Ragy Thomas
Analyst · William Blair. Please state your question.
Yes, we are and I'll confirm that. It's a lot more of a slam up business case with very much less risk factors. And the reason, if you recall, Arjun, many quarters or two, three years ago, we basically started talking about Care and kind of, focusing more on that. Again, the strategy is always built in this unified platform. Within that, we think in the next few years, there's a big opportunity coming up with everybody trying to move contact centers to the cloud, consolidate data centers. And what's happening is the traditional CCaaS vendors put a lot of their energy into building the telephony infrastructure, which 10-years ago, that was a differentiator. Can you keep the calls, manage the calls? Can you keep the cost down? Can you route a call? And can you give the call and can you make the IVR work? And today, we're in a place where that just got, in my mind, fairly completely commoditized, right? And good players like Amazon will continue to kind of make that as a part of the infrastructure. And we got lucky in that the avenues we've just been building the app layer, making the agent more productive, putting more AI to working in understanding conversations and responding back has bought and picking up all public data and connecting to all channels. So, that's the advantage we have. And so we're able to kind of, like I said, go into a company and say, let me show you the 15% of your service complaints that are not being responded, give me your average SLA. And let me beat it. I've said this to you before, the company -- one of the largest tech company that user care. One is our first definition partners, right? An average case, that's resolved in Sprinklr cost them 30% advisors responded to 50% faster and have 80% less dissatisfaction. We can quantify it. We won the award this year as one of the top vendors for CX. So, this becomes -- to your point, it's a little bit more of a clearer articulation to value with fewer variables to play.