For years, organizations have tried to truly engage their customers.
Most of those attempts end the same way — a star rating, a long form, a polite request that everyone ignores. Frustration on both sides, and thin data to show for it.
PIM was our first voice engine — a retro phone you could simply pick up.
No form, no stars. A natural, playful conversation about your visit. People didn't fill it in — they talked.
One person held the phone. The rest of the group stood around like spare parts.
It caught words and nothing else — shallow data, none of the feeling.
Every line invented live: cost goes up, accuracy goes down.
Lovely, but never viral — so it never paid its way in marketing.
Grab attention with the real world — motion, light, a knock from inside a box.
Earn the moment with a creature that genuinely reacts — emotion, not a script.
Turn the experience into rich, consented data — the part that pays the bill.
A good story or a bit of fun changes everything: a conversation earns 39% more informative answers — and twice the personal detail — than a static form. So we start by capturing attention.
A Limbic subsystem drives motors, lights and objects — from a simple knock-in-a-box to full animatronics.
Once we have your attention, we keep it.
Humans light up around creatures that react with real emotion. So we built an emotional core modelled after neuromodulation — feelings that fill, drain, and remember.
Turn on the webcam to let Demo read the room. Nothing is stored.
Engagement runs on stories — a venue's history, say. But history has to be factual, and live AI can hallucinate. So we weave verified, pre-recorded audio seamlessly into the live stream.
Demo remembers earlier moments and brings them back later — across a whole visit.
Author a personality — voice, temperament, quirks — without touching the engine.
Different installations, new senses, new effectors. A conversation for another day.