Localization is not translation
A localized output should preserve intent while adapting tone, format, customer expectations, and market convention. Literal translation can be fluent and still feel wrong.
- Review tone with native-market readers.
- Check dates, prices, politeness, and claim strength.
- Keep brand meaning stable while adapting surface expression.
What to benchmark
Use product launch copy, ad headlines, pricing-page localization, Japanese business email rewriting, and customer success summaries to test the agent's range.
How to improve over time
Save strong examples as market-specific style references. Retest after model updates because localization quality can change even when overall benchmark scores look stable.
How to use the comparison
model comparison is best used as shortlist evidence, not a final buying decision. Start with your language, task family, risk level, and budget, then rerun the leading candidates on your own representative samples.
- Support workflows should prioritize policy boundaries.
- Writing workflows should prioritize local tone and brand fit.
- Extraction workflows should prioritize schema validity and missing-field behavior.
Score gaps to double-check
Average scores can hide risk. An agent can look strong overall while still failing a few refund, legal, billing, security, or structured-output cases. Those high-risk tasks should be inspected separately before launch.
Pre-launch checklist
Before using this comparison in production, run a small retest with real inputs, edge cases, and a plan for what happens when the agent fails.
- Is there a clear human-review rule?
- Are model version and evaluation date recorded?
- Which outputs are not allowed to be sent or written automatically?
- Is there a fallback path when the agent fails?
A practical next step
If you are evaluating this comparison, start with ten real samples: three normal cases, three edge cases, two high-risk cases, and two cases with strict language or formatting requirements. Run two or three candidate agents and compare quality, repair time, and critical failures.