Three members of the Turn.io team spent a week in the bustling city of Mumbai, India. The main purpose of the week was to onboard 10 organisations to understand and use Turn.io. The heartbeat of Turn.io is to drive conversations into action, thereby providing evidence of the impact organisations are having.
Turn.io provides access to the WhatsApp for Business API for social impact organisations and applies a human-in-the-loop principle. Meaning you do not have to choose between a fully-automated-but-often-impersonal-chatbot service and a very-intimate-but-not-scalable service.
At Turn.io, we believe you need a combination. We spent our three days with the third Tech4Dev cohort talking about all things "chat" and most importantly building hands-on prototypes to use WhatsApp for good. The third day also included Noora Health, Leap For Word, Meraki Foundation and Digital Green sharing challenges and victories on their journey to use chat for impact.
On Thursday Lumen Consulting facilitated a Meetup, with an open invitation to any NGOs interested in two-way communication. The visit to India was made possible through a collaborative effort, initiated and driven by Donald Lobo from the Chintu Gudiya Foundation. You can read Donald’s thoughts and impressions of the week in this blog post, alongside some participants' experiences of Days 1, 2 and 3.
So what were our key learnings from last week?
The development space in India is inspirational!
It is driven by a host of innovative and competent teams that are tackling hard social problems with relentless energy in the world's second-most populous country. Being a small team ourselves, it excites us to build a product to enable other agile and aspirational teams to amplify their impact.
Tracking is important.
It is one of the fundamental reasons why we started Turn.io, to enable impact tracking as it happens instead of at the end of long programmes. The more we know, the more we can grow in the right direction, making sure that resources are applied to solve the right problems in the right places. We love how committed the teams are to using data, and we are committed to building a data-led product. Small changes can change a lot of lives.
Context is important.
To deliver scalable programs we need technology solutions, things like machine learning, natural language understanding, real-time two-way communication and automation. However, to solve hard social problems we need empathy, creativity and human connection. Listening to the participants’ use cases we were inspired to continue to build Turn.io as a human-in-the-loop product. We believe it should not be a choice between a fully automated chatbot (which often results in impersonal and frustrating user experience) OR an intimate but small-scaled service. It needs to be an AND. It needs to be empathy powered by technology.
Community is important.
The synergy of peer learning, the inspiration of hearing one another’s stories, the motivation of collaborative problem solving all seem to strengthen when shared with others. Likewise, group functionality in WhatsApp is a critical feature for social organisations. As Turn.io we agree and will continue to advocate for the group functionality to move out of beta on the WhatsApp for Business API. Our time in Mumbai confirmed the fundamentals on which we founded Turn.io. It warmed our hearts but also reinforced our urgency to improve Turn.io even more. The need is clear and critical - the power of chat, of having a point of connection into almost every life in India, has to be utilised to improve lives! From a product perspective, we are committed to including more automation and more AI-assistance in local languages to help with repetitive tasks. We will continue to build Turn.io as an extendable product, and we will always advocate for community involvement.