Episodios

  • EP 38: AI-Powered Advertising: Programmatic’s Next Evolution
    Feb 25 2026

    Traditional ad buying involved manual targeting, static audiences, and fixed bids. AI advertising uses machine learning to optimize targeting, bidding, and creative selection in real time across millions of data points. Performance Max and Meta Advantage+ campaigns represent this evolution - algorithms handling what used to require entire teams of media buyers.

    Smart bidding algorithms adjust bids based on conversion likelihood, time of day, device type, user behavior history, competitor activity, and dozens more variables simultaneously. This dynamic approach consistently outperforms manual bid management, especially for campaigns with large audiences and multiple ad variations. However, human strategy and oversight remain necessary—marketers must set clear goals, supply quality creative assets, and analyze performance to ensure AI automation aligns with business objectives.

    Critical risks include over-optimization—AI might optimize for metrics that don't actually align with business goals. Optimizing for clicks gets clicks but might not deliver quality traffic. Optimizing for conversions without considering lifetime value might acquire expensive customers who churn quickly. The human role is defining success properly so AI optimizes toward meaningful outcomes.

    Looking at 2026, programmatic advertising moves toward full automation. For small businesses without media buying expertise, this democratizes access to sophisticated advertising. For agencies and specialists, it forces evolution toward strategic consulting rather than tactical execution.

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    13 m
  • EP 35: AI Algorithmic Trading: The New Market Makers
    Feb 22 2026

    Welcome to the final episode of the AI in Finance series, exploring algorithmic trading and AI market makers—genuinely the wild west of AI in finance. Here's context most people don't realize: 60-70% of equity market volume already comes from algorithmic trading, with high-frequency trading alone accounting for roughly 50%. When you think about the stock market, you're thinking about a system that's already majority AI and algorithms, not human traders.

    Sam and Mac explore what fundamentally differentiates AI algorithmic trading from traditional algorithmic trading. Traditional algorithms follow fixed rules: if condition X, then execute action Y—deterministic and predictable. AI algorithms learn and adapt dynamically, recognizing complex patterns across multiple variables, adjusting strategies in real time based on changing market conditions, and optimizing behaviors continuously.

    The technical models include reinforcement learning (AI learning optimal strategies through trial and error in simulations), LSTMs for time series prediction, and increasingly transformer models adapted for financial data—same basic architecture as ChatGPT but trained on market data instead of language. These models are exceptional at understanding that the same price movement means different things in different contexts: high volatility versus low volatility, bull market versus bear market.

    Regulatory landscape remains challenging. The SEC requires reasonable oversight, but defining "reasonable" for systems executing thousands of trades per second is genuinely difficult. In practice, this means kill switches, risk limits built into algorithms, monitoring systems that flag unusual patterns, and automatic shutoffs when volatility triggers occur.

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    15 m
  • EP 34: AI in Credit and Lending: Democratizing Access or Amplifying Bias?
    Feb 22 2026

    AI in credit decisions is genuinely controversial because it could either democratize lending and expand access to underserved populations or take historical discrimination and amplify it at scale. The reality is both are happening simultaneously in different institutions—it all depends on how intentionally the AI is designed and monitored for fairness.

    Sam and Mac examine how AI is disrupting traditional credit scoring. FICO scores have dominated for decades using limited data: payment history, credit utilization, length of credit history, types of credit, and recent inquiries. This approach systematically excludes millions who don't have traditional credit histories, even if they're perfectly responsible with money and would be excellent borrowers.

    The technical models include XGBoost as the industry standard and neural networks for processing more data with hidden layers. Traditional logistic regression is often a poor fit for real-world credit behavior. Banks need model governance with clear ownership, regular bias testing, robust explainability, and human oversight for complex cases. AI handles straightforward approvals and denials; humans handle the middle—complex situations requiring judgment and contextual understanding.

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    15 m