Episodios

  • Invisible Threat: The Compass of Fiduciary Judgment
    Mar 19 2026

    In this episode of Invisible Threat, Carter Wilcoxson and Dr. Matthew Eby return to the tension introduced in Episode 2 and analyze what was actually happening beneath the surface.

    What felt like a simple disagreement between co-hosts was, in fact, a live demonstration of how fiduciary judgment forms when multiple legitimate obligations are active at the same time.

    Dr. Matt introduces a framework for understanding these moments through a “compass” of competing orientations: anchors, identity, fairness, and risk, with emotion at the center regulating the system. When these forces pull in different directions, tension arises—not because someone is wrong, but because different responsibilities are being protected.

    The real danger isn’t disagreement. It’s when the orientation behind that disagreement stays invisible, allowing the loudest pressure in the room to quietly determine the outcome.

    This episode offers a powerful diagnostic lens for fiduciary leaders, committees, and professionals who must make discretionary decisions under pressure.

    In This Episode:

    •A deeper analysis of the tension introduced in Episode 2

    •The fiduciary “compass”: anchors, identity, fairness, and risk

    •Why disagreement often reflects competing obligations—not conflict

    •How emotional regulation keeps fiduciary systems from collapsing into rigidity or resentment

    •Why invisible orientation, not disagreement, is the real threat to sound judgment

    If you’ve ever sat in a committee meeting where the room felt tight but no one could explain why, this conversation will help you see what was happening.

    Follow Invisible Threat wherever you get your podcasts as we continue examining how fiduciary judgment forms before decisions are made.

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    24 m
  • When the Help You Seek Reveals the Real Risk
    Mar 12 2026

    In Episode 5 of Invisible Threat, Carter Wilcoxson and Dr. Matthew Eby explore what happens when leaders bring in help to stabilize a situation that feels unresolved.

    Following the tense moment introduced earlier in the series, a trust department manager calls in a trusted advisor to review the files referenced during a regulatory examination. On the surface, everything appears sound: policies were followed, documentation is clean, and no violations occurred.

    But as the review unfolds, a deeper issue emerges.

    The question is no longer whether controls were followed. Instead, the conversation turns to how discretionary judgment is actually being exercised — and whether the record reflects the thinking behind those decisions.

    Through this carefully constructed dialogue, the episode reveals an uncomfortable truth: the help leaders seek often aims to reduce exposure and stabilize perception. The right help does something different. It makes the exposure visible.

    And once something becomes visible, the real work begins.

    This episode challenges fiduciary leaders to reconsider what kind of help they are truly asking for — protection from risk, or clarity that strengthens judgment.

    🔑 In This Episode

    •Why leaders often seek help to stabilize perceived exposure

    •The difference between protection and clarity in fiduciary oversight

    •How reliance on precedent can quietly narrow discretionary judgment

    •Why documentation may capture outcomes but not deliberation

    •The distinction between technical maturity and judgmental maturity

    🎯 Core Idea

    The most dangerous problems in fiduciary work are rarely technical failures.

    They appear when judgment becomes hidden behind defensibility.

    The right help doesn’t conceal the risk — it makes it visible.

    If you’ve ever asked for outside review to “settle something down,” this episode will feel familiar.

    Follow Invisible Threat wherever you get your podcasts as we continue examining the moments most professionals move past too quickly.

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    17 m
  • Invisible Threat: When Exposure Reorders Judgment
    Mar 5 2026

    In this episode of Invisible Threat, Carter Wilcoxson and Dr. Matthew Eby return to the unresolved tension from their prior discussion and slow it down.

    No policies were violated. No misconduct occurred. And yet something shifted.

    This conversation explores what happens when fiduciary duty and reputational exposure become active at the same time. When oversight, ratings, credibility, and institutional pressure enter the room, what feels urgent begins to change. The beneficiary hasn’t changed. The trust language hasn’t changed. The law hasn’t changed. But priority quietly can.

    Dr. Matt introduces a critical distinction: fiduciary duty flows to the beneficiary. Reputational risk flows to the institution. When those obligations compete, the order in which they are considered matters.

    The invisible threat is not disagreement. It is what happens when disagreement starts to feel unsafe and gets stabilized rather than examined.

    This episode examines how defensibility can quietly move ahead of interpretation and how judgment can narrow without anyone intending it to.

    🔑 In This Episode

    • Why fiduciary duty and reputational risk are not reciprocal

    • How examination pressure changes what feels urgent

    • The difference between stabilizing disagreement and examining it

    • Why uniformity can feel safer than discernment

    • How defensibility can quietly reorder judgment

    If you’ve ever felt a room tighten during an examination, committee meeting, or beneficiary conversation, this episode will feel familiar.

    Follow Invisible Threat wherever you get your podcasts as we continue examining what most people move past too quickly.

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    24 m
  • Invisible Threat in Practice: When Compliance Isn’t the Question
    Feb 26 2026

    In Episode 3 of Invisible Threat, Carter Wilcoxson and Dr. Matthew Eby move from theory into lived reality.

    Rather than explaining fiduciary judgment, this episode demonstrates it.

    Listeners are invited into a realistic, high-stakes conversation between management and an examiner at the close of a regulatory review. No rules are broken. Controls are intact. Documentation is sound. And yet, something in the room tightens.

    As the discussion unfolds, a deeper issue begins to surface: not whether discretion was exercised correctly, but how interpretation is being shaped by pressure, precedent, and the need to defend consistency.

    This episode explores the subtle moment when fiduciary systems begin training judgment to resolve tension by default rather than discernment. It highlights how disagreement, when smoothed over too quickly, can disappear from the record even while judgment remains very much at work.

    Nothing improper happens in this conversation.
    But something important does.

    This is the space Invisible Threat exists to examine.

    🔑 In This Episode

    •A realistic examiner–management dialogue drawn from fiduciary practice

    •Why consistency can quietly compete with context

    •How discretionary judgment becomes shaped by explainability

    •The moment disagreement tightens a room without becoming conflict

    •Why the absence of surprise can itself be a signal

    If you’ve ever been in a meeting where everything was professional, compliant, and documented—yet still felt unsettled—this episode will feel familiar.

    Follow Invisible Threat wherever you get your podcasts and join us as we continue to slow down, notice, and examine what most conversations move past too quickly.

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    18 m
  • When Judgment Becomes the Invisible Threat
    Feb 19 2026

    In Episode 2 of Invisible Threat, Carter Wilcoxson and Dr. Matthew Eby slow down to examine something that usually happens beneath the surface: how judgment forms before a decision is ever made.

    What begins as a conversation about podcast structure becomes a live example of the very dynamic this show exists to explore. Questions of roles, ownership, expertise, and risk surface in real time, revealing how well-intentioned people can view the same situation differently without anyone being wrong.

    Rather than resolving the tension quickly, Carter and Dr. Matt make it visible, demonstrating how disagreement can serve as information rather than conflict.

    This episode marks a turning point in the series, showing listeners not just what fiduciary judgment is, but how it emerges in practice.

    Follow Invisible Threat wherever you get your podcasts to continue the conversation.


    🔑 In This Episode

    • A real-time example of judgment forming under uncertainty

    • How roles and responsibility shape perspective

    • Why disagreement isn’t failure, but data

    • What it looks like to pause before certainty sets in
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    12 m
  • When Judgment Becomes Visible: The Origin of Invisible Threat
    Feb 12 2026

    In the inaugural episode of Invisible Threat, Carter Wilcoxson, Founder and CEO of ePIC Services Company, and Dr. Matthew Eby, founder of Nth Degree Financial Solutions and co-author of The Invisible Threat, introduce the ideas, experiences, and responsibility behind the podcast.

    They share how their professional paths first crossed, how the trust and fiduciary industry has evolved, and why judgment has become one of the most overlooked risks in decision-making today.

    Dr. Matt reflects on the doctoral research that led to the creation of Invisible Threat, revealing how disagreement arises when capable, well-intentioned professionals interpret the same facts differently. Rather than treating disagreement as failure, this conversation reframes it as valuable information.

    This episode sets the foundation for the series and introduces a core theme of the podcast:
    disagreement is diagnostic, not divisive.

    If you’ve ever left a boardroom or committee meeting feeling uncertain about how a decision was reached, this conversation is for you.

    Follow Invisible Threat wherever you get your podcasts to stay with us as the conversation continues.

    🔑 In This Episode

    • How Carter Wilcoxson and Dr. Matthew Eby first connected
    • Why judgment matters more as traditional rules fall away
    • What happens when experienced decision-makers disagree
    • How unseen judgment can quietly shape outcomes
    Más Menos
    40 m