Monday, February 09, 2009

BBC Moneybox on Speech Recognition for banking

I appreciate the BBC Radio's weekly personal finance program 'Moneybox' may not be something that all of my blog readers are aware of, but this week it's been looking at speech recognition and biometrics as a way of authenticating customers.

The article on their website is here and the podcast/recording is here. The reason for the interest is that two of the big UK banks say they are following developments closely and that a major Australian insurer is running the authentication in production. The story is being pushed strongly the vendor concerned, VeCommerce.

I have to feel a little bit of cynicism here. Speech recognition (and it's close cousin, speech biometrics) have been 'the next big thing' more often than I can count. It's not that this isn't good technology (VeCommerce are impressive, as are VoiceVault and a number of others), but adoption has been slow. Part of this, I feel, is that there is a big gap between what the makers of the technology are interested in and what the users/buyers seem to want. This was highlighted in the last Cisco/Dimension Data Speech survey (see here for my blog post on it). The industry tends to talk very technically, while the buyers are much more interested in customer experience. I suspect until this gap narrows, speech biometrics will remain a nice, niche technology having a vigorous debate about how successful it is as an anti-fraud measure.

Fraud in call centres is a big problem (see past posts like "Security, Call Centres and Fraud " from January last year and "Abbey National - did an IVR survey lead to a customer getting locked out their account? "), but I think speech biometrics needs to be much closer to the customer experience before it becomes more widely used.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

All I can say is "watch this space". I think you have identified the major issue very accurately in that previous marketing has been very technically focused. However, this is changing in a big way with some vendors (I know, I'm one) and this is having a dramatic impact. In my country, of the half a dozen or so major financial institutions, 4 of them are currently piloting or deploying biometrics as a security measure AND a customer experience measure. None of them are prepared to talk about it yet as they all perceive that it will give them a competitive market advantage.

Anonymous said...

There has been some recent breakthroughs in the voice biometrics space with Bell Canada enrolling more than 1.2M customers performing millions of successful verifications. The system replaces a tedious manual (and costly) authentication routine performed by agents. The deployment won SpeechTek 2008 implementation award.

Identity theft starts where there is minimal security. Telecom operators' contact centres are natural targets.

Alex said...

Thank you for the feedback, as it's very interesting to hear of good examples of voice biometrics in action.

I'm interested to hear about security, particularly in the non-financial services sector. I suspect retailers, as well as telcos, might have a use for voice biometrics as an anti-fraud measure.

Many thanks for the comments,
Alex

Anonymous said...

Here's another example which might be worth a couple of minutes of your time.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SlAbvgWlqu0

Alex said...

Thank you, that's a very interesting example from the Philippines. I'm quite impressed by that and how the ue of speech relates to the target audience.

Many thanks,
Alex