Funnel launches Insights: AI call scoring transforms every conversation into operational gold
Try Insights for free, AI-powered call analysis already live on 450K units, delivers personalized performance feedback and renter sentiment at scale
TAMPA, Fla., June 9, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Funnel, the proven AI-infused multifamily CRM, today announced the launch of their newest product, Insights, a first-of-its-kind AI call scoring, coaching and resident sentiment solution designed to replace ineffective secret shops and clunky survey tools. With Insights, operators gain instant performance feedback, complete portfolio visibility, and real renter intelligence. By turning every call into a coaching and leadership opportunity, it empowers teams to grow and helps operators lead with confidence.
'Secret shops capture one moment. Insights scores every moment,' said Michelle Hesler, Director of Sales at Ackermann Group, a real estate investment and management firm operating around 5,000 units across 15 cities in the Midwest and Southeast. 'Implementing Insights has created a standard for leasing agents as it relates to expectations and best practices on leasing calls, while also driving an impressive level of engagement from the team and creating more opportunities to grow and develop our associates.'
Insights automatically analyzes and scores 100% of calls—prospect and resident alike. That means no more grading performance based on a single 'good day,' no more manual reviews, and no more decisions made in the dark. With always-on AI, managers finally get objective, transparent performance data they can trust—and teams get fair, fast feedback they can actually use.
Key capabilities include:
Call data isn't just tracked—it's transformed into action. By shedding light on the real reasons behind resident and prospect calls, Insights gives operators a clearer path to improvement. It surfaces recurring issues, highlights coaching opportunities, and frees up teams to spend more time on meaningful interactions that drive results.
'With Insights, we're stepping into a new era of accountability and clarity. For the first time, we can see how our teams engage with residents and prospects across every community—without relying on time-delayed spot checks or subjective feedback,' said Brent L. Bunger, Executive Vice President, Adara Communities, a premier national multifamily management company founded in 2010. 'The AI is consistent, fair, and surprisingly nuanced. It doesn't just highlight coaching moments, it uncovers operational flaws and shortcomings we can address in real time. That combination—performance improvement plus portfolio-wide visibility—is a game changer.'
Early adopters are already seeing results: faster follow-ups, fewer repeat questions, better team retention and stronger renter experiences driven by data instead of gut feel.
Early results include:
Insights is more than a product—it's a mindset shift. One where technology supports people, not replaces them, and where data-driven coaching creates better outcomes for everyone involved.
'The future of multifamily isn't AI replacing humans—it's AI and humans working together to deliver better outcomes,' said Tyler Christiansen, CEO of Funnel. 'Insights is a perfect example of that. It gives teams the data and coaching they need to grow, while giving operators the visibility to lead with confidence. And it opens the black box of what your residents are really calling about, giving you an opportunity to make changes and have your people focus on high-value interactions. When technology supports people—not replaces them—that's when real transformation happens.'
Insights is available now, with no setup required. To help more operators experience the impact of real-time visibility and fair, fast feedback, Funnel is offering it for free to new customers, no CRM needed, some restrictions apply.
To learn more, visit our website or stop by the Funnel + Fenix booths (#139, #151) at Apartmentalize.
About Funnel
Funnel provides a win to three vital groups: operators looking to reduce costs and improve efficiencies; stretched-thin onsite teams who demand a better long-term career; and renters who deserve a better customer experience. Funnel's proven AI-infused CRM is the enterprise-grade solution industry leaders, owners, and operators trust to deliver a streamlined, consistent, and connected experience from first inquiry through years of renewals, while simultaneously saving operators quantifiable money through the operational flexibility only a renter-centric® platform can provide. We call it Renter Management Software; our clients call it the new operating model.
Media Contact:
Funnel
Hannah O'Leary
Sr. Manager Corporate Communications
[email protected]
View original content to download multimedia: https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/funnel-launches-insights-ai-call-scoring-transforms-every-conversation-into-operational-gold-302476181.html
SOURCE Funnel
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


News24
28 minutes ago
- News24
‘Elon is sticking to his principles': Musk's father says Trump dispute triggered by stress
The clash between Donald Trump and Elon Musk intensified after Musk criticised the president's tax and spending bill, sparking a heated social media exchange. Errol Musk, Elon's father, highlighted the intense stress both sides faced over months and urged for an end to the public battle. Trump warned of 'serious consequences' should Musk support Democrats, despite Musk's prior financial backing of Trump's 2024 campaign and collaboration on downsising government operations. The dispute between Donald Trump and Elon Musk was triggered by months of intense stress on both sides, and the public battle between the US president and the billionaire donor needs to stop, Musk's father told Reuters on Monday. Trump and Musk began exchanging insults last week on social media, with the Tesla and SpaceX CEO describing the president's sweeping tax and spending bill as a "disgusting abomination". Asked whether he thought his son had made a mistake by engaging in a public clash with the president, Errol Musk said people were sometimes unable to think as clearly as they should "in the heat of the moment." "They've had five months of intense stress," Musk told Reuters at a conference in Moscow organised by conservative Russian tycoons. "With all the opposition cleared and two people left in the arena, all they have ever done is get rid of everything and now they are trying to get rid of each other - well that has to stop." Asked how it would end, he said: Oh, it will end on a good note - very soon. Neither the White House nor Musk could be reached for comment outside normal US business hours. Trump said on Saturday his relationship with Musk was over and that there would be "serious consequences" if the world's richest man decided to fund US Democrats running against Republicans who vote for the tax and spending bill. Musk bankrolled a large part of Trump's 2024 presidential campaign. Trump named Musk to head an effort to downsize the federal workforce and slash spending. Musk's father told reporters he was standing by his son. "Elon is sticking to his principles but you cannot always stick to your principles in the real world," Musk's father said. "Sometimes you have to give and take." Speaking beside sanctioned Russian businessman Konstantin Malofeyev, Musk's father praised President Vladimir Putin as a "very stable and pleasant man." He accused "fake media" in the West of projecting "complete nonsense" about Russia and for casting it as an enemy.

Associated Press
28 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Amazon to spend $20 billion on data centers in Pennsylvania, including one at a nuclear power plant
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Amazon said Monday that it will spend $20 billion on two data center complexes in Pennsylvania, including one it is building alongside a nuclear power plant that has drawn federal scrutiny over an arrangement to essentially plug right into the power plant. Kevin Miller, vice president of global data centers at Amazon's cloud computing subsidiary, Amazon Web Services, told The Associated Press that the company will build another data center complex just north of Philadelphia. The announcements add to the billions of dollars in Big Tech's data center cash already flowing into the state. Since 2024 started, Amazon has committed to about $10 billion apiece to data center projects in Mississippi, Indiana, Ohio and North Carolina as it ramps up its investment in infrastructure to compete with other tech giants to meet growing demand for artificial intelligence products. The rapid growth of cloud computing and artificial intelligence has fueled demand for data centers that need power to run servers, storage systems, networking equipment and cooling systems. The majority owner of the Susquehanna nuclear power plant, Talen Energy, announced last year that it had sold its data center to Amazon for $650 million in a deal to eventually provide 960 megawatts. That's 40% of the output of one of the nation's largest nuclear power plants, or enough to power more than a half-million homes. However, the arrangement between Talen and Amazon — called a 'behind the meter' connection — has been held up by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission in the first such case to come before the agency. It has raised questions over whether diverting power to higher-paying customers will leave enough for others and whether it's fair to excuse big power users from paying for the grid. ___ Follow Marc Levy on X at:

Business Insider
29 minutes ago
- Business Insider
Sundar Pichai says AI is making Google engineers 10% more productive. Here's how it measures that.
Google is tracking how AI is making its engineers more productive — and has developed a specific way to measure it. Speaking on an episode of the " Lex Fridman Podcast" that aired last week, Google CEO Sundar Pichai said that the company was looking closely at how artificial intelligence was boosting productivity among its software developers. "The most important metric, and we carefully measure it, is how much has our engineering velocity increased as a company due to AI?" he said. The company estimates that it's so far seen a 10% boost, Pichai said. A Google spokesperson clarified to Business Insider that the company tracks this by measuring the increase in engineering capacity created, in hours per week, from the use of AI-powered tools. Put simply, it's a measurement of how much extra time engineers are getting back thanks to AI. Whether Google expects that 10% number to keep increasing, Pichai didn't say. However, he said he expects agentic capabilities — where AI can take actions and make decisions more autonomously — will unlock the "next big wave". Google has its own internal tools to help engineers code. Last year, the company launched an internal coding copilot named "Goose," trained on 25 years of Google's technical history, Business Insider previously reported. While AI Pichai said during the podcast that Google plans to hire more engineers next year. "The opportunity space of what we can do is expanding too," he said, adding that he hopes AI removes some of the grunt work and frees up time for more enjoyable aspects of engineering. Separately, the company is tracking the amount of code that is being generated by AI within Google's walls — a number that is apparently increasing. Pichai said during Alphabet's most recent earnings call that more than 30% of the company's new code is generated by AI, up from an estimated 25% in October. Google isn't the only one. Speaking at London Tech Week on Monday, Microsoft UK CEO Darren Hardman said its GitHub Copilot coding assistant is now writing 40% of code at the company, "enabling us to launch more products in the last 12 months than we did in the previous three years." He added: "It isn't just about speed." In April, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg predicted AI could handle half of Meta's developer work within a year.