Episodes

  • EP 40: AI Analytics: From Hindsight to Foresight
    Feb 25 2026

    AI analytics represents a fundamental shift from analyzing what happened to predicting what will happen. Traditional marketing analytics was retrospective-dashboards showing last month's performance, reports explaining why campaigns succeeded or failed. AI analytics is prospective-predictive models forecasting customer behavior, propensity scores indicating conversion likelihood, churn risk signals identifying at-risk customers before they leave.

    The shift in marketing team composition is significant. Traditional teams were heavy on creative and campaign managers. AI-driven marketing teams need data scientists, analytics engineers, and marketing technologists who understand both strategy and technical implementation. The skillset evolves from "what message resonates" toward "what patterns in customer data predict behavior we can influence."

    Critical pitfalls include overfitting models on historical data, optimizing for proxies rather than actual business outcomes, and creating feedback loops where AI recommendations reinforce existing biases rather than discovering new opportunities. Privacy regulations like GDPR and CCPA create constraints on what data you can collect and how you can use it for profiling.

    The ROI is compelling. McKinsey research shows businesses using advanced analytics growing 10-15% faster than competitors, with 20-40% improvement in marketing efficiency through better targeting and resource allocation.

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    16 mins
  • EP 37: AI Content Creation: 3x Output, Half the Cost
    Feb 25 2026

    The numbers are staggering: 96% of companies now use generative AI for content production. Companies report 3-5x more content output, 30-50% cost savings, and 50% reductions in creation time. This isn't incremental improvement—it's transformational change in how marketing teams operate.

    AI content creation in 2025 encompasses far more than ChatGPT writing blog posts. We're talking about integrated workflows governing ideation, creation, distribution, and analytics. Tools like Jasper, Copy.ai, and ContentBot handle everything from drafting to scheduling and multi-platform distribution. The sophistication has moved far beyond simple text generation.

    Limitations remain clear: AI struggles with truly original creative thinking—breakthrough ideas that redefine categories. It excels at recombining existing concepts but genuine innovation requires human creativity. AI lacks emotional intelligence and cultural nuance, can mimic empathy but doesn't actually understand context the way humans do, and generates confidently wrong information (hallucinations), which is why human fact-checking remains non-negotiable.

    Looking ahead, the strategic implication is marketing teams shifting focus from production to strategy. When AI handles volume, humans focus on insight, positioning, and differentiation. Small teams can now compete with large enterprises because production bottlenecks disappear.

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    19 mins
  • EP 34: AI in Credit and Lending: Democratizing Access or Amplifying Bias?
    Feb 22 2026

    AI in credit decisions is genuinely controversial because it could either democratize lending and expand access to underserved populations or take historical discrimination and amplify it at scale. The reality is both are happening simultaneously in different institutions—it all depends on how intentionally the AI is designed and monitored for fairness.

    Sam and Mac examine how AI is disrupting traditional credit scoring. FICO scores have dominated for decades using limited data: payment history, credit utilization, length of credit history, types of credit, and recent inquiries. This approach systematically excludes millions who don't have traditional credit histories, even if they're perfectly responsible with money and would be excellent borrowers.

    The technical models include XGBoost as the industry standard and neural networks for processing more data with hidden layers. Traditional logistic regression is often a poor fit for real-world credit behavior. Banks need model governance with clear ownership, regular bias testing, robust explainability, and human oversight for complex cases. AI handles straightforward approvals and denials; humans handle the middle—complex situations requiring judgment and contextual understanding.

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    15 mins
  • EP 33: AI in Compliance: Turning Regulation into Competitive Advantage
    Feb 22 2026

    Compliance has traditionally been viewed as a pure cost center—regulatory overhead that doesn't generate revenue. But AI is fundamentally changing this equation by turning compliance from a defensive obligation into an actual strategic advantage. New LSTM networks are achieving 94.2% accuracy in compliance monitoring while simultaneously cutting false positives dramatically.

    Sam and Mac explore why AI in compliance might be the biggest impact area that nobody is talking about. The false positive problem has always made compliance painful and expensive—traditional systems generated massive false positive rates, with analysts drowning in alerts where 95% turned out to be completely legitimate activity. This creates compliance fatigue where analysts become desensitized because so many alerts are false.

    The episode covers AI's impact across major regulatory areas: AML (Anti-Money Laundering), KYC (Know Your Customer), Sanctions Screening, and Trade Surveillance. For AML, AI narrows down suspicious patterns while letting routine activity pass without alerts. For KYC, banks report 78% faster onboarding times and 85% reduction in manual review—customers approved in an hour instead of days.

    AI must be transparent and auditable. The future is shifting from reacting to violations to preventing them entirely, flagging patterns on day three instead of catching problems on day 30, saving millions in potential federal lawsuits.

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    15 mins