Uniphore acquires ActionIQ and Infoworks
Uniphore today announced the acquisition of data technology companies ActionIQ and Infoworks. The move is a key part of the company’s new Zero Data AI Cloud, aimed at accelerating enterprise adoption of AI.
The platform is designed to overcome common barriers to business adoption, such as data access, accuracy and flexibility. The Zero Data AI Cloud helps organizations make better use of their data by removing the need for complicated data migrations and integrations.
Dig Deeper: GenAI must earn consumer trust if it is to transform search marketing
“The main reason we hear about these AI initiatives being stuck in proof of concept and not in production is that these companies don’t have their raw material, which is data, prepared in a way that these models and AI agents can start functioning. consume,” Umesh Sachdev, CEO and co-founder of Uniphore, said on CNBC.
ActionIQ’s Customer Data Platform and Infoworks’ Enterprise Data Platform significantly enhance Uniphore’s AI capabilities.
ActionIQ brings expertise in customer data management, enabling businesses to gain deeper insights into customer behavior and preferences. Infoworks specializes in data engineering and automation, simplifying the process of preparing and cleaning data for AI analytics.
Uniphore believes that combining these technologies with its AI capabilities will provide organizations with a tool to accelerate the development and deployment of AI-based applications.
Add MarTech to your Google News feed.
About the author
Constantine von Hoffman is editor-in-chief of MarTech. A veteran journalist, Con has covered business, finance, marketing and technology for CBSNews.com, Brandweek, CMO and Inc. He was an editor at the Boston Herald, a news producer at NPR and has written for Harvard Business Review , Boston. Magazine, Sierra and many other publications. He has also been a professional stand-up comedian, has lectured at anime and video game conventions on everything from My Neighbor Totoro to the history of dice and board games, and is the author of the realistic novel and magical John Henry the Revelator. He lives in Boston with his wife, Jennifer, and too many or too few dogs.