Customer experience chatbot developer Rulai has launched a new low-code chatbot development tool and raised $6.5 million to roll it out.

The development team at Rulai, with offices in Beijing and Campbell, Calif., is helmed by the renowned University of California, Santa Cruz, computer science professor Yi Zhang.

Professor Zhang, the companys chief technologist, and her team are launching a productthat customer service managers can use to develop chatbots that will perform tasks based on customer conversations, and that can becreated without a single line of code.

Its an example of how software developers and artificial intelligence systems are writing themselves out of the application development process.

Specifically, the Rulai tool was designed for customer service managers. Using Rulais drop-down toolkit, managers can write scripts and create action items to customize chatbots that will perform functions based on their communications with customers.

In the demo I saw, Professor Zhang created a chatbot that could automaticallyrespond to a customer and cancel and rebook their flights through a series of drop-down menus and an integration with a companys back end.

The chatbots rely on natural language processing technology developed by Rulai, and the customization toolkit the company has built will let managers with no coding experience create their own scripts. Based on users responses, the bots will respond with actions that are also created by the managers.

Rulai is throwing its bot toolkit out into an incredibly crowded market. Everyone from big names like Facebook and Microsoft to startups like BotCube, Azumo, Api.ai, Chatfuel, blahblahbot, pandorabot and RoBotOverlord (I made the last three up, but you get the idea) are working on these things.

For Rulai, another point of differentiation its pitching is the strength of its AI technology itself, according to Zhang.

The companys bot can escalate tasks to a human customer support system when needed; perform several rounds of communication with a customer and remember the context of the conversation; its based on mixed initiatives and mixed tasks technology, which means both the bot and the human can lead a chat; and it adaptively changes its approach based on real-time feedback.

Whether or not the companys chatbot development toolkit is the future, Rulai has lined up some serious backers to finance its growth.

To roll out this new product, Rulai has raised $6.5 million in new financing from a slew of Sino-U.S. investment firms led by GSR Ventures, a huge player in the Chinese venture capital industry, and an established presence in the U.S.

With over $1.5 billion under management in U.S. and Yuan-denominated funds, GSR has backed some of Chinas biggest new startups. Companies in the funds portfolio includeDiDi Chuxing, Qunar, ele.me, Xiaohongshu, Inke, Shanghai DZH and ofo.

Additional investors in the round included the former venture arm of FIL, formerly known as Fidelity Growth Partners and now called Eight Roads Ventures China and Zhongwei Capital.

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