XOi – Bringing AI to the Field

Technologist and VC Kai-Fu Lee has called AI the ‘singular thing that will be larger than all of human tech revolutions added together’ and said AI will probably replace 50% of human jobs. It’s appropriate to be concerned about how we manage the significant disruption AI will bring, but AI has enormous potential to accelerate businesses and elevate the human condition.  And AI is (finally) turning from sci-fi into reality as software eats the world, compute power gets cheaper/faster, algorithms and models mature, and massive amounts of data become available.

Huge investments in AI are driving this recent traction.  As a recent McKinsey study outlined, investment in AI has been accelerating at an unprecedented rate with $26 to $39B invested in 2016, which was nearly three times as much as in 2013.  Internal R&D ($18-27B) paced well ahead of external investment from P/E and VC ($6-9B), as the big tech companies (Apple, Google, Baidu, Amazon, Salesforce) and automotive companies (BMW, Toyota, Tesla) poured money into computer vision, robotics, speech recognition, virtual agents and machine learning to power their own applications.

The big tech companies are building a lot of the backbone of AI, and are rapidly advancing a variety of models and algorithms (many of which are being made available as open source).  As venture investors, we do not seek to fund AI companies to directly compete against these massive R&D investments.  Instead, we look for software companies solving business problems with compelling workflows that generate new datasets. These unique datasets can then be used to build upon the foundational AI technologies (e.g. computer vision, natural language processing, open source models) for a particular vertical.  We are in violent agreement with the comments by Accel’s Jake Flomenberg in his recent interview on Twenty Minute VC – vertical SaaS companies innovating in AI should crawl, walk, then run – build workflow first, harness a new and unique dataset from these workflows, apply models and algorithms and then iterate.

This is why we are excited to lead the latest round of investment in XOi. Aaron, Anthony and the team at XOi identified core problems in Field Service – a rapidly growing trade skills gap and a lack of trust between technician and end customer.  Their VisionTM product delivers compelling workflows that help bridge this gap, build trust, and accelerate sales.  These workflows enable the capture of millions of new data points – audio and video content of every job performed by a technician in the field.  The XOi team has been applying models and algorithms to this data to drive even more efficiencies and sales for their customers, and much more is still yet to come.

To read more about the XOi investment, see the full press release here.

Mike Becker

Managing Director, Vocap Investment Partners

Mike loves the entrepreneurial process and has over 20 years of investing, technology and operations experience. He works with entrepreneurs in a variety of technology sectors, including field service, media technology, supply chain, productivity, and health care IT. Mike currently serves in a Board capacity with KetteQ, boostr, XOi Technologies, Hive, and Medicom. He has also Chaired, Co-Chaired and served on the board of Venture Atlanta, one of the nation’s top technology conferences.

Prior to joining Vocap, Mike served as the COO of Triton Digital’s Applications & Services Division. During his tenure at Triton, he led the integration of multiple acquisitions and built a 100+ person Product, Technology, and Client Services team that delivered SaaS loyalty marketing, contesting, research, and gamification solutions to an expanding international client base. Prior to Triton Digital, Mike co-founded Enticent, a leading SaaS provider of loyalty marketing and audience relationship management tools for media companies. Mike helped to lead the company through three rounds of venture financing and a successful exit with the sale to Triton Digital. In addition to these roles, Mike has served as a Partner with Summit Investors, an investment partnership focusing on private and public investment opportunities. He also held positions with Kurt Salmon Associates and Andersen Consulting, where he worked on management consulting projects related to strategy, operations, and technology implementation.

Mike holds a bachelor’s degree from Duke University and an MBA from the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business. He currently resides in Atlanta, GA with his wife and three children.

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