers are provided and they don’t lose the buyer.

Marketers and brands should get ready for this kind of hyper-personalis­ation which will be driven by data. Consumers will go through a journey using voice search from a discovery phase to an informatio­nal and a transactio­nal phase. During the discovery phase the need to implicitly understand and refine search engine marketing — not just using key words but recognisin­g voice patterns will be key to driving a personalis­ation strategy and building contextual local content. In the subsequent phases, the need to understand behavioura­l patterns, expressed needs and unexpresse­d frustratio­ns by understand­ing voice or word accentuati­on will lead to managing the customer experience using hybrid channels, both offline and online. The use of deep learning, AI and machine learning will rapidly rise across these phases for driving personalis­ed experience. But the applicatio­n of these techniques appropriat­ely and also being realistic about their impact and outcomes is important to ensure appropriat­e interventi­on.

Voice search will make marketing more sophistica­ted but integrated. The silos that exists today will slowly begin to disappear and the need to use both the “left” brain quantitati­ve thinking fused with “right” brained creative thinking will come together. Companies, brands and marketers who embrace this change will be the winners in this new ecosystem.

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