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Got It launches Querychat natural language BI service

A combination of Google technologies, cobbled together with human expert assistance, delivers an NLP solution for BI. Can it compete with the likes of Tableau, Microsoft and ThoughtSpot?
Written by Andrew Brust, Contributor

Got It, the company behind Excelchat, a human expert chat-based support service for Excel (and Google Sheets), is today introducing a new service called Querychat. The service seeks to compete with natural language BI solutions like ThoughtSpot, AnswerRocketArcadia Data's Search, Tableau's Ask Data and Microsoft Power BI's Q&A.

Also read: Arcadia Data brings natural language query to the data lake

Information on Got It's Web site, in its Querychat press release and from its Querychat explainer video can be distilled as follows:

  • Excelchat's human expert paradigm forms the basis of the service, allowing human experts to interpret customer-submitted natural language queries and generate corresponding SQL queries
  • As a byproduct of the customer-expert interaction, a Natural Language Processing (NLP) model is trained using Google's open-sourced BERT technology, in order to learn the customer's jargon and conventions
  • As the model becomes more comprehensive and better-trained, the natural language translation to SQL becomes automated, based on the incidentally trained BERT model. This facet of the service, called TrueNLP AI, is where it ostensibly becomes competitive with ThoughtSpot, Ask Data, Q&A, et al
  • According to Got It, TrueNLP AI is superior to the aformentioned competing products, as the latter are based on keywords and synonyms whereas the Querychat model is based on semantic understanding of the NLP query terms
  • Querychat will initially support data coming from Salesforce and Google Analytics, stored in Google BigQuery, with support for other SaaS applications and cloud data warehouses to be added

Mash-up derby for NLP BI

While Querychat could just be a blip on the BI radar, it is nonetheless intriguing, for a couple of reasons.

To begin with, given Got It's previous Microsoft stack pedigree, including Excel, Power Query and Power BI for Excelchat, it's interesting that the company decided to build Querychat on BERT and BigQuery, rather than Azure Cognitive Services and Azure SQL Data Warehouse. Got It's press release does say support for "Azure Cloud Data Warehouse [sic] and other environments" will be delivered this year, however.

Second, Querychat adds more critical mass and legitimacy to natural language BI as a category in its own right. While it remains to be seen how well the TrueNLP AI technology can function on its own, without intervention from Querychat human experts, the mere presence of another NLP BI player has significance of its own.

Regardless, it would seem the combination of human and machine intelligence might maximize results while keeping costs under control. And it will be interesting to see if any of the more established NLP BI players add sentence-based NLP to their current more keyword-based approaches. 

Post updated at 2:45pm ET on 5/24/2019 to correct prior reported (mis)impression that Power BI was part of the Querychat solution. Although the Power BI logo appears multiple times in the linked explainer video, officials from Got It explained to ZDNet that this was meant to represent BI front-ends in general, and not Power BI specifically.

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