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Tech Talks Daily

Neil C. Hughes
Tech Talks Daily
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2362 episodes

  • Tech Talks Daily

    Synthetic Research Explained: A Powerful Tool To Support, Not Replace, Human Insight

    2026/03/29 | 25 mins.
    How far can we trust research that is generated without asking a single human being?
    In this episode, I sat down with Jordan Harper from Qualtrics to unpack one of the most talked-about developments at the Qualtrics X4 Summit, synthetic research. It is a topic that sparks curiosity, excitement, and a fair amount of skepticism in equal measure. And honestly, that tension is exactly why this conversation matters.
    Jordan brings a rare mix of scientific thinking and real-world technology experience, which makes him well placed to cut through the hype. We explored what synthetic panels actually are, and just as importantly, what they are not.
    While many assume this is simply about asking a large language model for answers, the reality is far more nuanced. The approach Jordan and his team are building is grounded in how humans respond to surveys, trained on vast datasets to reflect the inconsistencies, biases, and unpredictability that make human insight valuable in the first place.
    What stood out throughout our conversation was the idea that synthetic research should be seen as additive rather than a replacement. It offers speed, flexibility, and the ability to test ideas quickly, but it does not replace the depth and lived experience that only real people can provide. In fact, some of the most interesting insights come from comparing synthetic responses with human ones, revealing patterns, biases, and even blind spots in traditional research methods.
    We also got into the practical side of things. From controlling for issues like survey fatigue and social desirability bias, to experimenting with question design in ways that would be difficult with human respondents, synthetic research opens up new ways of working. At the same time, it raises important questions about validation, trust, and where to draw the line when decisions carry real-world consequences.
    For me, this episode is about perspective. In a world where AI is accelerating everything, it can be tempting to look for shortcuts. But as Jordan explains, the real value comes from using these tools thoughtfully, alongside human insight rather than in place of it.
    So as this technology continues to evolve, how should researchers and business leaders strike that balance? And where could synthetic research help you ask better questions before you make your next big decision?
  • Tech Talks Daily

    Experience Is Everything: Rethinking Customer Experience In An AI-Driven World

    2026/03/28 | 21 mins.
    What does customer experience really mean when every company claims to put the customer first?
    In this episode, I sat down with Jeannie Walters, founder of Experience Investigators, to unpack why so many organizations talk about customer experience yet struggle to turn it into something that drives real business outcomes. With more than two decades of hands-on work across industries, Jeannie brings a perspective that cuts through the noise and focuses on what actually works inside complex organizations.
    Our conversation took place at the Qualtrics X4 Summit, where one theme kept resurfacing. While AI dominated headlines, there was a noticeable shift back toward strategy, discipline, and accountability. 
    Jeannie has been making that case for years. As she explained, customer experience cannot sit on the sidelines as a reporting function or a collection of metrics. It has to become a daily business discipline, one that shapes decisions across leadership, operations, and culture.
    We explored the thinking behind her new book, Experience Is Everything, and the patterns she has seen repeated across organizations. Leaders invest in tools, gather feedback, and build dashboards, yet still struggle to connect those efforts to outcomes like retention, revenue, and long-term trust. Jeannie argues that the missing piece is often clarity.
     What does customer-centric actually mean for your organization? What are you trying to achieve, and how will you measure success in a way that matters to the business? Without those answers, even the best technology will fall short.
    There were also some honest reflections on AI. While it is accelerating everything, it also raises the stakes. Customers are becoming more aware of how their data is used, and trust is becoming harder to earn and easier to lose. That creates both an opportunity and a risk.
    Organizations that treat customer experience as a strategic priority can use AI to strengthen relationships, while those that treat it as a cost center may simply scale poor experiences faster.
    What stood out most in this conversation was the shift from theory to action. From redefining teams that were stuck reporting on metrics to empowering them to lead business change, Jeannie shared practical examples of how mindset, strategy, and execution come together. It is a reminder that customer experience is not owned by one team. It is something that either shows up in every interaction or not at all.
    So as AI continues to reshape how businesses operate, are we using it to deepen trust and deliver better experiences, or are we simply amplifying what already exists? And where does customer experience truly sit inside your organization today?
  • Tech Talks Daily

    The Human Side Of Healthcare Technology At Stanford Health Care

    2026/03/28 | 20 mins.
    What does a great patient experience really look like when people are at their most vulnerable?
    In this episode, I sat down with Stanford Health Care's SVP and Chief Patient Experience and Operational Performance Officer, Alpa Vyas, to explore how one of the world's leading healthcare organizations is rethinking the human side of care.
    From the outside, healthcare is often seen as a system of processes, technology, and clinical outcomes. But as Alpa explains, every interaction sits within a deeply emotional moment in someone's life, where fear, uncertainty, and complexity collide. That reality shapes everything.
    Our conversation goes back to the early days of Stanford's transformation, where Alpa recognized a gap that many organizations still struggle with today. Improvement efforts were underway, systems were being optimized, yet the patient voice was largely absent. Inspired by design thinking principles from Stanford's own d.school, her team began with empathy as the foundation. That shift changed the direction of everything that followed, from how feedback was gathered to how decisions were made across the organization.
    We also explored the role of technology, and where it truly fits. There is often a temptation to lead with AI or automation, but Alpa brings the focus back to culture, behavior, and trust. Technology, including platforms like Qualtrics, became powerful once the right questions were being asked and the right mindset was in place.
    Moving from delayed paper surveys to real-time feedback transformed not only how quickly issues could be addressed, but how patients felt heard. One story stood out where a patient received a follow-up call before even leaving the parking lot, a simple moment that redefined their perception of care.
    We also touched on "Operation Blue Sky," an initiative that looks beyond traditional surveys to capture insight from call recordings, messages, and other unstructured data sources. It opens the door to a future where healthcare providers can anticipate problems before they happen and intervene at the right moment. That raises important questions around pace, trust, and readiness, especially in an industry that has good reason to move carefully.
    This episode is ultimately a conversation about balance. Between innovation and responsibility, between efficiency and empathy, and between data and human connection. So how do we ensure that as healthcare becomes more advanced, it also becomes more human? And what lessons from this journey could apply far beyond healthcare?
  • Tech Talks Daily

    How Jeff Gelfuso And Qualtrics Are Closing The Gap Between Insight And Action

    2026/03/27 | 25 mins.
    What happens when customer experience stops being a soft metric and starts becoming a direct driver of revenue, retention, and real-time action?
    In this episode, I sat down with Jeff Gelfuso, SVP and Chief Product and Experience Officer at Qualtrics, during X4 Summit in Seattle to talk about how AI is changing the way businesses understand and improve customer relationships. Jeff shared how his role sits at the point where product, experience, and business outcomes meet, helping customers use Qualtrics in ways that are both practical and measurable.
    One of the biggest themes in our conversation was the shift from simply listening to customers to actually doing something in the moment. For years, many companies have relied on surveys, dashboards, and reports that told them what had already gone wrong. Jeff explained how that model is changing fast. With AI, organizations can now understand signals as they happen and trigger action before a poor experience turns into churn, frustration, or lost revenue.
    We talked about examples from brands like Marriott and TruGreen, and this is where the conversation became especially interesting. In TruGreen's case, AI-powered analysis helped reveal that service quality, not price, was the real reason customers were leaving. That kind of insight changed the conversation from guesswork to financial impact. When one point of retention can mean $10 million in annual revenue, experience suddenly becomes a boardroom issue, not just a customer service metric.
    Jeff also offered a refreshingly clear view on agentic AI. Instead of treating it as another layer of hype, he described it as a way to turn experience data into action, using context to help businesses close the loop faster and with greater precision. That means moving beyond smarter dashboards and toward systems that can surface priorities, recommend next steps, and help teams act without getting buried in complexity.
    Another standout part of the discussion was how Qualtrics is helping customers move beyond pilot purgatory. Jeff was candid that meaningful AI progress still takes work, focus, and the discipline to solve the right problems first. The companies seeing real value are not trying to do everything at once. They are identifying specific use cases, tying them to real business outcomes, and building from there.
    What I enjoyed most about this conversation was how clearly Jeff connected technology to human experience. Yes, there was plenty of discussion around AI, automation, and context, but at the heart of it all was something much simpler. Better experiences build stronger relationships, and stronger relationships drive loyalty, trust, and growth.
    So if your business is still treating experience as a nice-to-have instead of a measurable driver of performance, what might you be missing right in front of you? I would love to hear your thoughts after listening.
  • Tech Talks Daily

    Who Is Winning The AI Race? The Clarivate AI50 Report Has The Receipts

    2026/03/26 | 31 mins.
    What does it really mean to lead in AI when the headlines are loud, the claims are endless, and the real signals are often buried under hype?
    In this episode, I sit down with Ed White from Clarivate to make sense of one of the most important questions in technology right now, who is actually leading the AI innovation race, and what does the data really tell us? 
    Ed leads the Clarivate Centre for IP and Innovation Research, where his team analyzes enormous volumes of intellectual property and innovation data to understand where technology is heading, who is building it, and which ideas are likely to shape the future. That matters because AI is no longer a side story inside tech. It is becoming an economic issue, a business issue, and increasingly a geopolitical one too.
    Our conversation centers on fresh Clarivate research showing that AI patent filings passed 1.1 million overall by 2025, with growth accelerating at a pace that is hard to ignore. Ed helps unpack what that actually means in practical terms. 

     I found this especially interesting because the report does not simply point to the familiar names everyone already talks about. It also highlights academic institutions, automotive companies, and businesses working behind the scenes with far less noise.

    What I enjoyed most about this discussion is that Ed brings a rare mix of technical depth and real clarity. He does not just throw out huge numbers and leave them hanging there. He explains what they mean for investors, enterprise leaders, governments, and anyone trying to understand where this market is heading next. 
    We also get into one of the biggest tensions in AI today, the balance between speed and assurance. That part really stayed with me. In a market obsessed with moving fast, Ed makes a strong case that trust, explainability, and usability may end up shaping who actually wins.
    This is a conversation about much more than patents. It is about power, strategy, timing, and how innovation spreads across borders, industries, and institutions. If you want to cut through the noise and hear a more data-led view of the AI race, this episode will give you plenty to think about.
    As always, I would love to hear what stood out to you most after listening, so please share your thoughts with me. When you look at the AI race today, do you think the real leaders are the companies making the most noise, or the ones quietly building for the long term?

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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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