From Data Overload To Decision Advantage: Inside Anticipatory Intelligence with Ansel Stein Podcast Por  arte de portada

From Data Overload To Decision Advantage: Inside Anticipatory Intelligence with Ansel Stein

From Data Overload To Decision Advantage: Inside Anticipatory Intelligence with Ansel Stein

Escúchala gratis

Ver detalles del espectáculo

In this episode, I'm joined by Ansel Stein, Vice President of Operations at Crisis24, and the leader behind AiiA powered by Palantir, an intelligence platform built to help executives cut through noise and make better calls in uncertain conditions.

Ansel's background spans more than two decades across analysis, diplomacy, and high-stakes advisory work, including supporting U.S. national security priorities. Today, he's applying that same discipline to the private sector, helping organizations turn overwhelming streams of information into judgment leaders can actually use.

We talk about what "intelligence" really means in this context, and why it's different from collecting more data or running another monitoring program. Ansel breaks down the thinking behind the AiiA President's Brief, inspired by the kind of concise, high-rigor briefings senior government leaders rely on, and explains how that model translates into business decision-making without losing context or nuance. If you have ever felt buried by alerts, headlines, and competing narratives, this conversation puts language around that problem and offers a practical alternative.

We also address the concerns many leaders have about AI, privacy, and the fear of being tracked. Ansel is clear on boundaries, what data AiiA uses, why open-source intelligence matters, and how governance needs to be designed upfront if trust is going to hold. From structured analytic techniques and scenario planning to the idea that risk and opportunity often sit side by side, this episode is a look at how organizations can move from reacting to anticipating, without handing accountability over to a machine.

If your team is trying to shorten the time from signal to decision while still protecting trust, what would it look like to treat intelligence as a leadership habit rather than a crisis tool, and are you ready to build that muscle before the next disruption hits?

Todavía no hay opiniones