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Invisible Threat

Podcast von Dr. Matthew Eby & Carter Wilcoxson

Englisch

Business

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Mehr Invisible Threat

There are forces that quietly and invisibly shape fiduciary judgment when rules alone are no longer sufficient to determine responsibility. The Invisible Threat podcast is hosted by Carter Wilcoxson, Founder and CEO of ePIC Services Company, and Dr. Matthew Eby, Founder of Nth Degree Financial Solutions, a doctorally trained fiduciary researcher and co-author, with his wife Joanne, of The Invisible Threat: A Professional Fiduciary’s Guide to Unseen Challenges in Wealth Management. The podcast explores what happens when professionals trained to rely on traditional rules are required to interpret duty, discretion, and responsibility in complex situations—often without realizing that what is required in those situations has changed. Through fiduciary scenarios drawn from real-world situations, the podcast examines how judgment is formed—before anyone is aware of it—inside moments of uncertainty where interpretation carries real consequences. To make judgment visible, the podcast draws on the AFIRE™ Compass, a research-backed framework that examines how Anchors, Fairness, Identity, Risk, and Emotion influence fiduciary judgment in today’s fiduciary industry. Designed for trust officers, administrators, advisors, and other fiduciary professionals, the podcast treats disagreement and uncertainty not as failure, but as diagnostic—revealing how unseen assumptions shape responsibility long before outcomes are documented.

Alle Folgen

19 Folgen

Episode Risk Assessments Miss the One Thing That Actually Matters Cover

Risk Assessments Miss the One Thing That Actually Matters

"If we've been assessing risk constantly, why do we keep seeing the same problems?" The question lands quietly, but the implications ripple. What if the industry's most trusted tool—the one designed to protect trust beneficiaries—was never built to measure what actually matters most? On Invisible Threat, Carter Wilcoxson examines a paradox that reshapes how you think about fiduciary risk. Risk assessments are meticulous at documenting controls, policies, and procedures. But they were engineered to see infrastructure, not judgment. The most consequential failures in trust organizations form long before any examination can detect them—invisible precisely because our assessment frameworks were designed to measure something else entirely. This conversation explores the gap between competent fiduciaries and exceptional ones, a distinction no current risk management framework captures. As CEO of ePIC Services Company, Carter brings a rare clarity to institutional risk and fiduciary duty. He understands both sides of this tension: the genuine value of systematic assessment and its genuine blind spots. For anyone navigating trust governance, discretionary decision-making, or the architecture of fiduciary committees, this episode names something essential that's been hiding in plain sight. About the Guest: Dr. Matthew Eby and Joanne Eby bring decades of combined experience in fiduciary practice and institutional examination. Their perspective on what traditional ROE frameworks miss has shaped how leading trust organizations rethink their approach to fiduciary judgment and risk culture.

11. Juni 2026 - 23 min
Episode Can We Do It? Should We? A Fiduciary's Real Question Cover

Can We Do It? Should We? A Fiduciary's Real Question

The moment arrives when someone realizes the safest answer isn't the right answer. When the document technically allows something, but your gut tells you it shouldn't. That tension—that pause before collapsing into a decision—is where fiduciary judgment actually lives. In this episode of Invisible Threat, discover what separates competence from excellence in trust work. You'll explore how exceptional fiduciaries learn to interpret the human reality underneath a beneficiary's request, why institutional systems can inadvertently reward procedural safety over sound judgment, and how the industrialization of fiduciary work poses an invisible threat to the profession itself. The conversation reveals the crucial distinction between "Can we?" and "Should we?"—and why that gap is where judgment truly develops, not through mechanical process, but through mentorship, disagreement, and relational learning. Host Carter Wilcoxson returns to unpack themes from a previous conversation, this time alongside Dr. Matthew Eby and Joanne Eby, who together authored groundbreaking research on fiduciary judgment. Their discussion centers on how institutions shape the judgment cultures within which fiduciaries operate—examining the ROE process, discretionary decision-making standards, and the tension between institutional risk management and genuine fiduciary duty. This is a conversation for anyone in trust work who has felt that pause before deciding. About the Guest: Dr. Matthew Eby and Joanne Eby are researchers and thought leaders examining fiduciary judgment, institutional culture, and the future of trust work in an age of increasing automation and standardization.

4. Juni 2026 - 27 min
Episode The Judgment We Never See: Why Risk Hides Until It's Too Late Cover

The Judgment We Never See: Why Risk Hides Until It's Too Late

"I could feel it happening," he says, "but I never had the words for it." Thirty years inside fiduciary institutions—decades of judgment calls, trust decisions, moments where everything balanced on a single interpretation—and yet the language to describe what was actually occurring remained locked away. A doctorate arrived. The credential was earned. But what it unlocked was something else entirely: the ability to name the invisible. In this episode of Invisible Threat, you'll discover a framework for understanding fiduciary judgment not as a process to optimize, but as a distinctly human act of orientation—the blink before action is taken. You'll learn why rigorous academic research into discretionary decision-making reveals patterns that intuition alone could feel but never articulate. Most importantly, you'll confront why the industry's accelerating turn toward automation may be closing off the very moment where real judgment lives, and what gets lost when we stop asking why we decide. Carter Wilcoxson sits with Dr. Matt Eby, whose doctorate from Edgewood University became not a credential to display, but a tool to see. What changed? What became visible? And what does the fiduciary world risk losing if it never learns to recognize what's been hiding in plain sight all along? This is a conversation about the weight of knowing. About the Guest: Dr. Matt Eby is a fiduciary practitioner and researcher whose doctoral research bridges the gap between institutional fiduciary practice and the human judgment at its core. With three decades of experience in trust administration and fiduciary decision-making, his work focuses on making visible the structures and patterns that shape discretionary judgment.

28. Mai 2026 - 50 min
Episode When the Safe Answer Isn't Right: Lindsey Day on Real Fiduciary Duty Cover

When the Safe Answer Isn't Right: Lindsey Day on Real Fiduciary Duty

There's a question that lives in every fiduciary's chest when the document goes silent: Can we do this? But then comes the harder one—should we? It's the tension that hums beneath every discretionary decision, knowing that a yes or a no doesn't just move money. It shapes a life. It shapes a legacy. Lindsey Day, a trust and fiduciary advisor with fifteen years navigating institutional judgment and committee dynamics, brings listeners inside the invisible pressures that form decision-making at every level. Day traces how the same fact pattern—the same request, the same circumstances—gets answered completely differently depending on which room holds your decision, which institution frames your fiduciary duty, which regulators audit your reasoning. The conversation reveals how a fiduciary's personal philosophy—whether they give people the benefit of the doubt or assume constraint—lives quietly beneath every choice they make, shaping outcomes in ways that ripple far beyond the numbers. Carter Wilcoxson hosts Invisible Threat with a precision earned from years studying how judgment actually works under pressure. This episode unfolds as a conversation rooted in real relationship—Day and Wilcoxson discussing fiduciary responsibility not as theory, but as the lived weight of a capital F Fiduciary in a world where the stakes are always human.

21. Mai 2026 - 57 min
Episode The In-Law Factor: Why Spouses Destroy Family Trusts Cover

The In-Law Factor: Why Spouses Destroy Family Trusts

The magic isn't in the park itself. It's in the moment when a three-year-old stops mid-conversation with a character and the room holds its breath. Then someone dies, and the real test begins. Behind closed doors, in living rooms across America, siblings stop speaking to each other not because of what their parents left behind, but because their spouses—people who never knew the family's original values—are making the decisions now. Most families believe their estate plan will hold. They think their oldest will step up. They think the trust document signed twenty years ago will protect what matters. But Invisible Threat examines what actually happens when discretionary decision-making falls to someone outside the family's original circle of values. You'll discover why fiduciary duty alone cannot prevent the invisible fractures that tear families apart, and how intentional planning—while there's still time—can preserve both wealth and relationships across generations. Carter Wilcoxson came to estate planning the hard way: by witnessing it tear families apart. He watched it happen to his wife's family when her grandfather passed and her father became executor. That single moment of seeing how a trust can fracture a bloodline became his obsession. In this episode, recorded live from Orlando, Carter explores the hidden vulnerabilities inside every family trust and shares what advisors and families need to understand before the critical moment arrives.

14. Mai 2026 - 42 min
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

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