Gamalon scores $20 M led by Intel Capital

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Gamalon wants to change the game when it comes to understanding text-based customer communications
Instead of using neural networks to learn about a vast corpus of information, the startup takes a different approach, putting the text in a
database and building decision trees to very rapidly train the data to arrive at the required information
Today, it announced a $20 million Series A investment led by Intel Capital.Other participants in the round included .406 Ventures and
Omidyar Technology Ventures along with existing investors Boston Seed Capital, Felicis Ventures and Rivas Capital
rounds.Gamalon CEO Ben Vigoda says they developed a new approach to analyzing customer interactions because the state of the art in AI and
machine learning was too much of a black box.His company wants to change that by making the whole process much more interactive
To that end Gamalon also released a new tool called Idea Studio, a product that can automatically build learning trees to help users arrive
at answers extremely fast or allow a business analyst or data scientists to simply enter a series of queries and build a decision tree on
the fly based on the text
With neural networks, Vigoda says, the user has no control over the end result, but with Idea Studio you can edit the trees and refine the
results immediately.Gamalon Idea Studio decision tree
Photo: GamalonThe product still needs a way to review all of the text-based content, of course, but instead of having humans categorize it
all manually, with Gamalon you import your data into a database, do analytics on it and then make it available for rapid categorization and
response.This could have multiple utilities, whether for customer service agents to find answers very quickly or customers to interact with
bots and find answers much faster
projects based on a large corpus of data.You can build a learning tree by entering related text to train it
GIF: GamalonNaveen Rao, corporate vice president and general manager in the Artificial Intelligence Products Group at Intel Corporation
says they like how Gamalon puts machine learning into hands of many different employees around the customer information use case
They have six large customers including Avaya.