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Tech Talks Daily

Neil C. Hughes
Tech Talks Daily
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2373 episodes

  • Tech Talks Daily

    The Lucid Software Playbook For Aligning People, Process, And AI

    2026/04/08 | 31 mins.
    How do you bring people together to do better work when everything around them feels increasingly complex, distributed, and uncertain?
    In today's episode, I sat down with Jessica Guistolise from Lucid Software, and what struck me straight away was her belief that work has always been a group project, even if many organizations still behave as though it is not. 
    Jessica shared how much of the friction we experience at work comes from misalignment, unclear expectations, and a lack of shared understanding. When teams are spread across time zones, systems, and now AI-powered workflows, those gaps only widen. Her perspective is simple but powerful. When people can actually see the work, rather than interpret it through documents, meetings, or assumptions, something shifts. Conversations become clearer, decisions become faster, and collaboration starts to feel human again.
    We also explored how visual collaboration platforms like those from Lucid Software are helping teams move away from scattered tools and disconnected workflows toward a more unified way of working. Jessica described it as having everything on one workbench, where teams can brainstorm, plan, and execute without constantly switching context. 
    What really stayed with me was her focus on inclusivity in collaboration. Not everyone contributes in the same way, and visual environments can create space for different thinking styles, whether someone is outspoken, reflective, or somewhere in between. That idea of creating a shared language across teams, roles, and even personalities feels increasingly relevant in a world where communication often breaks down.
    Of course, no conversation right now would be complete without talking about AI. Jessica offered a refreshingly honest view. There is uncertainty, and there should be. But rather than avoiding it, she believes leaders need to make AI visible, map how it is used, define where human judgment matters, and encourage teams to experiment openly. 
    One of the most interesting ideas she shared was reframing mistakes as early learnings. When teams feel safe to test, fail, and share what they discover, progress accelerates. When fear or blame enters the picture, everything slows down.
    We also touched on AI literacy and what it really means in practice. For Jessica, it comes down to clarity. Clear workflows, clear guardrails, and clear expectations about accountability. AI might assist, but humans remain responsible for outcomes. That mindset, combined with leadership that actively participates in experimentation, creates an environment where people feel confident stepping forward rather than holding back.
    This conversation left me thinking about how many organizations are still trying to layer AI onto unclear processes and expecting better results. Jessica's message is that clarity comes first, then technology can amplify it. 
    So if work really is a group project, are we giving our teams the visibility and confidence they need to succeed, or are we still asking them to figure it out in the dark?
  • Tech Talks Daily

    EvoluteIQ On Rethinking ROI In The Age Of Enterprise AI

    2026/04/07 | 40 mins.
    What happens when the very pricing model meant to speed up AI adoption ends up slowing it down?
    In this episode of Tech Talks Daily, I sit down with Sameet Gupte, CEO and co-founder of EvoluteIQ, to discuss a part of the enterprise AI story that still doesn't get enough attention.
    While so much of the conversation around AI focuses on models, copilots, and the latest agentic promises, Sameet brings the discussion back to a business reality that every enterprise leader understands. If the economics do not work, adoption stalls. And if success in a pilot makes the final rollout even more expensive, something has gone wrong long before the board signs off on scale.
    Sameet argues that many organizations are still trapped by legacy pricing structures built for an earlier generation of automation. Per-user and per-bot pricing may look manageable at the pilot stage.
    Once a company tries to expand automation across departments, processes, and geographies, the numbers can quickly stop making sense. That creates what many now call pilot purgatory, where a company proves something can work, but cannot justify taking it any further. It is a problem rooted in incentives, procurement, and fragmented technology stacks, and it is one that CFOs are watching very closely.
    What I found especially interesting in this conversation is how Sameet frames the issue. He believes most enterprises do not actually have an automation problem. They have an orchestration problem.
    In other words, the challenge is rarely a lack of tools. It is getting all the systems, workflows, approvals, data flows, and legacy infrastructure to work together to produce a clean business outcome. That idea changes the conversation from buying isolated features to rethinking the process as a whole.
    We also discuss why outcomes-based pricing is increasingly resonating with enterprise buyers. Sameet explains why predictable costs, transparent commercial models, and shared accountability are helping move automation conversations out of innovation teams and into the CFO's office.
    For public companies and large global enterprises, that matters. Leaders want fewer surprises, fewer overlapping vendors, and a much clearer line between spend and return.
    There is also a broader theme running through this episode about where the market is heading next. Sameet sees real urgency around vendor consolidation, enterprise simplification, and the need to rethink how AI is introduced into the business. His view is that companies need to pause, define what they actually want AI to do, and then choose tools that fit the business, rather than reshaping the business around the latest platform pitch.
    If you are trying to make sense of AI adoption beyond the hype, this conversation offers a practical and timely perspective on pricing, scale, and what real transformation could look like inside the enterprise.
    After listening, do you think the future of enterprise AI will be shaped as much by commercial models as by the technology itself, and what are you seeing in your own organization?
    Useful Links
    Connect with Sameet Gupte, CEO and co-founder of EvoluteIQ
    Learn More About EvoluteIQ
  • Tech Talks Daily

    Closing The AI Trust Gap In Customer Experience With Cyara

    2026/04/06 | 33 mins.
    How many bad customer experiences does it take before someone walks away for good? In my conversation with Amitha Pulijala, we explore why the answer might be fewer than most businesses are prepared for, and what that means for anyone investing in AI-powered customer experience.
    New research from Cyara reveals a stark reality. Twenty-eight percent of consumers will abandon a brand after just one poor interaction, and nearly half will do the same after only two or three. That leaves very little room for error at a time when more organizations are introducing AI into customer journeys, often at speed and at scale.
    Amitha, who leads product strategy in the AI and CX space, brings a grounded perspective shaped by years of working with large enterprises and complex contact center environments. What stood out in our discussion is how the real challenge is no longer about whether AI can handle customer interactions. In many cases, it already can. The issue is whether customers trust it enough to let it try.
    We unpack the growing perception gap: 73 percent of consumers still believe human agents resolve issues faster, even though AI systems can deliver near-instant responses. That disconnect often comes down to past experiences, from bots that fail to understand context to systems that trap users in frustrating loops with no clear way out.
    There is also a clear line that customers draw around where AI belongs.
    Routine, high-volume tasks such as password resets or appointment confirmations are widely accepted. But when conversations shift toward financial security, healthcare, or legal advice, expectations change. People want human judgment involved and reassurance that the outcome is reliable.
    What makes this conversation particularly relevant is the generational divide shaping expectations. Younger users are far more open to AI-led interactions, provided they work seamlessly. Older generations remain more cautious, often preferring the certainty of speaking with a human. That creates a design challenge for businesses trying to serve everyone without alienating anyone.
    Throughout the episode, Amitha emphasizes that trust is built through experience, not intention. That means testing AI systems in real-world conditions, monitoring how they perform over time, and ensuring that when things do go wrong, the transition to a human feels smooth and informed rather than abrupt and frustrating.
    This is not a conversation about replacing humans with machines. It is about understanding where AI can add speed and efficiency, where it should support human agents, and where it should step back entirely. The organizations getting this balance right are not the ones deploying AI the fastest, but the ones validating it most carefully before customers ever see it.
    As businesses race to embed AI at every touchpoint, a bigger question emerges. Are we building systems that customers actually trust, or are we creating new points of friction that push them away?
     
    Useful Links
    Connect with Amitha on LinkedIn
    Survey Data
    Cyara Website
    Follow Cyara on LinkedIn
  • Tech Talks Daily

    Turning AI Ambition Into Real Business Value

    2026/04/05 | 30 mins.
    What does it really take to move AI from endless experimentation into something that creates real business value? In this episode, I sat down with Tom Alexander, Head of Innovation and Transformation at CrossCountry Consulting, to talk about why so many organizations still struggle to turn AI ambition into meaningful outcomes.
    Tom works closely with executive and CFO teams that are either unsure where to begin or frustrated that early AI efforts have not delivered what they hoped for. We talked about why this is rarely just a technology issue. In many cases, the real blockers are ownership, change management, weak alignment across the business, and a failure to connect AI initiatives to the problems that matter most.
    One of the big themes in our conversation was the need to treat AI as an enterprise-wide program rather than a collection of isolated tools. Tom shared how leaders can focus on business processes first, identify where automation can genuinely improve performance, and avoid getting distracted by hype. We also unpacked the growing accountability challenge around AI, including who should own it, how stakeholders can align, and why strong foundations in data, governance, and training matter so much.
    This episode is packed with practical takeaways for anyone trying to make sense of AI adoption inside a business. If you are trying to figure out where to start, how to scale, or how to avoid another stalled initiative, there is a lot in here for you. After listening, I would love to hear your thoughts. How is your organization approaching AI, and where do you think most businesses are still getting it wrong?
    Useful Links
    CrossCountry website
    Connect with Tom Alexander on LinkedIn
    Field Notes podcast
  • Tech Talks Daily

    Adapting To Rising Costs And Constant Threats

    2026/04/05 | 18 mins.
    Is the endpoint still just a device, or has it quietly become one of the most important control points in modern enterprise security?
    Recording live from IGEL Now And Next in Miami, I sat down once again with Darren Fields for what has become an annual check-in on how fast the industry is really changing. And this time, the conversation feels very different.
    Over the last 12 months, the discussion has moved well beyond traditional endpoint management. From global supply chain pressure driven by AI demand to rising hardware costs and unpredictable refresh cycles, the assumptions that once shaped endpoint strategy are starting to fall apart. Darren shares how organizations are now being forced into difficult decisions, absorb rising costs, delay investment, or rethink the model entirely.
    We also explore how that shift is changing the conversation at the leadership level. What was once seen as a procurement decision is increasingly being reframed as a resilience strategy. Extending hardware life, reducing dependency on supply chains, and maintaining operational continuity are becoming just as important as performance and cost.
    Security, of course, sits at the center of it all. With the majority of breaches still originating at the endpoint, Darren highlights how organizations are starting to rethink where they focus their efforts. Rather than focusing solely on data centers and cloud environments, there is growing recognition that control, visibility, and enforcement must occur at the edge.
    The conversation also touches on the reality of modern cyber threats. From constant attack attempts to incidents that leave organizations offline for weeks, the challenge is no longer just restoring systems but restoring access. And that shift has major implications for how recovery and continuity are designed moving forward.
    We also look at the growing convergence of IT and OT, the role of contextual access, and the balancing act between stronger security and user experience. With organizations at very different stages of their journey, there is no single path forward, but there is a clear sense that change is already underway.
    So as the pace of technology, risk, and demand continues to accelerate, one question remains. Are organizations adapting fast enough, or are they still relying on models that no longer reflect the world they are operating in?
    What do you think, are we finally seeing a shift toward treating the endpoint as a strategic priority, or is there still a gap between awareness and action?

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About Tech Talks Daily

If every company is now a tech company and digital transformation is a journey rather than a destination, how do you keep up with the relentless pace of technological change? Every day, Tech Talks Daily brings you insights from the brightest minds in tech, business, and innovation, breaking down complex ideas into clear, actionable takeaways. Hosted by Neil C. Hughes, Tech Talks Daily explores how emerging technologies such as AI, cybersecurity, cloud computing, fintech, quantum computing, Web3, and more are shaping industries and solving real-world challenges in modern businesses. Through candid conversations with industry leaders, CEOs, Fortune 500 executives, startup founders, and even the occasional celebrity, Tech Talks Daily uncovers the trends driving digital transformation and the strategies behind successful tech adoption. But this isn't just about buzzwords. We go beyond the hype to demystify the biggest tech trends and determine their real-world impact. From cybersecurity and blockchain to AI sovereignty, robotics, and post-quantum cryptography, we explore the measurable difference these innovations can make. Whether improving security, enhancing customer experiences, or driving business growth, we also investigate the ROI of cutting-edge tech projects, asking the tough questions about what works, what doesn't, and how businesses can maximize their investments. Whether you're a business leader, IT professional, or simply curious about technology's role in our lives, you'll find engaging discussions that challenge perspectives, share diverse viewpoints, and spark new ideas. New episodes are released daily, 365 days a year, breaking down complex ideas into clear, actionable takeaways around technology and the future of business.
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