New York-listed customer engagement platform Twilio Inc. has announced a multi-year strategic partnership with Microsoft aimed at accelerating the adoption of conversational artificial intelligence (AI) across enterprise customer engagement.
The collaboration, unveiled during the company’s annual SIGNAL event, brings together Twilio’s robust customer engagement platform with Microsoft’s enterprise-grade Azure AI infrastructure to unlock new possibilities in AI-driven communication.
The alliance targets more than 10 million Twilio developers and thousands of Microsoft-managed customers, enabling them to build and scale advanced conversational AI experiences.
It reflects Twilio’s broader vision of transforming every digital interaction between businesses and consumers into a seamless, personalized engagement, according to the announcement.
Conversational AI, which relies on natural language processing and machine learning to interpret and respond to human dialogue, has become a key technology for enhancing customer service and sales.
Yet many companies still struggle with incomplete data, legacy system integration, and limited AI expertise. The Twilio-Microsoft partnership aims to address these challenges through a unified solution that combines Twilio’s communication and data capabilities with Microsoft Azure’s secure and scalable AI infrastructure.
Twilio’s Chief Product Officer, Inbal Shani, said the partnership will help businesses deliver more precise, efficient, and engaging customer interactions by embedding conversational AI into core engagement workflows.
“Every interaction between a business and their customers is an opportunity to build loyalty and trust, and those interactions have been drastically improved by AI,” Shani said.
Microsoft’s Corporate Vice President for Azure AI, Asha Sharma, added that the collaboration offers customers a powerful combination of technologies to scale AI adoption while managing risk and ensuring compliance.
Alongside the strategic tie-up, Twilio introduced new product innovations designed to enhance its AI offering.
These include ConversationRelay, a voice AI solution that enables developers to create natural voice-based agents using their preferred large language models, and Conversational Intelligence, a feature that turns audio and text interactions into structured data and actionable insights for enterprises. The latter is now generally available for voice and in private beta for messaging.
By deepening its AI capabilities and aligning with a technology partner like Microsoft, Twilio is doubling down on its strategy to power intelligent, multi-channel customer engagement.
The move underscores a growing industry trend in which communications and AI are converging to transform how businesses interact with customers across digital platforms.