Olark vs Front
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Olark rebuilds around v2 — new layout, AI Assistants surface, in-product bot evaluation.
Olark is mid-rollout of v2, a full interface rebuild that landed in mid-2025. The AI Assistants area is now structured around Knowledge / Persona / Evaluation tabs, with bot review and feedback (thumbs up/down on individual answers) happening directly in-product. Knowledge ingestion has expanded to JSON and ZIP files plus much larger website crawls. Smaller v2 quality-of-life touches keep landing — collapsed agent menus, static offline messages, Group ID exposure for API users.
The product is being rebuilt around AI-assisted chat support, not bolted on. The Evaluation tab in particular signals a closed-loop training direction — agents tune the bot from real conversations rather than configuring it abstractly. v2 is also shedding classic settings page by page; expect that migration to keep producing visible incremental wins.
Next moves likely deepen the bot evaluation loop — automatic quality scoring, suggested knowledge updates from low-rated answers — and continue retiring classic surfaces. A pricing/tiering revisit around AI usage is plausible once the v2 migration has run its course.
Front is doubling down on AI as the primary surface, not a side feature.
The release stream is dense with AI work: knowledge-source connectors (Guru, Confluence) feeding Copilot and Autopilot, fact invalidation controls so admins can curate what AI cites, AI Translate landing across SMS/WhatsApp/Messenger/Chat, and new agent-runtime integrations like One that bridge Front to thousands of external tools. Non-AI work (Salesforce/Asana templates, Zoom Contact Center, analytics) is still landing but plays second fiddle to the AI cadence.
Front is positioning as an AI-native customer comms hub rather than a shared-inbox tool with AI bolted on. The pattern — grounding AI in private knowledge, exposing admin governance over what AI says, broadening channel coverage — is the playbook for moving AI from gimmick to production-trusted. The integration push (Zoom CC, One, omnichannel surfaces) suggests Front wants to be the operator console for AI-mediated support, not just one of many inboxes.
Expect the next directional move to be deeper Autopilot autonomy — measurable AI-resolved ticket metrics, escalation rules tied to confidence, or AI-led drafting that promotes itself to send-without-review under specific governance gates. The fact-invalidation feature is a precondition for that.
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