Live interpretation for tours & visits
One phone turns your commentary into the visitor’s language, live.
Overseas visitors miss the local guide’s commentary. Hiring an escort interpreter is costly and hard to schedule — factory tours and campus visits often fall back to gestures.
Factory tours, campus visits, exhibition hosting — the overseas guests arrive, but an escort interpreter isn’t in every tour’s budget. Avoce puts interpretation in your pocket: the guide talks while walking, phone in hand, and visitors scan a QR code to read the commentary live on their own phones, in their own language.
The worst thing on a tour is stopping to wait for translation. Avoce’s captions stream: you keep talking, the translation keeps up, and the group keeps moving. Focus mode shows the latest line in large type — a glance is enough while walking. With 14 languages, the Japanese and Vietnamese visitors in the same group each read their own.
How it works
- The guide holds a phone with Avoce open and talks while walking
- Visitors read the same screen, or you hand them the phone
- Focus mode shows the latest line in large type — easy to read on the move
Why Avoce
- 14 languages covered — serve Southeast Asian and European visitors alike
- The caption log survives the tour; turn it into a visit summary afterwards
- Near-zero cost compared to hundreds per day for an escort interpreter
A two-hour tour ≈ 120 points — about $7.30 on the $10.99 / 180-point pack.
Frequently asked questions
Do visitors need to install an app?
No. Scanning the QR code opens the caption page right in the browser — pick a language and read. Friendly even for visitors who aren’t comfortable with phones.
Does it pick up speech well while walking?
Best results come from holding the phone within about 30 cm of your mouth. Outdoors or on a noisy factory floor, an inexpensive clip-on Bluetooth mic makes a clear difference.
What if one group speaks several languages?
Everyone scans the same QR code and picks their own target language — one tour, with Japanese, English, and Vietnamese captions running side by side on different phones.