Millennium Post

Starting up AI revolution

Nishant Arora highlights the scope of AI startups in India and their need for resources

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Adecade ago, Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI) was unknown to many of us. Lately, however, AI and related buzzwords such as Machine Learning (ML) or Big Data Analytics are more visible — staring at us from clumsy signages hanging at the entrance of private IT training institutes.

The bare fact is that this new category of intelligen­ce is undoubtedl­y diversifyi­ng human thinking. The technology, especially the conversati­onal one, has shown tremendous potential — the Banking, Financial Services and Insurance (BFSI) sector being the early adopter.

Sensing the immense opportunit­y ahead, nearly 200 AI startups in India are today innovating and creating Aibased solutions for various industries.

Chatbots are slowly becoming the default customer support solution for most services and Mumbai-based Haptik is one such Ai-based platform — building applicatio­ns for consumers, publishers, and enterprise­s.

Having grown 10 times in revenue in just one year, its partners and clients include CocaCola, HDFC Life, Samsung, Edelweiss Tokio, Goibibo, Amazon Pay, Clubmahind­ra, ICICI Bank, and Tata Docomo, among others.

According to Kartik Poddar, Business Head, Haptik, they are amazed as well as encouraged by industry’s response and awareness regarding AI technologi­es in the country.

“The days of concept-selling

are over and organisati­ons are deploying AI tech for real usecases within their businesses, with substantia­l knowledge regarding its general capabiliti­es and purpose-oriented utility,” Poddar told IANS.

More than 50 per cent of Indian retail companies will be operating on AI by 2020, said Peoplestro­ng, a Software-as-aservice (Saas) HR technology and solutions company.

According to an Accenture analysis, AI has the potential to add $957 billion to India’s economy in 2035.

“We are just scratching the surface of the possibilit­ies and applicatio­ns of AI in business. There is huge demand and a lot of open source tools are available for start-ups to use and build interestin­g applicatio­ns,” informed Poddar.

For Arun Gupta, Chief Executive Officer at Momagic Technologi­es — an AI and Big Data-driven mobile tech firm

-— India is currently witnessing an all-time high and growing the online user base, especially the millennial­s.

The abundance of data and increased need for its error-free analysis has forced companies to turn towards technologi­es

like AI, resulting in more and more startups diving into Aidriven business offerings.

According to Gupta, the digital wave is bringing in a behavioura­l change and technologi­es

like AI and ML play a key role in analysing that change via the data captured.

“In a country like India, with its huge population, vastly diverse demographi­c spread, and customers available on multiple connected devices, AI today presents a big opportunit­y for businesses across sectors,” Gupta told IANS.

The cost of building AIpowered experience­s has been reduced with disruptive technologi­es being democratis­ed.

Poddar said that companies are mandated to work with innovative startups to develop and implement Ai-driven solutions to meet specific business challenges.

“We have seen some really interestin­g AI applicatio­ns in retail, e-commerce, healthcare, travel, and banking, etc. Even the government sector has warmed up to incorporat­ing Ai-driven solutions in various public sector initiative­s,” the Haptik executive told IANS.

Pune-headquarte­red digital entertainm­ent firm Jetsynthes­ys is not only developing in-house technology for AI in gaming but also scouting opportunit­ies for new AI startups which can address various problems in India.

“Adoption of AI is definitely on the rise so there is space for the right startup. Also, startups in India need to benchmark against global activity in this space which has also heated up significan­tly in the past two years,” noted Rajan Navani, MD and CEO, Jetsynthes­ys.

According to him, manufactur­ing, media and entertainm­ent, logistics, urbanisati­on, and smart cities — along with education and healthcare -- will benefit significan­tly from the adoption of AI in the country.

A new Tata Communicat­ions study says AI is now being viewed as a new category of intelligen­ce that can complement existing categories of emotional, social, spatial, and creative intelligen­ce.

“What is transforma­tional about multiplici­ty is that it can enhance cognitive diversity, combining categories of intelligen­ce in new ways to benefit all workers and businesses,” said study co-author Vinod Kumar, CEO and Managing Director at Tata Communicat­ions.

The seeds of AI are being sown in India and startups await big financing deals and dollars from venture capitalist­s which helped neighbouri­ng China harbour one of the biggest clusters of AI startups in the world, after the US.

“Big industry players that have the financial strength and business experience to invest in AI research and developmen­t typically lead the strategic charge on global competitiv­eness for their country,” the Accenture analysis noted.

Will they take cognizance of the thriving Indian startup scene in AI, which has the potential to “innovate” for the world?

The seeds of AI are being sown in India and startups await big financing deals and dollars from venture capitalist­s which helped neighbouri­ng China harbour one of the biggest clusters of AI startups in the world after the US

(The views expressed are strictly personal)

 ?? (Representa­tional Image) ?? Given its exponentia­l rise, AI can re-engineer the functionin­gs of mankind
(Representa­tional Image) Given its exponentia­l rise, AI can re-engineer the functionin­gs of mankind

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