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Voice is rapidly emerging as a new interface layer in self-service—but adoption is not happening evenly across use cases. The Industry Group has posted overview of Voice in self-service and included is VAIMS scoring and worksheet assessment for voice readiness.
The assumption that voice will replace touchscreens across kiosks is incorrect. In reality, voice is gaining traction in environments that are high-volume, time-sensitive, and constrained by labor.
The clearest example is the quick-service restaurant drive-thru. Here, voice aligns with operational needs—fast ordering, minimal friction, and limited decision complexity. It is no surprise this segment is leading adoption.
Beyond QSR, voice is gaining ground in service triage applications such as healthcare intake and enterprise support. In these environments, the value is less about convenience and more about workflow efficiency—reducing human intervention while maintaining throughput.
For the pro AV community, the shift to voice introduces a different kind of design challenge.
Voice is not just an interface—it is a systems integration problem spanning audio, visual, and data layers.
👉 Poor audio = failed experience. Every time.
Voice increases reliance on visual confirmation layers:
👉 This reinforces a key point for AV integrators:
Voice drives more demand for digital signage, not less.
Voice systems must stay in sync with:
That requires:
👉 This is where AV meets enterprise IT.
The winning deployments are not “voice-first”—they are multimodal by design:
For AV professionals, this shifts the role from:
Voice systems increasingly rely on:
👉 This brings AV infrastructure closer to compute infrastructure
Inside traditional kiosks—retail browsing, wayfinding, and complex transactions—voice remains situational.
Customers need:
These are still better served visually.
Voice is not replacing touch or screens.
It is expanding the interface stack.
The real opportunity for the AV industry is not microphones—it is:
Voice is not the future of self-service on its own.
But as part of a multimodal system, it is becoming essential.
The winners won’t be those who deploy voice.
They will be those who integrate it into the operating model.
👉 Only segment approaching true scale deployment
👉 Voice alone cannot replace screen-based UX
Voice success depends on:
👉 Not a UI problem → system design problem
👉 Industry moving beyond single-interface design
Voice will not replace touch
It will sit alongside it as part of a broader system

The Industry Group (aka Kiosk Association) comprises various related technology sites and news feeds from kiosks to digital signage to POS and Smart City. Retail Automation and EV Charging are others. Self-service technology (SST) is a type of technology that allows customers to perform various tasks without the assistance of a human. SSTs can bring many benefits to both customers and businesses, including cost savings, improved efficiency, and better customer experience.
The Kiosk Association comprises companies involved in self-service, digital signage, digital menus, outdoor technology, kiosks, point-of-sale, smart city, healthcare, telehealth, voice order, thin client, EV charging and retail automation.
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