
"Some of these agents were being built with no-code tools, meaning shipping to production was fast, but the quality of the product was often low. Other agents were being made by companies that had the time and resources to spend months building specialized tools. 'Developers and enterprises needed an alternative,' Leonard told TechCrunch, adding that he and Caneja also realized that the future of software would be 'coded, validated, and optimized by coding agents.'"
"Last year, they decided to launch VoiceRun, a platform that lets developers and coding assistants launch and scale voice agents. Right now, many of these low-code platforms let people build voice agents with visual diagrams, where people click through conversation flows and write prompts into boxes that then dictate how the agent should behave. All of that can be hard to manage, Leonard said."
Nicholas Leonard and Derek Caneja launched VoiceRun last year to let developers and coding assistants build and scale AI voice agents through code. Many existing voice agents were created with no-code visual tools that enabled fast shipping but produced lower-quality, hard-to-manage conversation flows. Other teams could spend months building specialized systems, creating a gap for teams needing both speed and control. VoiceRun lets users write code to define agent behavior, enabling fine-grained configuration such as dialects and other custom behaviors that visual interfaces may not support. The founders envision a future where software is coded, validated, and optimized by coding agents.
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