Subsplash vs Deepgram
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Subsplash wires natural-language AI through People and Analytics — its two highest-leverage surfaces.
Subsplash has spent the last two months putting AI on the busiest parts of its admin. Trends AI consolidated giving, attendance, and events data into AI-buildable dashboards in late March, and People Assistant followed in May with natural-language filtering of congregation lists. Between those, the team shipped a dedicated Events Manager role, a group-attendance analytics dashboard, and smaller workflow-board UX gains.
The bet is clear: ministry staff with no SQL or BI background want to ask questions of their congregation's data in plain language — both for analysis and for action. Trends AI handles the analytical half; People Assistant is the actionable list-building counterpart. The supporting work — RBAC, attendance analytics, faster workflow navigation — is what lets the AI features actually land inside real church-staff workflows.
Expect AI to extend next into Workflows (plain-language routing rules for congregants) and Giving (donor segmentation for stewardship outreach), with a unified AI surface across modules as the natural endpoint. Pricing the AI tier separately, as Trends AI already is, telegraphs how Subsplash will monetize this push.
Diarization v2 lands with a 3.3× human-eval edge — Deepgram's contact-center push gets sharper.
Deepgram is shipping in two coordinated lanes: deeper transcription quality (Nova-3 multilingual numerals, Gujarati, profanity filtering across 50+ languages) and a maturing Voice Agent API (managed LLM swaps, third-party TTS controls). The new opt-in diarize_model=v2 brings a new architecture preferred 3.3× over v1 in human eval, with the biggest gains on contact-center audio. Self-hosted images and multi-language SDKs are released on a tight, predictable cadence.
The arc is consolidating around enterprise contact-center workloads: better speaker separation, safer outputs via profanity redaction, and richer language coverage are exactly the gates that block call-center adoption. Voice Agent is becoming a managed-LLM thin layer where customers pick the brain (OpenAI, removed Llama Nemotron) while Deepgram owns ears and mouth. Expect diarize_model=v2 to become the default once telemetry catches up.
Likely next: v2 diarization promoted to default for diarize=true, and a streaming version of the same architecture to extend the contact-center story to live transcription. More managed-LLM additions in Voice Agent, plus continued language fill-in for Nova-3.
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