April 3, 202600:24:41

Conversations are the product, Andy Abramson Podcast

“Call transcription is dead. The conversation is the product.” For MSPs and channel partners, Abramson sees a meaningful opportunity—but not in simply reselling AI features. Instead, the role is becoming more strategic. Partners can help customers integrate conversational data across systems, implement governance frameworks, and ensure compliance in an increasingly complex regulatory environment

@Doug Green

The voice AI and transcription market is undergoing a fundamental shift—one that goes far beyond improving accuracy or lowering costs. In a recent Technology Reseller News podcast, I spoke with Andy Abramson about how platforms like Zoom and Slack are redefining the role of conversational data in the enterprise.

At the center of this shift is a simple but powerful idea: transcription is no longer the end goal. It is becoming an embedded, expected feature—automated, commoditized, and increasingly invisible. The real value is moving upstream, toward what organizations can actually do with the data generated from conversations.

“We’ve gone from ‘can we transcribe?’ to ‘what can we do with it?’”

That evolution signals the emergence of a new platform layer built around conversational intelligence. Rather than treating calls and meetings as ephemeral events, enterprises are beginning to view them as structured, persistent data assets—fuel for analytics, automation, compliance, and AI-driven decision-making.

This has significant implications for the competitive landscape. Standalone transcription vendors, once differentiated by accuracy and pricing, now face pressure as transcription becomes native to broader platforms. At the same time, elements of the UCaaS and CCaaS stack may also be impacted, as value shifts away from transport and toward intelligence.

A critical question emerging from this transition is ownership. As platforms embed AI more deeply, enterprises must consider who controls their conversational data—and how it can be accessed, governed, and leveraged. While some organizations may gain efficiency and insight, others risk becoming dependent on platform-defined workflows and data models.

For MSPs and channel partners, Abramson sees a meaningful opportunity—but not in simply reselling AI features. Instead, the role is becoming more strategic. Partners can help customers integrate conversational data across systems, implement governance frameworks, and ensure compliance in an increasingly complex regulatory environment.

In that sense, conversational data is becoming a new category of enterprise asset—one that requires oversight, architecture, and policy. The shift aligns closely with broader industry conversations around AI governance, auditability, and trust.

Looking ahead, the next 12 to 24 months will be critical. The market could consolidate around a handful of dominant platforms, or it could evolve into a broader ecosystem where conversational intelligence is exposed through APIs and integrated across multiple environments.

What is clear, however, is that the conversation itself is no longer just a byproduct of communication.

It is the product.

#VoiceAI #Transcription #ConversationalAI #UCaaS #CCaaS #ChannelPartners #MSP #AI #TechnologyResellerNews

No transcript available.