There are two types of AI demos: the “Hollywood demo,” which is highly produced, polished, and looks pretty perfect; and the “real-world demo,” which is raw, unpolished, and shows real product performance (imperfections and all).
Hollywood demos look great, but sometimes need a closer look to make sure what you see is what you’ll get.
When you’re evaluating an AI Agent for customer service, you need to look past the polish. You’re assessing how well it will handle real-world scenarios – the messiest, most complex conversations your team deals with every day. That matters even more when you’re evaluating how it works on the toughest support channels, like voice.
At Pioneer, we showed Fin Voice by calling Fin live on stage. We wanted to show the real thing (with real latency and …
There are two types of AI demos: the “Hollywood demo,” which is highly produced, polished, and looks pretty perfect; and the “real-world demo,” which is raw, unpolished, and shows real product performance (imperfections and all).
Hollywood demos look great, but sometimes need a closer look to make sure what you see is what you’ll get.
When you’re evaluating an AI Agent for customer service, you need to look past the polish. You’re assessing how well it will handle real-world scenarios – the messiest, most complex conversations your team deals with every day. That matters even more when you’re evaluating how it works on the toughest support channels, like voice.
At Pioneer, we showed Fin Voice by calling Fin live on stage. We wanted to show the real thing (with real latency and interruptions) so people could understand the product they’d be deploying to their own customers.
What makes voice hard, and real-world demos important
Voice is one of the toughest tests of any AI system. It’s not just “chat with speech.”
An AI Agent needs to be able to listen, respond, and adapt in real time. Timing, tone, and turn-taking are all part of the product, they shape the experience as much as accuracy or reasoning.
An edited video might sound seamless, but it can’t show how a system behaves in a real support environment – like when a conversation takes an unexpected turn or when it pauses briefly to reason or retrieve data. Those small moments – latency, clarifications, interruptions – are when you see what the AI Agent is really capable of.
A real-world demo shows that. It lets you see and hear how the system actually behaves under real conditions, not in a controlled environment that’s been smoothed out with editing.
What happened when we called Fin live on stage
When our Chief Product Officer, Paul Adams, demoed Fin Voice at Pioneer, the goal was to show the product exactly as customers experience it.
Paul called Fin live on stage, and in 90 seconds, Fin verified his identity, retrieved account data, managed an interruption, offered options, completed the workflow, and sent a follow-up email.
If you watched it live, you probably noticed a few things:
- Latency when Fin paused briefly to fetch subscription details or check backend systems. That wasn’t lag, it was work happening in real time.
- Natural conversation flow. Fin detected when Paul had finished speaking, handled interruptions, and replied in short, natural turns.
- Awareness and tone. You could hear subtle changes in pacing when Paul laughed or hesitated.
- Unscripted conversation design. Paul spoke naturally, and Fin adapted to resolve his query without any IVR menus or fixed paths.
Those details are the real test. A voice AI Agent that performs well in a live demo is one that will perform well for you and your customers too.
How Fin Voice has evolved
Voice has been one of the most demanding, and rewarding, areas of development for Fin. Since launch, we’ve been expanding what it can do so support leaders can customize how Fin sounds, behaves, and aligns with their brand.
- **Voice and tone customization: **Choose from multiple natural voices, set greetings, and fine-tune how Fin communicates with customers.
- **Escalation and conversational guidance: **Teach Fin to use your terminology, ask clarifying follow-ups, and escalate when needed.
- **Deployment controls: **Manage rollouts, test safely in internal environments, and fine-tune before going live.
- Flexible integrations: Connect to any telephony system via call forwarding, and link Fin Voice to backend systems or APIs to take action.
- **Multilingual capability: **Fin Voice now supports 28 languages natively.
Alongside these features, we’ve made big improvements to Fin’s answer quality – the foundation of a great voice experience.
When people call, they’re looking for accurate, immediate answers they can trust. So we’ve focused on three key areas: low latency, which is down roughly 30–40% since launch; clarification flow, so Fin asks smart follow-up questions to reduce back and forth and improve resolution rates; and voice-specific answer structure, so Fin delivers information in shorter sentences with pacing designed for listening.
Together, these improvements mean customers get the highest-quality answers as quickly as possible, resulting in more resolutions, and better experiences.
Why real matters
Running a live demo always carries risk because things can go wrong. But that’s also why it matters, because that’s how customers experience it too.
Support leaders stake their reputation on the systems they choose. Real-world demos show how a system actually behaves under real conditions, not how it looks after editing. That’s the only way to understand what you’re putting in front of your customers.
When you see Fin in a demo, you’re seeing the same system that runs in production. Real-world demos take more effort and don’t always go perfectly, but they show what’s real, which is ultimately what you need to see.