marketing 13 Feb 2026
Your research shows returns are now a routine part of shopping, not a seasonal issue. What does the data reveal about how frequently consumers are returning items, and why should CX leaders care?
artificial intelligence 12 Feb 2026
artificial intelligence 11 Feb 2026
artificial intelligence 11 Feb 2026
Marketing agencies are uniquely positioned as custodians of client data across dozens of platforms. How has this role evolved in terms of security responsibility, and why is 2026 a critical year for agencies to address this?
How can agencies transform their security practices from a checkbox requirement into an actual competitive advantage during pitches and contract renewals?
AI-powered phishing attacks are becoming increasingly sophisticated. Can you describe what modern social engineering attacks targeting marketing agencies actually look like in 2026, and what makes agencies particularly vulnerable to these AI-driven threats compared to other industries?
Beyond technical solutions, what role does human awareness and training play in defending against these evolving threats?
How should agencies think about credential management differently when they're not just protecting their own data, but serving as the gateway to client accounts across platforms?
If you could recommend three immediate actions that agencies should take this quarter to strengthen their security posture, what would they be?
For agencies that have historically viewed cybersecurity investments as cost centers, how should they reframe this thinking given the current threat landscape?
Looking ahead through 2026, what emerging threats should agencies be preparing for now, even if they haven't fully materialized yet?
sales 10 Feb 2026
Why has traditional sales automation failed to deliver true conversational intelligence in real customer interactions in the automotive retail industry, and what distinguishes conversational AI from rule-based automation in high-stakes sales environments like automotive retail?
Traditional sales automation in automotive was never designed to handle real conversations. It was built to trigger actions — send an email, fire a text, drop a voicemail — based on simple rules and timelines. That works fine for task management, but it breaks down in real customer interactions where intent shifts quickly, questions come out of sequence, and emotion plays a role in decision-making.
Conversational AI is different because it is built to interpret context, intent, and timing in real time. In automotive retail, where the stakes are high and buyers expect immediate, relevant responses, static automation simply can’t keep up. Conversational AI adapts to how people actually communicate instead of forcing customers into predefined workflows.
How can conversational AI tools act like a top-performing salesperson without replacing the human sales team?
Conversational AI can behave like a top-performing salesperson because it mirrors the habits that make great salespeople successful: speed, consistency, and the ability to ask the right questions at the right moment. What it does not do is replace the human element that closes deals.
At Contactter.ai, the AI handles the initial engagement, qualification, and follow-up at a speed no human team can match across every channel. That ensures no opportunity is lost due to delay. When the conversation reaches a point where judgment, negotiation, or relationship-building matters most, the human sales team steps in. The result is not replacement, but leverage. Salespeople spend more time selling and less time chasing leads that have already gone cold.
What makes sales-focused conversational AI fundamentally different from customer service chatbots, and what enables Contactter.ai to maintain context across text, email, and voice as a single continuous conversation for automotive buyers?
Sales-focused conversational AI is fundamentally different from customer service chatbots because the goal is entirely different. Customer service bots are designed to reduce workload and deflect inquiries. Sales-focused AI is designed to build momentum and move conversations forward.
Contactter.ai was built as a single conversation engine across text, email, and voice, rather than separate tools stitched together. That shared context allows the system to understand that a text reply, an unanswered call, and a follow-up email are part of one ongoing conversation. From the buyer’s perspective, the experience feels continuous and human rather than fragmented and repetitive.
What signals does Contactter.ai use to determine when a conversation should transition to a human salesperson?
The decision to transition a conversation to a human salesperson is based on intent signals rather than arbitrary rules. These signals include buying language, questions about pricing or availability, readiness to schedule an appointment, trade-in discussions, financing-related questions, or a clear request to speak with someone.
When those signals appear, the AI escalates the conversation with full context so the salesperson doesn’t have to start from scratch. That handoff is critical because it preserves momentum and ensures the human enters the conversation informed and prepared.
How does Contactter.ai’s direct integration with CRM and DMS systems enhance its real-time decision-making during sales conversations for auto dealerships?
Direct integration with CRM and DMS systems allows Contactter.ai to operate with real dealership data rather than assumptions. The AI can reference inventory availability, customer history, prior interactions, and dealership workflows while the conversation is happening.
This real-time access improves decision-making, prioritization, and handoffs. Instead of acting as a standalone chatbot, the AI becomes part of the dealership’s operating system, aligned with how the store actually sells and services customers.
marketing 3 Feb 2026
Tell me about Zoomd’s business.
Zoomd has been working in User Acquisition for a while.
How is User Acquisition different today?
Today… is it all Google and Meta?
What Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) are important for User Acquisition?
What should a marketer new to User Acquisition understand before launching his or her first campaign?
marketing 3 Feb 2026
artificial intelligence 30 Jan 2026
Predictive modeling then builds on those signals to forecast outcomes, scenario-test media and creative investments, and evaluate trade-offs before decisions are made. As measurement systems become more advanced, marketers are moving away from trying to perfectly reconstruct a journey that no longer exists and instead using AI-driven modeling to plan what comes next with greater confidence, even as privacy constraints and signal loss accelerate.
The result is a move from reactive optimization to proactive, forward-looking planning, where reporting becomes a decision engine rather than a justification exercise.
I’m honored to be a guest on an upcoming episode, where I’ll dive into AI architecture and share how organizations can set themselves up for success with AI. If you’re eager to gain actionable insights and hear from industry leaders on how they’re driving innovation in marketing and advertising, make sure to tune in!
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How's this "Returns Shouldn’t Be Tolerated — They Should Be a Strategic Differentiator"
Interview Of : Mike Murchison
What scaling AI reveals about governing personalisation
Interview Of : Mark Drasutis
How Mundial Media Uses AI to Decode Cultural Context
Interview Of : Tony Gonzalez
How Marketing Agencies Can Protect Client Data in an Era of AI-Powered Threats
Interview Of : Christopher Skipworth
Turbo-Speed AI Saves Auto Sales: Silent Partner’s Contactter.ai Drives Buyer Engagement
Interview Of : David Marod
Navigating the New Era of Mobile User Acquisition: Inside Zoomd’s 20-Year Journey
Interview Of : Daniel Avshalom