Definition
Natural Language Processing is the field of AI that teaches computers to read, understand, and respond to human language the way people actually write and speak it.[1]
At a glance
- Turns messy text and speech (emails, reviews, calls) into structured information a business can act on.[3]
- Powers everyday tools: chatbots, voice assistants, spam filters, autocomplete, and translation.[1]
- Common business wins: 24/7 customer support, gauging customer mood at scale, and fast contract or document review.[2]
- Modern NLP is the engine behind tools like ChatGPT; the market is projected near 48 billion dollars in 2025.[4]
What it does for a business
NLP handles the language work that floods most companies: answering routine questions via chatbots, scanning reviews and social posts to flag unhappy customers early, sorting and routing emails, and pulling key terms out of contracts.[3] The goal is freeing staff from repetitive reading and typing.
How to think about it
Language is unstructured and ambiguous, so NLP rarely hits 100 percent accuracy.[1] Treat it as a tireless assistant that drafts, sorts, and flags, with humans reviewing high-stakes output. Start with one clear, high-volume task (like support tickets) rather than trying to automate everything.
Bottom line
NLP is how software finally understands plain human language, letting a business automate text-heavy work like support, feedback analysis, and document review.