Comparing Amazon Connect and boost.ai? Both are Contact Center & CCaaS, Enterprise and Voice & Phone AI tools in the directory, which is why buyers put them on the same shortlist. Below is a side-by-side look at how they price, what they integrate with, and when each is the better fit, so you can pick on the facts rather than either vendor's own sales page.
| Attribute | Amazon Connect | boost.ai |
|---|---|---|
| Pricing | Paid · $0.038/min | Paid · Custom |
| Founded | 2017 | 2016 |
| Categories | Contact Center & CCaaS Enterprise Voice & Phone AI | AI Agents & Chatbots Contact Center & CCaaS Enterprise Voice & Phone AI |
| Integrations | Salesforce Zendesk ServiceNow Marketo Amazon Lex AWS Lambda Amazon S3 Amazon Kinesis | Genesys Zendesk Salesforce Five9 Amazon Connect Microsoft Teams |
Amazon Connect is AWS's cloud contact center, rebranded Amazon Connect Customer in April 2026. It runs voice, chat, email, and SMS from a single agent workspace, with agentic self-service bots, prebuilt AI agents, real-time agent assist, and conversational analytics now bundled into the base channel rates. Everything is pay as you go: no per-seat licenses, no servers to manage, and capacity scales from a handful of agents to tens of thousands without a contract renegotiation.
The product launched in March 2017 as a productized version of the contact center technology Amazon built for its own retail business, with GE Appliances among the first customers, and 2017 is the launch year rather than a company founding. Since then it has become AWS's showcase for enterprise scale: Intuit scales TurboTax support from 6,000 to 11,000 agents in minutes, Capital One runs its direct bank and fraud operations on it, and Priceline leaned on it through pandemic call spikes. In April 2026 AWS acquired conversational AI vendor NLX and reorganized Connect into four solutions, with Connect Customer as the customer service arm; United Airlines used the NLX technology to ship a conversational AI agent in three months instead of twelve.
Pricing is unusually public for this market. Published US rates are $0.038 per voice minute plus telephony charges, $0.010 per chat message, $0.014 per SMS, and $0.080 per email, with the AI capabilities included rather than sold as add-ons. A cheaper non-AI Customer Basic tier exists but AWS does not publish its rates on the main pricing page, and a free tier covers 90 minutes of monthly usage. Real bills hinge on volume, so model your traffic before committing.
Choose Amazon Connect if you have builders on staff, live in the AWS ecosystem, and want usage-based pricing that scales to enormous volume. Skip it if you want a turnkey helpdesk with a fixed per-seat bill, since getting the most from it still means wiring up Lambda, Lex, and your CRM yourself.
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boost.ai comes from Sandnes, Norway, where founder Lars Ropeid Selsås started in 2016 by automating customer interactions for a local bank. That origin explains everything about the product: it is conversational AI built for institutions that cannot afford a creative answer, and Nordic banks and insurers were the proving ground. Customers today include Nordea, Santander, DNB, Telenor, Vodafone, and Metro Bank, and the platform claims more than 600 live AI agents handling over 150 million automated conversations a year.
Technically, boost.ai's signature move is the hybrid: deterministic natural-language understanding that behaves predictably at thousands of intents, combined with generative AI where flexibility helps, all wrapped in governance controls. That lets a compliance officer sign off on what the agent is allowed to say while the agent still handles the long tail of phrasing real customers use. It covers chat and voice, integrates with contact-center platforms like Genesys, Five9, and Amazon Connect, and even supports Nordic authentication systems like BankID, a detail that says a lot about who it serves.
The company took a majority investment from private equity firm Nordic Capital in 2021 and sells the way you would expect an enterprise Scandinavian vendor to sell: quote-based pricing, no public price list, proper procurement. An unusual cultural artifact is its certification program, with thousands of certified AI trainers among its customers' staff, reflecting a philosophy that the client team, not the vendor, should run the agent day to day.
Pick boost.ai if you are a bank, insurer, telco, or public-sector organization that needs high-accuracy automation with auditable behavior. It is not the tool for a startup wanting a widget by Friday; it is the tool for the organization whose regulator reads the transcripts.
Read the full boost.ai listing → · See boost.ai alternatives →
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