Tech Talks Daily
What does it actually take to rethink the endpoint in a world shaped by AI, Zero Trust, and the growing convergence of IT and operational technology? Recording live from IGEL Now and Next in Miami, I sat down with Matthias Haas to unpack what he describes as a genuine transformation moment for enterprise computing. This wasn’t a conversation about incremental change. It was about challenging long-held assumptions around devices, security models, and how work is delivered in modern organizations. Matthias shared how the idea of the “adaptive secure desktop” is moving beyond traditional...
info_outlineTech Talks Daily
How do you rebuild an entire industry that most people accept as slow, fragmented, and frustrating? In this episode, I sit down with Dan Lifshits, co-founder of Dwelly, to explore how AI is being used to rethink the rental market from the inside out. What struck me most in this conversation is how Dwelly isn’t approaching property management as a software layer you simply bolt on. Instead, they are acquiring rental agencies and rebuilding the operating model itself, embedding AI into every workflow, from tenant communication to maintenance coordination and rent collection. It is a very...
info_outlineTech Talks Daily
How are businesses supposed to grow when technology is moving faster than regulation, customer expectations keep shifting, and AI is changing the rules in real time? In this episode, I sat down with Derya Matras, Vice President of EMEA at Meta, to talk about what growth really looks like for businesses operating in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa right now. This was a fascinating conversation because it went far beyond the usual talking points around AI and advertising. Derya brought a broader view of the pressure many businesses are under today, from macroeconomic uncertainty and...
info_outlineTech Talks Daily
What happens when AI ambition starts moving faster than the infrastructure built to support it? In this episode, I spoke with Lee Caswell, SVP of Product and Solutions at Nutanix, about the latest Enterprise Cloud Index and what it tells us about where enterprise IT really is right now. There is no shortage of AI headlines, product launches, and promises about what comes next, but this conversation gets behind the noise and into the operational reality that many business and technology leaders are now facing. As Lee explained, AI is not arriving in isolation. It is pulling containers, data...
info_outlineTech Talks Daily
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...
info_outlineTech Talks Daily
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....
info_outlineTech Talks Daily
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...
info_outlineTech Talks Daily
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...
info_outlineTech Talks Daily
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...
info_outlineTech Talks Daily
What does it really take to move AI from impressive demos into the hands of the people who keep the world running every day? In this episode of Tech Talks Daily, I sat down with Kriti Sharma, CEO of IFS Nexus Black, to explore a side of AI that rarely gets the spotlight. While much of the conversation around artificial intelligence focuses on chatbots and copilots, Kriti is working in environments where failure is not an option. Manufacturing plants, energy grids, airlines, and field service operations all depend on precision, experience, and consistency. What struck me early in our...
info_outlineHow do you rebuild an entire industry that most people accept as slow, fragmented, and frustrating?
In this episode, I sit down with Dan Lifshits, co-founder of Dwelly, to explore how AI is being used to rethink the rental market from the inside out. What struck me most in this conversation is how Dwelly isn’t approaching property management as a software layer you simply bolt on. Instead, they are acquiring rental agencies and rebuilding the operating model itself, embedding AI into every workflow, from tenant communication to maintenance coordination and rent collection. It is a very different mindset, and one that challenges how many businesses think about digital transformation.
Dan brings a fascinating perspective shaped by his time competing in high-growth environments at companies like Uber and Gett. We talk about what those years taught him about scaling complex, operational businesses and how those lessons now apply to one of the largest and least digitized sectors in the economy. There is a clear parallel between ride-hailing and rentals, both are fragmented, both rely on two-sided marketplaces, and both have historically depended on manual processes that struggle to scale. As Dan explains, “long-term residential rentals ticks very similar boxes” to ride-hailing, which makes it ripe for reinvention.
We also spend time unpacking what an AI-powered rollup actually means in practice. This is where the conversation becomes particularly interesting for founders and business leaders. Rather than selling software into traditional businesses and hoping for adoption, Dwelly takes control of both the operations and the technology. That allows them to redesign workflows, remove bottlenecks, and deliver a more consistent experience for landlords and tenants alike. The result is a model where a single operator can manage hundreds, even thousands, of properties with a level of service that would have been impossible just a few years ago.
Of course, there are bigger implications here too. If this model works at scale, it raises questions about how many other service industries could be rebuilt in a similar way. It also highlights the growing role of venture-backed rollups, particularly with firms like General Catalyst backing this approach as a new investment category. But it is not without challenges. Changing operational behavior, integrating acquisitions, and maintaining service quality while scaling fast are all complex problems that cannot be solved by technology alone.
This episode left me thinking about where the real value in AI sits. Is it in the tools themselves, or in the willingness to rethink how a business actually operates? And if AI can transform something as established as property management, which industries are next in line for the same kind of reinvention?
I would love to hear your thoughts. Are AI-powered rollups the future of service industries, or do they introduce a new set of risks we are only beginning to understand?