PRESS RELEASE
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| May 8, 2002 |
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Contact: Maureeen Richey |
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Phone: 510-543-3420 |
AskAnything
Chosen by Microsoft to Showcase .NET Technology
AskAnything
Technologies was one of several companies in the San Francisco Bay Area chosen
by Microsoft to help showcase how startup companies are effectively using the
Microsoft .NET Framework and Visual Studio .NET to develop their technology.
AskAnything will use the .NET platform Tlogyby
Microsoft to help showcase how startup companies are effecto deliver a
new version of its Web-based customer support software.
San Francisco, CA,
May 8, 2002—AskAnything Technologies, a provider of web-based customer
support, announced that Microsoft has chosen AskAnything to showcase how
startup companies are using the .NET Framework and Visual Studio .NET to
develop their software. All of
AskAnything's new customer support software was developed using Microsoft's
.NET platform, including XML Web services, the core of AskAnything's new
technology. "Microsoft provided us with all the components needed to
quickly enable XML Web services and execute our complete design, and their
tools offered us more security and more power than any other tools,"
explained Stephen Roth, AskAnything president. Roth said that Microsoft is also
providing AskAnything with additional resources and support to aid in the .NET implementation.
Microsoft will soon publish a case study describing how .NET aided in
AskAnything's software development.
AskAnything
first released its customer support software in 1999 in response to the growing
need for automation in customer-company correspondence. Traditionally, online
and telephone-based customer support has been a manual process: customers email
or telephone when they have questions, and the company must respond to each
customer individually. "With an estimated 80 percent of customers asking
the same 20 questions, companies find themselves with a time-consuming and
often costly burden," said Roth.
AskAnything's
first release automated part of this process with a "dynamic FAQ system"—Web-based
software that automatically created and updated a list of frequently asked
questions (FAQs). Customers went to the support website and typed their
questions in plain English, and the AskAnything software presented them with a
list of relevant FAQs. If the FAQs did not answer the customers' questions, the
software forwarded the questions to a customer support representative, who would
email the customers back with an answer. Finally, the software added each question
and answer to the knowledgebase so that the next customer with the same
question would not have to contact a customer support representative.
For its latest
release, AskAnything has integrated its dynamic FAQ system with two of the
top-selling mid-market customer relationship management (CRM) systems: FrontRange’s
GoldMine and Interact Commerce Corp’s SalesLogix. These systems are designed to
track interaction with customers by providing a database for customer support
representatives to log correspondence with customers. "We felt that our dynamic
FAQ could enhance the time-saving and money-saving capabilities of existing CRM
systems by reducing the number of repeated questions that reach CRM systems and
by automatically populating CRM databases with any novel questions,"
explained Roth.
To achieve integration
with its CRM partners, AskAnything had to address two problems: 1) it needed a
way to penetrate a company's firewall so that it could access the CRM system,
and 2) once inside, it needed a way for its application to communicate and
share data with the CRM application, despite the fact that the CRM application
might be written in a different language and might run on a different operating
system.
AskAnything solved
both integration problems using .NET to create a Web service based on XML and SOAP.
Web services allow applications to communicate with each other by translating
data into XML, which is a meta-language most software platforms can understand.
Once data is translated into XML and SOAP, it travels across the Web via the
standard HTTP protocol and easily passes through corporate firewalls without
jeopardizing the security of the network.
AskAnything expects its successful
integration with FrontRange and SalesLogix to pave the way for smooth
integration with other CRM systems. AskAnything also plans to expand its
software capabilities to import information from a wide variety of sources,
including email messages, Word documents, Excel
spreadsheets, and Web sites. "We feel fortunate that Microsoft has decided
to support us in this way," concluded Roth. "By using .NET to
integrate with CRM systems, we have broadened our range of potential
customers."
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