Tech15:03 · 13m ago

NICE CEO Reflects on $955 Million Cognigy Acquisition and AI Customer Service Impact

Globes
Translated & summarized from Globes by baba
The story · English

A year ago, Israeli software company NICE acquired AI firm Cognigy for $955 million, marking one of the highest valuations in the customer experience sector. Philip Heltoewig, Cognigy's co-founder and NICE's AI lead, told Globes that selling a company for nearly a billion dollars is very different from just receiving a valuation. He noted that aside from Intercom's recent $3.6 billion sale, few companies in their field have sold for over a billion dollars. Heltoewig emphasized the difficulty of refusing such an offer, explaining that while a lower upfront price with potential future gains might be appealing, such deals rarely exist. He also highlighted that as founders, they continue to receive significant incentives within NICE, allowing them to benefit from the company's growth.

At NICE's annual conference in London, the company announced that the integration of Cognigy has been completed ahead of schedule. NICE claims to be the only company globally offering an end-to-end AI-powered customer experience platform that can resolve issues within seconds, including flight cancellations, refunds, product returns, and compliance with regulations across 100 languages. The platform also supports customer service center management and trains AI to solve problems effectively. NICE reported handling 25 billion AI interactions annually, with a 500% increase in platform deployment and over 2 billion interactions processed last year.

Heltoewig illustrated the platform's real-world impact with the example of Lufthansa's April pilot strike, which stranded tens of thousands of passengers. Instead of long waits and frustration, customers received proactive notifications with new flight options or refunds, supported by AI agents available via phone, app, or website. Over seven days, the AI processed 20 million interactions related to rebookings, refunds, and hotel reservations, turning a crisis into a customer care success.

Regarding partnerships, Heltoewig stressed that a key condition of the NICE acquisition was that Cognigy remain available as an independent platform alongside its integration. This allowed customers using competitors like Genesys and Cisco to continue accessing Cognigy. However, Genesys removed Cognigy from its marketplace after the acquisition, a move Heltoewig called "stupid," as it forces customers to buy directly from Cognigy with a discount, benefiting Cognigy but hurting Genesys. He expressed confidence that despite this, Cognigy’s AI agents perform best on their native platform.

The article was written by a guest at NICE's annual customer experience conference in London.

Read the original at Globes
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