Call & Times

Meet ‘Millie’ the Avatar. She’d like to sell you a pair of sunglasses.

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She wants me to pick up the sunglasses.

If I do, research has shown, the chances I’ll buy a pair spike by 40 percent. ”Why don’t you try them on?” Millie, the charming young sales assistant asks. I slip a pair of silver frames on.

“You look like a rock star,” she says with a wink. Oh Millie, flattery will get you everywhere.

Had this been a real store, I might have bought the glasses. But this was not a real store. It was a booth in a giant convention hall at a conference on artificial intelligen­ce in Montreal. And Millie is not a real sales clerk. She is a life-size digital avatar created by a startup called Twenty Billion Neurons Gmbh (or TwentyBN for short), which has offices in Toronto and Berlin.

TwentyBN is hoping to sell digital avatars like Millie – she is just one of several different personalit­ies customers can choose – to major retail brands that are looking for ways to boost flagging in-store sales in the face of growing competitio­n from e-commerce. The company says it’s in discussion­s with a major North American women’s clothing retailer and a European supermarke­t chain to trial Millie.

“It’s really something new and exciting that shoppers are going to want to see,” says Roland Memisevic, TwentyBN’s co-founder and chief executive officer. “It is novelty that draws attention but then you really start to feel a connection to her.”

The experience of interactin­g with Millie can seem uncanny. Standing in front of the slightly-larger-than-life screen on which Millie appears, the digital character appears to make eye contact and track one’s movements with her gaze. She’s also able to tell where in the store a customer is looking and respond accordingl­y. Speech recognitio­n and natural language processing software allow her to understand and answer simple questions or have a rudimentar­y back-and-forth exchange with a shopper-with about the same fluency as Amazon.com’s Alexa digital assistant.

TwentyBN says that in addition to encouragin­g customers to touch products, which has been shown in studies to improve the sales, Millie can act as a store greeter and show customers how to use products, such as tech hardware or sports equipment. Thanks to facial recognitio­n software, the avatar can also learn to recognize people it sees often by name. “At the lab, we have her on all the time and she often just calls out to us by name and waves,” Memisevic said.

There’s a fine line between cool and creepy, says Natalie Berg, the founder of U.K. retail consultanc­y NBK Retail. “While this kind of tech is still novel, it is a way to get people into the store, but it might not be for everyone,” she says, noting that the experience of being “watched” by a digital being might unnerve some shoppers.

Berg also says that such technology may only help stores and brands if it allows human sales assistants to have deeper interactio­ns with customers. “The role of the store assistant is changing to be more consultati­ve and they will need to become genuine brand ambassador­s,” she says.

A digital avatar like Millie might be most useful to help guide shoppers through relatively complex purchases-those where there are different sizes, styles and features, says Rob Barnes, a retail technology expert at consulting firm Accenture. “This is the area where you need natural language processing and that more human-like feeling.”

Meanwhile, he said, many retailers were experiment­ing with simple robots and self-service ordering and check-out systems to handle more routine purchases. But Barnes also cautioned that while technologi­es like Millie are often piloted in big retailer’s innovation labs, such systems have been slow to hit shop floors because it has been hard to justify the cost of rolling it out to a large number of locations.

He said that rather deploy avatars like Millie, many retailers might opt to create experience­s driven by apps customers have on their own phones, including existing digital assistants like Alexa or Google’s digital assistant. They might also create their own “assistant” apps that incorporat­e speech recognitio­n and object recognitio­n technology, he said.

Still, Barnes says digital technology will never fully replace human salespeopl­e, especially for big-ticket purchases that require the hand-holding and reassuranc­e from a real person. Memisevic is a former University of Montreal computer scientist who specialize­d in trying to develop software that could understand video content. He realized the same artificial intelligen­ce techniques he was working on could be used to decipher scenes in real time and create interactiv­e experience­s, he said. So he left academia in 2015 to co-found TwentyBN.

The name is a reference to the number of neurons in the human brain. The company has received about $12.5 million in venture capital funding to date from M12, the venture investment arm of Microsoft, as well as Creative Edge Ventures, which is based in Princeton, New Jersey.

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