Christopher P. Willis on Using AI to Create a Better User Experience with Better Content
In this episode, Frank and Andy speak to Christopher P. Willis about Using AI to Create a Better User Experience with Better Content.
Certainly, if you have ever you read instructions or product documentation that left you annoyed and confused, then you can appreciate the work he does with Acrolinx.
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Transcript
00:00:00 BAILey
Hello and welcome to data driven.
00:00:02 BAILey
In this episode Frank and Andy speak with Christopher Willis about how artificial intelligence can help bake brands create congruent content across cultures, languages and writers.
00:00:13 BAILey
One quick word of correction.
00:00:15 BAILey
Frank made the assumption that CPO was chief product Officer.
00:00:19 BAILey
Chris is actually Chief pipeline officer.
00:00:21 BAILey
In addition to being chief marketing Officer, Acrolinx currently does not have a chief product officer.
00:00:28 BAILey
Frank should know by now what happens when you assume anything.
00:00:32 BAILey
I’ll have a chat with him later.
00:00:34 BAILey
For now, enjoy the show.
00:00:44 Frank
Hello and welcome to data driven, the podcast where we explore the emerging fields of data science, machine learning and artificial intelligence.
00:00:52 Frank
If you’d like to think of data as the new oil, then you can think of us like Car Talk because we focus on where the rubber meets the virtual road and with me on this epic road trip down the information.
00:01:04 Frank
Superhighway as always is Andy Leonard.
00:01:07 Frank
How’s it going Andy?
00:01:08 Andy
Good Frank, how are you doing?
00:01:10 Frank
I’m doing great, I’m doing great.
00:01:11 Frank
It’s a beautiful Tuesday morning here in the DC area.
00:01:14 Frank
We’re recording this on September 28th and I can’t believe it’s already October.
00:01:22 Andy
Almost gosh, yeah, yeah.
00:01:23 Frank
Almost October.
00:01:25 Andy
It’s it’s been beautiful fall weather.
00:01:28 Andy
Past few days here in sunny Farmville, VA.
00:01:33 Andy
And I’m really enjoying that.
00:01:35 Andy
Got a lot of outdoors work done in the past few days and that’s always a good thing.
00:01:40 Frank
Yeah, we just built the trampoline for the kids and that was a was a lot of fun.
00:01:46 Frank
’cause the.
00:01:46 Frank
Instructions were horrible.
00:01:50 Andy
Did you get one with that big net around it?
00:01:53 Andy
Keep from bouncing off and ’cause otherwise it should come with a coupon for a free cast.
00:01:58 Frank
Freecast and free healthcare that’d be funny.
00:02:00 Andy
Yes, yes, that’s right, yeah.
00:02:03 Frank
Yeah, so without further ado I’d like to introduce we have this.
00:02:07 Frank
Awesome guest today.
00:02:08 Frank
We’ve been really lucking out on terms of folks coming to us and and suggesting guests for us, which is quite refreshing, actually.
00:02:17 Frank
So so today we have with us Christopher Willis, Acrolinx Chief Marketing Officer and Chief Product Officer.
00:02:25 Frank
Christopher is an expert in technology, marketing and brand alignment alignment with over 20 years of experience in with some of the world biggest tech names including Perfecto.
00:02:35 Frank
Kmag and Cambridge technology group.
00:02:39 Frank
And through his work at Acrolinx, he’s become a renowned thought leader on the topics of content governance and brand alignment.
00:02:46 Frank
He’s also an expert on AI and how AI can help.
00:02:50 Frank
Big brands can great create congruent content across cultures, language and writers.
00:02:56 Frank
Acrolinx creates tools for developing content that feels human, relatable, and compassionate.
00:03:01 Frank
It’s already used by some of the biggest brands in the technology world today, so welcome to the show, Chris.
00:03:09 Christopher
Thank you, I’m excited about your trampoline.
00:03:12 Frank
Well, thank you.
00:03:12 Frank
Thank you.
00:03:13 Frank
You should come on down I.
00:03:14 Frank
I think you’re on the East Coast somewhere in Boston.
00:03:17 Christopher
I am outside of Boston, yes?
00:03:18 Frank
Awesome cool cool you never know ’cause sometimes people will put where they used to live on LinkedIn and not update that so.
00:03:26 Christopher
Nope, haven’t gone anywhere in what a year?
00:03:27 Christopher
And a.
00:03:27 Christopher
Half if not.
00:03:28 Frank
Right, right?
00:03:29 Christopher
A lot, not a lot of travel, yeah?
00:03:30 Frank
Year and a half in the two week lockdown.
00:03:35 Frank
Well, welcome to the show so so.
00:03:38 Frank
Tell me about what so, so you’re a CMO and a CPO.
00:03:43 Frank
That’s that’s, uh.
00:03:45 Frank
That’s an interesting mix I I can see how the two are related, but can you explain kind of like what it is you do for acrolinx and maybe a little bit about.
00:03:54 Christopher
So I do a bunch of things.
00:03:55 Christopher
I I I joined the company to run marketing and marketing has.
00:04:00 Christopher
A lot of.
00:04:00 Christopher
Reach in this organization because of what we do and who we sell to.
00:04:05 Christopher
So I reach into pipeline.
00:04:07 Christopher
I reach into the product process on product marketing in there and come from a background where this approach really resonates and makes a lot of sense and the way that we collect and build and use data is very aligned to the way that I’ve.
00:04:24 Christopher
I’ve built content in the past.
00:04:28 Frank
Interesting, interesting.
00:04:29 Frank
So the the product at acrolinx it it.
00:04:33 Frank
It uses AI to create content.
00:04:36 Frank
So, so like what does that do is?
00:04:38 Christopher
Different so we are.
00:04:38 Frank
It kind of NLP.
00:04:40 Christopher
We’re improving content, so we’re we’re about being improving the quality and effectiveness of enterprise.
00:04:47 Christopher
Content so the easiest way to think about what we do is everybody that writes everybody that owns a content organization, whether that’s in a development group with technical documentation or product manuals, or marketing content enablement content, internal education.
00:05:04 Christopher
All these folks have a whiteboard in their office and.
00:05:07 Christopher
On that whiteboard are all the components of language, the way that they want to create their content.
00:05:12 Christopher
It’s the tone of voice.
00:05:13 Christopher
It’s the clarity level education level of their of their readers.
00:05:17 Christopher
It’s the amount of compassion, emotion, inclusiveness that they want in their contents.
00:05:22 Christopher
The words that they want to use and that they don’t want.
00:05:24 Christopher
Use, it’s all up there on the whiteboard.
00:05:26 Christopher
They feel good about it.
00:05:28 Christopher
They’ve defined essentially the voice of their group or their organization.
00:05:32 Christopher
The problem with that whiteboard is that it’s in their office and nobody can see it, and even if they could, we don’t have a writers pool in the world anymore.
00:05:40 Christopher
We’re all writers when you go to work, a byproduct of your work is.
00:05:45 Christopher
Content, and so.
00:05:46 Christopher
As a marketer I get my best content from folks that don’t touch marketing.
00:05:51 Christopher
They’re just smart people that can create so they don’t.
00:05:55 Christopher
They don’t care about what’s on my whiteboard at all, and.
00:06:00 Christopher
When we were, I mean, the last seven or eight years you talked about.
00:06:03 Christopher
The potential for the digital shift, and I think everybody been using that as a marketing buzzword like digital shift is coming.
00:06:10 Christopher
You got to get ready and I don’t know if anybody ever really thought it was coming, but it was a great way to so some fear into our prospects that if you don’t modernize, the world is going to change.
00:06:20 Christopher
Holy crap March hit last year and the digital shift arrives and now you’re only touchpoint with your consumer is through digital content for some period of time and it became really apparent to folks that how you commute.
00:06:36 Christopher
Gay matters and then all the things that happened last year from from a social standpoint.
00:06:43 Christopher
Language took on a very lead role.
00:06:46 Christopher
And how do you as an enterprise ensure that you’re communicating in the voice of your audience?
00:06:53 Christopher
And that’s where Acrolinx comes in.
00:06:54 Christopher
We look at terminology.
00:06:56 Christopher
We look at.
00:06:56 Christopher
It’s style guidelines voice guidelines to be able to create this essentially central lexecon of how to communicate his business and then.
00:07:07 Christopher
Either your writers in real time use acrolinx in their sidebar and what in whatever authoring tool they’re using, whether they’re using something like madcap flare or Adobe products or Google Docs or Microsoft or anything in a browser.
00:07:21 Christopher
Uhm, you’re able to use acrolinx in real time to check there your content.
00:07:25 Christopher
Acrolinx checks for all the components that.
00:07:28 Christopher
It’s learned from your organization to create great content and provide you with the score.
00:07:32 Christopher
You can improve over time or through automation.
00:07:35 Christopher
So think in terms of continuous process, continuous delivery of content.
00:07:42 Christopher
I’m checking content in it’s being scored delivered back to me.
00:07:45 Christopher
I’m making changes and it’s rolling out at the speed of my.
00:07:48 Christopher
Development process.
00:07:50 Christopher
So at the base of what we’re doing, when you think about where we’re at, it’s it’s really about taking content in stream of characters, extracting that content, buying the context of that, identifying.
00:08:03 Christopher
Uh, your tokens either at the word level at the sentence.
00:08:06 Christopher
Level and then adding in the linguistic data underneath that around morphology and compound analysis to understand what’s.
00:08:14 Christopher
In the content that we’re we’re looking at identifying terminology and and variant detection and then laying patterns on top of that, our proprietary secret sauce to be able to provide that.
00:08:26 Christopher
That feedback of whether or not your content is correct on character on tone on terminology, and then that feeds back.
00:08:34 Christopher
To users in the form of guidance.
00:08:37 Frank
Interesting, so it guides the people who are creating the content doesn’t necessarily generate the content for them.
00:08:45 Christopher
We don’t override and we don’t right because customers.
00:08:47 Frank
Right?
00:08:49 Christopher
If you think in terms of who our customers are.
00:08:51 Christopher
Our our customers tend to be the largest technology companies in the world, so think top 20 global technology companies almost every single one of them uses acrolinx and.
00:09:02 Christopher
A piece of guidance might be useful, it might be on purpose, so as an example, when I write through my system and I write the word software.
00:09:12 Christopher
It says Are you sure you didn’t mean platform?
00:09:14 Christopher
And why does it say that?
00:09:15 Christopher
Because in my world, if we’re talking about our product, I don’t want my employees to call it software, it’s it’s platform.
00:09:21 Christopher
It’s an extensible platform with integration pieces and an API.
00:09:24 Christopher
I don’t want to sell it as software.
00:09:26 Christopher
But I might have meant to say software.
00:09:29 Christopher
So I don’t want to.
00:09:30 Christopher
I don’t want to enforce that rule.
00:09:32 Christopher
I want to provide guidance and if you agree with that guidance, you implement that guidance.
00:09:37 Christopher
We have the technology to override that, but in almost every case that doesn’t make sense to the customer.
00:09:45 Andy
So is the input for the content is it?
00:09:46 Frank
What is this?
00:09:46 Frank
What this?
00:09:50 Andy
Is it spoken or written or all of the above?
00:09:55 Christopher
All of the above, so we can take in.
00:09:57 Christopher
I mean, there’s a number of ways to teach the platform to be your editor.
00:10:04 Christopher
One is to pull mass quantities of content.
00:10:07 Christopher
Give me all your great content.
00:10:09 Christopher
What does it look like?
00:10:10 Christopher
Identify what you think is good and we’re going to read through that, and the system will read through all that content and start generating guidelines.
00:10:15 Christopher
Based on what you believe is great content today.
00:10:18 Christopher
Uhm, there’s also the ability to just go in and into our interface and set guidelines so you can set a tone of voice you can identify how lively you want your content.
00:10:29 Christopher
Today there are challenges to all of those methods because over time you’re going to learn more, and that’s part of what I’ve really been aiming to.
00:10:39 Christopher
Evolve with the product is.
00:10:42 Christopher
Gartner, the analyst firm, has said that 50% of of marketers, people that set the company voice are. I don’t think this is the word they use, but I.
00:10:52 Christopher
Will use guessing.
00:10:54 Christopher
I have a good idea of what my audience wants to hear, so I define my tone of voice.
00:10:58 Christopher
I define the words that I’m going to use I I think I know what people want to hear.
00:11:02 Christopher
And if I use acronyms.
00:11:05 Christopher
Go ahead and I take all that information that I’ve gathered, and I teach acrolinx to to help create content like that and the output of acrolinx is an Acura link score so you’re aiming for 100.
00:11:17 Christopher
Most customers are aiming for 80.
00:11:18 Christopher
You want to be 80 or better.
00:11:20 Christopher
80 means good, 90 means done, numeric value of of good and done, so no subjectivity.
00:11:26 Christopher
It’s just it is what it is.
00:11:28 Christopher
This is either on my guidance or it’s not on my guidance and.
00:11:32 Christopher
If I get 100 acrolinx score on a piece of content, well by God, that’s going to perform fantastically. It’s exactly what I think.
00:11:41 Christopher
My audience wants to hear and how I think they want to hear it.
00:11:43 Christopher
The important word in.
00:11:45 Christopher
There though, is I think.
00:11:47 Christopher
I think that.
00:11:49 Christopher
Where I want to aim to get to is the ability to create a feedback loop from my audience.
00:11:54 Christopher
So think in terms of support tickets.
00:11:57 Christopher
I’m I’m using acrolinx to create support tickets.
00:12:00 Christopher
I’m scoring very highly.
00:12:02 Christopher
I’m putting those support tickets out.
00:12:03 Christopher
People are using them and.
00:12:06 Christopher
They’re failing on whatever it is they’re trying to fix.
00:12:11 Christopher
Can you tell me why can we gather why first, is there a way to systematically take in the lie?
00:12:16 Christopher
But if there isn’t.
00:12:17 Christopher
I don’t know.
00:12:18 Christopher
Happy face sad face like at the airport.
00:12:20 Christopher
Are you happy with this or aren’t you?
00:12:22 Christopher
And if you’re not?
00:12:24 Christopher
Why is it a clarity issue?
00:12:26 Christopher
Did you not understand the words where we’re using words that you’ve never seen before, but it give me some reasons and then I can start gathering data to feed back into acrolinx that takes us from being strategy aligned, I think to audience aligned they want.
00:12:42 Christopher
And as that, as our software moves more in that cyclical process, you don’t need to know what your audience wants to hear and how they.
00:12:50 Christopher
Want to hear it?
00:12:51 Christopher
They’ll tell you, and that’s what I that’s the thing that.
00:12:53 Christopher
I’m most excited.
00:12:54 Christopher
About right now is being able to to evolve towards that world.
00:12:58 Christopher
This product has been in a state of evolution.
00:13:02 Christopher
It’s about 2002 I.
00:13:05 Christopher
I joined the company in in 2017, UHM to move us into sort of a wider market space and this is I think that’s one of the most exciting things for me right now is seeing how we can bridge that gap from going.
00:13:21 Christopher
I believe too they want.
00:13:25 Frank
Interesting, so it becomes kind of a virtuous feedback loop.
00:13:30 Frank
Yep, uh.
00:13:33 Frank
And it becomes, dare I say, a data driven process because.
00:13:40 Frank
Your documentation, my experience on software products is that.
00:13:45 Frank
Documentation tends to be done last, maybe even Andy after after testing and after security maybe.
00:13:54 Frank
If testing is done intentionally so I like the idea of kind of making this rather is from us a kind of subjective thing to this objective.
00:13:54 Andy
Yeah, agreed.
00:14:02 Frank
Are you meeting the customer needs?
00:14:04 Frank
Because I think we can all empathize with the idea that we’ve all read instructions that quite frankly, stink.
00:14:10 Frank
The trampoline instructions were just godawful.
00:14:14 Frank
I mean like and like. I like to think I’m a smart guy. I like to think I’m a smart guy, but like you know I actually it’s funny you mentioned it because I actually ended up going to YouTube to find a couple of videos where.
00:14:26 Frank
Somebody else built it and kind of had the same problems.
00:14:30 Frank
You know, and we’ve all we’ve all had that experience with, like just awful instructions.
00:14:34 Frank
So I, I like the idea of, you know, if they had, uh, maybe they do have a website.
00:14:38 Frank
I didn’t check, but.
00:14:40 Frank
Uh, you know.
00:14:41 Frank
Kind of just saying like you.
00:14:42 Frank
Know this is what?
00:14:43 Frank
Worked, this is what didn’t I like that.
00:14:46 Christopher
Yeah, I mean think in terms of like we have a a major motorcycle manufacturer here in the US and they create a multi 100 page user manual and from a consistency standpoint.
00:14:50 Christopher
Cycle megapack
00:15:01 Christopher
When you are hiring people that are within your motorcycle culture that use certain words, I’ll say on the street to identify pieces of a motorcycle.
00:15:13 Christopher
And then they come to work and create this manual.
00:15:16 Christopher
How are you ensuring that you’re using consistent terminology through hundreds of pages and hundreds of writers?
00:15:21 Christopher
All who say things in different ways about the same thing.
00:15:25 Christopher
So if it’s something as simple as.
00:15:26 Christopher
This is how you connect the battery and anytime we talk about connecting the battery.
00:15:30 Christopher
We use this.
00:15:31 Christopher
Language and then governing that over hundreds of pages and hundreds of writers.
00:15:36 Christopher
That simple example is the basis of what makes this really interesting.
00:15:41 Christopher
That consistency built into your process, so that if you’re a coffee maker and you’re doing training.
00:15:47 Christopher
For your burrito.
00:15:49 Christopher
Language matters like a latte latte.
00:15:53 Christopher
It’s it’s not a flat white.
00:15:55 Christopher
It’s not an Americano.
00:15:56 Christopher
Don’t confuse your terminology, but at the top of the hierarchy.
00:16:01 Christopher
What if we all spelled the name of the company, right?
00:16:03 Christopher
Like what if everybody that wrote at this company spelled the company right or or used the right name?
00:16:08 Christopher
If you’re American Express, or you Amex or you, American Express or UAE, and if everybody does it just slightly different.
00:16:16 Christopher
You have no consistency and you have.
00:16:18 Christopher
No brand voice.
00:16:18 Christopher
So just those simple ideas.
00:16:21 Christopher
That’s a that’s a guideline.
00:16:22 Christopher
So then you move from there.
00:16:23 Christopher
What else would you do if you could make sure that everybody creates a piece of content with the right name spelled correctly?
00:16:28 Christopher
What else would you?
00:16:29 Christopher
Do and that’s where this gets really interesting because you start thinking in terms of, well, I sell really weird meat.
00:16:36 Christopher
Nice products that people I can’t hire people that know about it to come in and write about it.
00:16:41 Christopher
And I had a customer that was in the insurance space and sold insurance for equine husbandry so I can’t hire people that walk in here knowing how to write about that.
00:16:53 Christopher
OK, first you need to tell me what that means and then he told me and I was like oh cool, I get it and and then too I I see what you’re saying.
00:17:02 Christopher
So by teaching the system to identify terminology, match that terminology and look for correct terminology, I can create content in domain without domain knowledge and that starts to change the game.
00:17:14 Christopher
On how you hire, how you on board and, and the value of your employee base.
00:17:18 Frank
So as a city boy from New York City, I’m assuming equine husbandry means horse breeding.
00:17:29 Andy
Well, one of the things this reminds me of is a very important field or part of a field in in managing data and we call it the overarching piece as data stewardship and that has a lot of facets.
00:17:44 Andy
One of them is master data management.
00:17:47 Andy
Where when we say something or when we more importantly name a fee.
00:17:52 Andy
Field or column in a table somewhere that we use a name that everybody understands and that the entire enterprise agrees.
00:18:01 Andy
Oh, that’s what’s in that particular column, and it turns out that it sounds simple.
00:18:08 Andy
It really does.
00:18:09 Andy
It’s like, really, you know, this is how how hard can it be.
00:18:13 Andy
But I remember a conversation once about what does a day mean.
00:18:19 Andy
And it meant different things depending on which department, and in some cases you have to create these.
00:18:26 Andy
These dictionaries that say you know in the sales department that day means this in the software Development Department today means that and it’s very much this inter intra intra enterprise.
00:18:41 Andy
Communications process, and it sounds a lot like what you guys are doing except.
00:18:46 Andy
You’re adding some automation to it.
00:18:48 Andy
You’re applying AI.
00:18:50 Andy
You’re looking for that consistency, which is really where master data management serves well.
00:18:55 Andy
So I absolutely love that now.
00:18:58 Andy
One of the questions that I have is, is there a generic set of rules that applies kind of as a baseline everybody when they start using your product they they inherit this baseline?
00:19:14 Andy
Or is it completely blank and everybody has to coat it up?
00:19:19 Christopher
So you can.
00:19:20 Christopher
You can turn it on and use, you know standard style guideline, AP Strunk and White whatever as the basis of what you do.
00:19:29 Christopher
But the the value of the product is making it your own, and that’s where I mean.
00:19:35 Christopher
If in a future world, turn it on with a base.
00:19:39 Christopher
Guidelines set and let the audience teach you, and you build up over time the the guidelines for your audience.
00:19:46 Christopher
Today it’s about doing that capture to be able to pull all that information in and make that usable guidelines.
00:19:53 Andy
That so question follow up about that audience feedback.
00:19:57 Andy
There’s some notorious anecdotes about people creating bots in social media and having the blocks go sideways based on feedback.
00:20:06 Christopher
It’s there yet there are.
00:20:10 Andy
Is that, uh, worry.
00:20:11 Andy
Is that a concern?
00:20:13 Christopher
It’s it’s something that we’ve talked about for years.
00:20:15 Christopher
Actually, it’s been a big part of the way that we’ve communicated, even even at the investor level about what we do.
00:20:21 Christopher
There’s always that risk with AI that it goes full sideways and and because of the audience that we’re working with from a customer standpoint, because it’s an enterprise pitch and not a consumerized.
00:20:33 Christopher
We think.
00:20:33 Christopher
It’s it’s less likely to be, uh, a major challenge.
00:20:36 Christopher
And most importantly, we’re not.
00:20:39 Christopher
We’re not making those changes for our customers, we’re not forcing them.
00:20:44 Christopher
It is just guidelines.
00:20:45 Christopher
So if you start to see guidelines that are.
00:20:49 Christopher
Things that you wouldn’t want, right?
00:20:52 Christopher
You wouldn’t.
00:20:53 Christopher
You wouldn’t have to act on them.
00:20:54 Christopher
I mean, right now what we’re seeing is.
00:20:58 Christopher
You know things like inclusive language.
00:21:01 Christopher
This has become a very important aspect of what the enterprise is dealing with.
00:21:05 Christopher
Everybody has a diversity and inclusion officer within their organization.
00:21:09 Christopher
Everybody wants to be better and it’s not just about, you know.
00:21:14 Christopher
Using a a database on a website that tells you things that you shouldn’t, shouldn’t say.
00:21:18 Christopher
It’s also about providing education for your your end users for your writers, for your employees, so that they understand why.
00:21:25 Christopher
Because not all of this inclusive language process is intuitive.
00:21:30 Christopher
There are things that we say that none of us would ever have any idea where they come from.
00:21:35 Christopher
What the basis of those are, you know, things like peanut gallery or or even saying something isn’t up to par from an inclusion standpoint.
00:21:45 Christopher
Not everybody golfs and might not know what you’re talking about, so being able to.
00:21:50 Christopher
Not only say here’s a thing that maybe you would like to remove from your content, but here’s some reasons why and what we would expect is over time and what we’re starting to see with our customers is that over time people don’t.
00:22:01 Christopher
Need the guidance for specific terminology as much because they’ve learned that, oh, I had no idea that was insensitive.
00:22:08 Christopher
Cool, I’m just not going to do that, so it’s it’s it’s a I actually teaching real intelligence to be more sensitive.
00:22:18 Frank
It’s a bit like guardrails then as opposed to like new.
00:22:22 Frank
So you know what you’re saying.
00:22:24 Frank
And I like the fact that you know it’s still up to a human judgment to make that decision.
00:22:29 Christopher
Yeah, I mean it, this is still it’s still an art.
00:22:29 Frank
’cause I think it also.
00:22:29 Frank
’cause think it also?
00:22:32 Christopher
There’s still arguments.
00:22:32 Christopher
Right now.
00:22:33 Christopher
We need to leave that in.
00:22:35 Frank
Right?
00:22:36 Frank
No, that makes a lot of sense.
00:22:37 Frank
That makes a lot of sense.
00:22:39 Frank
So at this point, this is where we do the pre canned questions which should have been attached to the.
00:22:45 Frank
Invite. Yep, awesome.
00:22:48 Frank
And given that we’re having issues with our.
00:22:52 Frank
Her audible sponsorship because I think for some reason it got the URL changed so I don’t know.
00:22:58 Frank
If we’re gonna ask that one.
00:23:00 Andy
Yeah, we could talk about that, like, uh?
00:23:02 Frank
Right?
00:23:03 Andy
Yes, it changed.
00:23:05 Frank
So they changed the URL on us and the whole program on us.
00:23:08 Frank
Maybe there was an email sent, maybe we missed it, who knows?
00:23:12 Frank
They could, they could use Acrolinx anyway, yes, uh, how did you find your way into this kind of data in AI or data driven marketing like?
00:23:22 Frank
Or did you find it?
00:23:24 Frank
Or did it find?
00:23:25 Christopher
You I I got confused way back in 2003. Actually when I found myself in my first.
00:23:33 Christopher
AI company, uh and interestingly it wasn’t one mentioned because nobody would mention it, it was model.
00:23:39 Christopher
Golf model Golf was a uh golf training software company and the basis of this technology was a composite. The gathering of of 2000.
00:23:51 Christopher
Segments of an individual.
00:23:53 Christopher
Two second golf swing across hundreds of top golfers to create a single individual composite that eliminated each one of their individual weaknesses to create the perfect golf swing.
00:24:04 Christopher
And then we would overlay that golf swing over a golfer to improve their golf game.
00:24:09 Christopher
The technology was amazingly complex.
00:24:11 Christopher
And there’s just this huge system that had been built up over years.
00:24:15 Christopher
I know any of that until I just happened across that business.
00:24:20 Christopher
Joining with a VC that had purchased that business.
00:24:23 Christopher
Uhm, coming here to acrolinx.
00:24:26 Christopher
I knew exactly where I was going so I didn’t really trip into it here.
00:24:30 Christopher
This is a huge need in in my world coming from international software companies where your greatest content creation minds are not necessarily the best writers, the.
00:24:43 Christopher
Editorial process is super painful, and identifying acrolinx as an answer to that.
00:24:50 Christopher
It’s kind of like that hair club for men thing.
00:24:52 Christopher
I’m not just the President, I’m a customer.
00:24:54 Christopher
I mean I.
00:24:55 Christopher
I use this product every day and my team couldn’t live without the product we we build.
00:25:01 Andy
Eating your own dog food, I think is a is a powerful metaphor.
00:25:06 Frank
Which may which may or may not be understandable to your audiences, so maybe that would be flagged.
00:25:11 Andy
That may be something yeah problem.
00:25:11 Andy
That may something yeah problem.
00:25:13 Christopher
I don’t know what a dog is.
00:25:14 Frank
Right, right or you know.
00:25:17 Frank
Or just like who would he dog?
00:25:18 Frank
Food like Dana there there’s.
00:25:20 Frank
I mean, I mean, there’s.
00:25:21 Frank
A lot of art in language, you know.
00:25:23 Frank
Oh yeah, and there’s a lot of kind of what’s the fancy word for illusions?
00:25:23 Frank
Yeah, absolutely.
00:25:31 Frank
And kind of subtle references that not everybody would get.
00:25:35 Frank
And then as you kind.
00:25:36 Frank
Of deal with.
00:25:37 Frank
You know different cultures?
00:25:39 Frank
I mean, you know you can’t right just because it’s in English doesn’t mean it will be intelligible by someone in Japan.
00:25:47 Frank
Or you know, Indonesia, like it’s just.
00:25:51 Frank
You know so.
00:25:51 Frank
You know?
00:25:52 Christopher
So, and that’s one of the things that we do as well as be able to take all of this content, strip it down to source.
00:25:57 Christopher
Content for.
00:25:57 Christopher
Translation have it translated somewhere and then take it back through acrolinx and put back in some sense of of voicing guidelines in that foreign language so that you’re creating something that’s cool here.
00:25:58 Frank
Right?
00:26:12 Christopher
And I want it to be cool someplace.
00:26:13 Christopher
So it’s their definition of cool is probably fairly different than ours, so being able to translate that base thing, take it from flowery language down to source content and then bring it back to localized flowery content is is another thing that we do.
00:26:27 Frank
I remember when I when I worked for a large German bank there was an English translation for like a recruiting website.
00:26:35 Frank
And I read it, and while it was mechanically correct, I mean they used phrases that no American would know.
00:26:40 Frank
Like you know, in in Germany, cell phone would be handy.
00:26:44 Frank
So like they wrote like.
00:26:46 Frank
Keep your handy.
00:26:48 Frank
Like what does that even mean?
00:26:50 Frank
Like you know, it’s just like it is adorable, but like it’s just kind of like what do you mean you don’t call it a handy only call the cell phone?
00:26:50 Christopher
It’s adorable though.
00:26:57 Frank
Well, can we call it a mobile phone?
00:26:59 Frank
Again, no one really uses it and you don’t understand it but that.
00:27:02 Frank
I mean that sounds.
00:27:03 Frank
Awkward like that it.
00:27:07 Andy
Yeah, there’s this old anecdote.
00:27:08 Andy
I mean old like back from when, when the years began with the one where the early early attempts at automating translation.
00:27:17 Andy
And, uhm, there’s an anecdote.
00:27:19 Andy
That said, they fed into the machine.
00:27:23 Andy
You know, something in English.
00:27:24 Andy
Had it translated to another language, I believe it was actually Russian, and then they had that output translated back into English to test and see.
00:27:34 Andy
And I think they skipped the step where they took it from.
00:27:37 Andy
Flowery, or, you know, metaphorical down to the basics, the both ways, and they put in the flesh, as the spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.
00:27:48 Andy
And it went to Russian.
00:27:49 Andy
And then it came back as.
00:27:52 Andy
Let’s see, the vodka is good, but the meat is raw.
00:27:56 Andy
That’s what I believe in.
00:27:57 Andy
Yeah, and you can see.
00:27:59 Andy
Kind of how that went, but it’s it’s like Frank mechanical translation, you know, but it’s fascinating adding that step I I can’t imagine number one how difficult that is.
00:27:59 Christopher
I get it.
00:28:10 Andy
And #2 just the amount of metadata you’ve got swirling around about expressions in other languages that you can then substitute to add the flowerree back.
00:28:22 Christopher
Yeah, I mean it’s it’s.
00:28:23 Christopher
It’s a big process to be able to do that.
00:28:27 Christopher
I mean, all of these things, words, language English is difficult enough.
00:28:32 Christopher
Now go and do it in German.
00:28:34 Christopher
Go and do it in Japanese Scandinavian languages it’s it’s a fun challenge to be a part of.
00:28:41 Andy
Sounds like it.
00:28:42 Frank
Speaking of fun, there’s actually a subgenre of videos on YouTube I’ve seen where they’ll take a song.
00:28:50 Frank
And translate it back and forth on Google Translate between different languages.
00:28:55 Frank
Until it kind of stops changing.
00:28:58 Frank
And then they’ll sing that one of the ones, and maybe we’ll put in the show notes if I could find it.
00:29:02 Frank
Is The Fresh Prince of Bel Air.
00:29:06 Frank
Translated like 50 times from English to Mandarin, then to Spanish, then back to English.
00:29:10 Frank
Something like that and it just sounds like so bizarre.
00:29:14 Frank
It’s kind of like there’s like a sentence or two, like, oh, I.
00:29:16 Frank
Can see where that kind of makes.
00:29:17 Frank
Sense, but it.
00:29:18 Frank
Was just it’s just funny and I think.
00:29:20 Frank
It shows kind of an.
00:29:21 Frank
Extreme example, but a funny example.
00:29:27 BAILey
Hello Bailey here.
00:29:29 BAILey
I just wanted to make sure that our loyal listeners knew about Frank and Andy’s new podcast about quantum computing.
00:29:36 BAILey
It’s called impact quantum and it helps data and software engineers prepare for the coming quantum computing revolution by bringing in the best minds in the field and having them explain the watts and the whys of this new technology.
00:29:50 BAILey
Sure, Frank and Andy are the hosts there too, but I am also part of the show, so if you can’t get enough of me, rest assured that I do the voiceovers there as well.
00:30:01 BAILey
Now back to Christopher Willis.
00:30:09 Andy
Our second question is, what’s your favorite part of your current gig, Chris?
00:30:15 Christopher
I mean, I think it’s the company that I worked for.
00:30:17 Christopher
I mean, this is an interesting place because we are NLP and there is a lot of language and art within this.
00:30:24 Christopher
It does.
00:30:27 Christopher
Like your average software company, we hire a very diverse employee base of of skills that most companies don’t have, and one of the things that we did during the the the COVID period was create this weekly coffee match up and you get matched with somebody in the.
00:30:46 Christopher
Company most likely that you don’t know.
00:30:48 Christopher
And having conversations with with the scope of people that we have in the organization has been really interesting and fun because.
00:30:57 Christopher
I wouldn’t run into that.
00:30:58 Christopher
In my past experiences.
00:30:59 Christopher
Uhm, you kind of know what you’re going to get at a mobile cloud testing company or a mobile app development firm.
00:31:06 Christopher
But here just the diversity level and the people that I work with is really awesome.
00:31:12 Frank
Cool, so we have three fill in the blank.
00:31:15 Frank
Questions complete this sentence when I’m not working, I enjoy blank.
00:31:21 Christopher
Uh, coaching CrossFit?
00:31:22 Christopher
I’m a.
00:31:23 Christopher
I’m a CrossFit coach.
00:31:24 Frank
Oh interesting cool.
00:31:27 Andy
Very cool, our next one is I think the coolest thing in technology today is blank.
00:31:27 Andy
Right cool.
00:31:35 Christopher
The rise of content intelligence, so being able to make all of this more valuable from a use standpoint, it’s another area that we’re leaning into.
00:31:45 Christopher
But there’s a lot of companies in that space that are making content ensuring the content is valuable in its use.
00:31:52 Christopher
So you’re spending a lot of time and energy creating it, it’s.
00:31:55 Christopher
Doing anything.
00:31:59 Frank
Our final completed sentence is I look forward to the day when I can use technology to blank.
00:32:06 Christopher
Wait any number of things.
00:32:09 Christopher
Right now it’s probably an and and I bet there are solutions out there that do some of this, but be able to foresee my my analytics needs and actually build reports for me.
00:32:21 Christopher
The way that I need them to be built.
00:32:22 Christopher
I’m having a huge problem hiring an analytics.
00:32:26 Christopher
Leader for my operations team.
00:32:28 Christopher
It’s very difficult, so we could just have something that knew exactly what I wanted and built my reports on it that.
00:32:35 Christopher
Would be really cool.
00:32:37 Frank
Very cool, yeah.
00:32:39 Andy
So our next, not a fill in the blank, is share something different about yourself.
00:32:45 Andy
But we remind people we’re trying to keep our friendly family friendly rating here so.
00:32:51 Christopher
So I have a tail, no don’t I.
00:32:56 Christopher
I think the difference.
00:32:57 Christopher
About me.
00:32:58 Christopher
Is and this is the question that comes up the most when I talk to the media is how are we even talking to you?
00:33:04 Christopher
I have a theater degree from a liberal arts college.
00:33:06 Christopher
Uhm, I went off to college to be premed biology was at 8:00 AM my freshman year.
00:33:13 Christopher
That didn’t really match.
00:33:14 Christopher
With my new lifestyle in college and dumb and and I, I had done some theater in high school and.
00:33:21 Christopher
Thought I should.
00:33:22 Christopher
Devote the rest of my life to the stage.
00:33:25 Christopher
And I realized waking up, you know, software junior year.
00:33:30 Christopher
Oh no.
00:33:31 Christopher
What have I done?
00:33:32 Christopher
But I corrected it.
00:33:34 Christopher
Right, so the second half a junior year and a senior year, I backed it up with a minor that would at least help me get a real job.
00:33:40 Christopher
You know, philosophy, uh?
00:33:43 Christopher
I’m so so helpless, helpless as I was.
00:33:45 Frank
A very noble pursuit though.
00:33:48 Christopher
That was coming out and being able to use the skills that I acquired in college to actually a get a job and then these be successful in that job I, I think, makes me a bit different than a lot of my peers who come out of degree programs around engineering their coders.
00:34:09 Christopher
That become marketers in in my peer group here in Massachusetts. Almost all of the CMO’s in equivalent companies have technical backgrounds. I owned a Commodore 64 in 1983.
00:34:21 Christopher
But that’s that was as technical as I got.
00:34:25 Christopher
I had to learn a lot I.
00:34:27 Andy
Yep, sorry, I didn’t mean to cut you off.
00:34:29 Andy
But I can see.
00:34:31 Andy
Those both of those aspects playing into it.
00:34:34 Andy
Theater being, you know all about communication.
00:34:37 Andy
I mean, that’s that’s huge in marketing and then philosophy.
00:34:42 Andy
Well, I, I think it’s a good bedrock to base anything.
00:34:46 Andy
You know anything that requires understanding.
00:34:49 Andy
And then couple those two together.
00:34:51 Andy
I I remember a Scott Adams book where he talks about aligning different skills and how when you get like two different skills together they create this.
00:35:02 Andy
This really nice.
00:35:04 Andy
I don’t know the right word, but a very nice combination at least, and I can see both of those fitting well.
00:35:10 Andy
Into marketing, especially which you you’re doing now with AI and communication.
00:35:16 Christopher
The the theater aspect of it, so I didn’t act.
00:35:19 Christopher
I’m not a great actor.
00:35:19 Christopher
I don’t know what to do with my hands so so I directed for four years and what I took away from that that I now it defines me in my role is you have castle right people.
00:35:34 Christopher
That’s first thing you’re not on stage.
00:35:36 Christopher
They’re on stage.
00:35:37 Christopher
You need to provide them with the right context, blocking prioritization to be able to do their job.
00:35:43 Christopher
And then you need.
00:35:43 Christopher
To get out of the way.
00:35:44 Christopher
And your only job is to help to keep them on script or on on on the on the words in the right places, breaking down barriers.
00:35:54 Christopher
To make them more successful and then you just got to believe that they’re going to do what they they they said they were going to do, and that’s very much how I managed today.
00:36:03 Christopher
I can’t micromanage.
00:36:05 Christopher
I don’t want to.
00:36:06 Christopher
I don’t have the time to.
00:36:07 Christopher
I’m doing other things.
00:36:08 Christopher
Things so I need to put the right people on the stage.
00:36:10 Christopher
I need to give them priorities.
00:36:11 Christopher
I need to make sure that they have everything they need to be successful and then I need to let them do their job and that’s gotten me the ability to hire people that I never should have been able to hire at the companies that I’ve worked at, from much larger companies because they know that they’re going to come to this.
00:36:26 Christopher
Company and be able to do all the things they’ve always wanted to do.
00:36:29 Christopher
And it’s it’s helped me get really great teams in place.
00:36:34 Frank
Very interesting, interesting.
00:36:34 Andy
Very nice.
00:36:36 Frank
And where can folks learn more about you and your?
00:36:42 Christopher
Uhm, so I’m on. I’m on LinkedIn at CP Willis, UM and then Acrolinx is www.acrolinxarrowlnx.com all of our information is there or you can find me through any number of socials I’m sure.
00:37:00 Frank
OK, but make sure you use Christopher P.
00:37:05 Christopher
The singer is not me anymore.
00:37:07 Frank
Fingers not you, nor is the vineyard person.
00:37:11 Christopher
No, but God willing things work out.
00:37:15 Frank
Uh, and do.
00:37:18 Frank
You do audiobooks.
00:37:19 Frank
Or can you recommend a good book for audience?
00:37:22 Christopher
I well so so I do, but the last one that I listened.
00:37:26 Christopher
To God, what was?
00:37:27 Christopher
It you know the guy that wrote the Martian, yes.
00:37:30 Christopher
Uh, uh.
00:37:32 Frank
Is it Andy Weir?
00:37:34 Christopher
Yep it is Andy Weir.
00:37:36 Christopher
Andy Weir just released a new book.
00:37:39 Christopher
Uhm called Hail Mary.
00:37:44 Christopher
A guy wakes up in a spaceship.
00:37:47 Christopher
I he thinks he’s on a spaceship in the middle of space along with two dead bodies, and he has no idea how he got there.
00:37:55 Christopher
That’s all you need to know.
00:37:56 Christopher
I I didn’t read the Martian.
00:37:58 Christopher
Uhm, I was on a road trip with my dad last year during the pandemic.
00:38:03 Christopher
Uhm, and he popped that into the.
00:38:06 Frank
I’ll echo Andy sentiment and all that nice British lady and the show.
00:38:11 Frank
Alright cool, definitely put that on my list and well audible is kind of sort of a sponsor, but we don’t have a link right now ’cause they changed the platform on us that is in progress right now, so hopefully by the time this show gets published that’ll be fixed.
00:38:26 Frank
And if that is the case, we’ll have Bailey kind of explain that.
00:38:31 Frank
So with that anything else you’d like to add, Chris.
00:38:33 Christopher
Nope, good.
00:38:34 Frank
Awesome Andy.
00:38:37 Andy
I’d just like to thank you Chris for being on the show, taking time out of your day.
00:38:42 Andy
I won’t speak for Frank, but I had a great time.
00:38:45 Andy
I learned stuff.
00:38:46 Andy
I always love it when I learn new stuff.
00:38:48 Andy
So thank you so much.
00:38:49 BAILey
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00:38:52 BAILey
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