How Quicktate works

Read your voicemail.

Adam Palmer, an east-coast executive is preoccupied with meetings and appointments all day and doesn't have time to listen to his voice messages. He receives a lot of calls every day.

Calls to Adam are diverted to Quicktate, where they are quickly transcribed and then forwarded to Adam via email and/or text message.

In between meetings, Adam quickly reads all his messages from his handheld device.

Transcribe your personal notes.

Susan is driving in the car and has some great ideas for her upcoming business proposal. Since she cannot drive and take notes at the same time, she simply dials Quicktate and speaks (verb "quicktates") all of her ideas.

Before she even gets to the office, all of her recordings have been transcribed and emailed to her.

Corporate Surveys

Acme International has launched a new product, and has asked all its customers to call them with their comments and opinions.

Calls are diverted to Quicktate where they are transcribed and emailed to Acme in both English and Spanish.

Emergency Broadcast Alert

A shooting occurs at a Phoenix boys school requiring the Principal to immediately contact a large number of parents. Before Quicktate, the school would have had to make hundreds of phone calls. With Quicktate, the school simply makes one call, and within minutes the message is delivered to all the parents by email and text message to their cell phones.

Quickly share information with multiple Government Agencies.

An environmental disaster occurs in the Mid-West involving numerous local, state, and federal government agencies. So much is happening, so fast, that it is diffcult for the hundreds of relief workers and goverment agencies to share information in a real-time fashion.

Using Quicktate, all broadcasts and alerts can be diseminated to all the appropriate persons and agencies almost instantly.

Translate Speech into other languages

Eduardo is a site inspector working at a manufactoring facility in Northern Mexico. His job requires that he submit inspection reports to the United States Government in English, and to the Mexican Compliance Authorities in Spanish. By speaking into his cellular phone while inspecting the plant ("quicktating"), Edwardo's entire report is quickly converted into text in both English and Spanish and automatically emailed to the appropriate agencies.

Convert customer service phone messages to text

AGL is a large internet hosting company with thousands of customer service calls per day. The volume of calls exceeds AGL's customer service capabilities.

By diverting AGL's calls to Quicktate, the customers' requests are transcribed and delivered to AGL electronically, where they can be resolved more quickly and more efficiently. AGL saves many thousands of dollars each month by not having to listen to its telephone voicemail messages.

Write letters to camp from your phone

Bugsy and Katie Berman are attending summer camp in the Catskills. Unfortunately, their parents are not very good at writing letters to their kids.

Thanks to Quicktate, Mr. and Mrs. Berman need only dial a special phone number and then speak their letters. Quicktate immediately transcribes the letters in time for that days' lunch-time mail call. Now Bugsy and Katie get letters from home every day!