Above The Treeline with Andy Young

Redefining Communications Services

55 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Redefining Communications Services

Descripción

One of my recurring observations about the printing industry is how often companies present themselves through physical scale. The aerial view of a large warehouse with access to critical transportation and postal infrastructure. The production floor. The equipment. The size of the operation, or the number of locations spread across the country, becomes the proof point. There is nothing wrong with that. In print, operational strength and redundancy matter. But if a company is trying to tell a different story about its future, why are the plant and physical operation still the centerpiece of the narrative? A Different Setting I didn’t sit down with Sami Antaoui, CEO of MBA Group, beside a press or on a production floor. Instead, we met at Hend House, MBA Group’s central London offices, in a space featuring large atrium windows, a spiral staircase, open seating, and not a print plant in sight. The offices were once home to Walt Disney Studios, which felt strangely appropriate. Like Disney, MBA Group is in the business of imagination, design, experience, and execution. We recorded our conversation in the screening room, where executives once reviewed pre-release versions of Disney films. It felt like a fitting setting because, in many ways, Sami and his team are “imagineering” what a communications service provider can become. Beyond the Familiar Narrative I am often asked by print service bureau operators: what does a shift to digital-first thinking actually look like? What is the message? The business case? How do they tell a new story? MBA Group has been in business for more than four decades, with deep roots in print and physical communications. Physical communications remain an important part of the business. But our conversation was not really about print. It was about what happens when a service provider expands the definition of the work it does. With customers such as American Express and Deutsche Bank, MBA has to take innovation seriously. Over time, it has become a core part of the company’s success strategy. MBA has continually looked up upstream into data, closed-loop outcomes, software platforms, digital engagement, customer journeys, personalized video, BPO-style services, and managed communications. Its marketing and outward messaging rarely lead with print or even cover it. Instead, MBA leads with ideas, customer experience, transformation, and the changing role of communications. And, as an extra bonus, the print volume that remains becomes a nice value-add. Why This Shift Matters For many transactional and regulated communications providers, print volumes are under structural pressure. Customers are digitizing. Enterprises are trying to reduce costs. Consumers expect faster, more contextual, more convenient interactions. At the same time, trust, compliance, and accountability still matter deeply. The future may not belong only to those with the largest production platforms or the lowest unit cost. It may belong to those that can help clients understand customers, coordinate channels, manage context, and improve the experience around essential communications. From Output to Orchestration In our conversation, Sami described MBA Group as a communications group rather than simply a print provider or digital provider. The question is not whether a communication is printed, emailed, sent by SMS, delivered through RCS, or managed through another channel. The question is what the customer needs, what the business is trying to accomplish, and how the communication fits into the broader relationship. A provider that once produced output can become a partner in journey design. A company that once managed print files can help manage data, timing, channel selection, customer response, and engagement history. A business built around production can grow into software, orchestration, digital engagement, advisory services, and closed-loop communications. MBA Group’s Pulse [https://www.mba-group.com/pulse/] shows how service providers are moving beyond output and into orchestration, connecting data, channels, timing, and customer context. The conversation also touched on RCS, WhatsApp, AI, private ownership, and the role of trust in digital communication. But the larger theme was clear. The customer communications market is not simply moving from print to digital. It is moving from output to orchestration. From production to context. From channel delivery to customer experience. The Question Ahead That raises an important question for every service provider in this market: What are you really becoming? Episode 29 of Above the Treeline features Sami Antaoui, CEO of MBA Group, in a conversation about transformation, growth, and the expanding role of communications service providers. Work with TreelinePress TreelinePress is an independent, vendor-neutral platform with a clear point of view on where customer communications are heading. The work is less about traditional analyst coverage and more about finding and telling the larger stories behind market change by connecting corporate strategy, technology, industry transformation, and the people shaping what comes next. I work with companies and industry leaders through executive interviews, sponsored podcasts, event coverage, and market commentary to explain not only what an organization is doing, but why it matters. To discuss a story, sponsorship, event, or custom media project, connect with me at TreelinePress.com. Get full access to TreelinePress at treelinepress.substack.com/subscribe [https://treelinepress.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

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27 episodios

Portada del episodio Redefining Communications Services

Redefining Communications Services

One of my recurring observations about the printing industry is how often companies present themselves through physical scale. The aerial view of a large warehouse with access to critical transportation and postal infrastructure. The production floor. The equipment. The size of the operation, or the number of locations spread across the country, becomes the proof point. There is nothing wrong with that. In print, operational strength and redundancy matter. But if a company is trying to tell a different story about its future, why are the plant and physical operation still the centerpiece of the narrative? A Different Setting I didn’t sit down with Sami Antaoui, CEO of MBA Group, beside a press or on a production floor. Instead, we met at Hend House, MBA Group’s central London offices, in a space featuring large atrium windows, a spiral staircase, open seating, and not a print plant in sight. The offices were once home to Walt Disney Studios, which felt strangely appropriate. Like Disney, MBA Group is in the business of imagination, design, experience, and execution. We recorded our conversation in the screening room, where executives once reviewed pre-release versions of Disney films. It felt like a fitting setting because, in many ways, Sami and his team are “imagineering” what a communications service provider can become. Beyond the Familiar Narrative I am often asked by print service bureau operators: what does a shift to digital-first thinking actually look like? What is the message? The business case? How do they tell a new story? MBA Group has been in business for more than four decades, with deep roots in print and physical communications. Physical communications remain an important part of the business. But our conversation was not really about print. It was about what happens when a service provider expands the definition of the work it does. With customers such as American Express and Deutsche Bank, MBA has to take innovation seriously. Over time, it has become a core part of the company’s success strategy. MBA has continually looked up upstream into data, closed-loop outcomes, software platforms, digital engagement, customer journeys, personalized video, BPO-style services, and managed communications. Its marketing and outward messaging rarely lead with print or even cover it. Instead, MBA leads with ideas, customer experience, transformation, and the changing role of communications. And, as an extra bonus, the print volume that remains becomes a nice value-add. Why This Shift Matters For many transactional and regulated communications providers, print volumes are under structural pressure. Customers are digitizing. Enterprises are trying to reduce costs. Consumers expect faster, more contextual, more convenient interactions. At the same time, trust, compliance, and accountability still matter deeply. The future may not belong only to those with the largest production platforms or the lowest unit cost. It may belong to those that can help clients understand customers, coordinate channels, manage context, and improve the experience around essential communications. From Output to Orchestration In our conversation, Sami described MBA Group as a communications group rather than simply a print provider or digital provider. The question is not whether a communication is printed, emailed, sent by SMS, delivered through RCS, or managed through another channel. The question is what the customer needs, what the business is trying to accomplish, and how the communication fits into the broader relationship. A provider that once produced output can become a partner in journey design. A company that once managed print files can help manage data, timing, channel selection, customer response, and engagement history. A business built around production can grow into software, orchestration, digital engagement, advisory services, and closed-loop communications. MBA Group’s Pulse [https://www.mba-group.com/pulse/] shows how service providers are moving beyond output and into orchestration, connecting data, channels, timing, and customer context. The conversation also touched on RCS, WhatsApp, AI, private ownership, and the role of trust in digital communication. But the larger theme was clear. The customer communications market is not simply moving from print to digital. It is moving from output to orchestration. From production to context. From channel delivery to customer experience. The Question Ahead That raises an important question for every service provider in this market: What are you really becoming? Episode 29 of Above the Treeline features Sami Antaoui, CEO of MBA Group, in a conversation about transformation, growth, and the expanding role of communications service providers. Work with TreelinePress TreelinePress is an independent, vendor-neutral platform with a clear point of view on where customer communications are heading. The work is less about traditional analyst coverage and more about finding and telling the larger stories behind market change by connecting corporate strategy, technology, industry transformation, and the people shaping what comes next. I work with companies and industry leaders through executive interviews, sponsored podcasts, event coverage, and market commentary to explain not only what an organization is doing, but why it matters. To discuss a story, sponsorship, event, or custom media project, connect with me at TreelinePress.com. Get full access to TreelinePress at treelinepress.substack.com/subscribe [https://treelinepress.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

Ayer55 min
Portada del episodio Beyond Print: Danny Cook on the Future of Go Inspire

Beyond Print: Danny Cook on the Future of Go Inspire

A Personal History with Xerox Years ago, during a customer roundtable, the host opened the session by asking everyone what they had wanted to be when they were growing up. My response, without hesitation, was, “I wanted to work for Xerox.” That answer created a slightly awkward and funny moment. At the time, I was part of Ricoh’s Global Production Solutions team, formerly IBM Infoprint, which was based in Boulder, Colorado. Sitting in a room representing one of Xerox’s larger competitors was probably not the ideal setting to admit that Xerox had once been my dream employer. But it was true. Growing Up Around Xerox As a kid, our Xerox sales representative, Carl Jenson, was the coolest guy I knew. He wore gold wire-rimmed glasses and three-piece suits, and he drove a big fancy car. To me, he represented a company that exuded professionalism and class. But the appeal went beyond the image. Xerox was one of the most innovative companies in the world. Long before digital transformation became a boardroom cliché, Xerox was changing how people interacted with computers, created and reproduced documents, and moved information through organizations. For those of us who grew up around the industry, it felt as though the company was helping define the future in real time. My family’s business was a small reprographics firm, and Xerox was woven into the fabric of our daily operations. Xerox service representatives became almost like family. They were familiar faces who spent time in our business, understood how we worked, and showed up whenever we needed them. One of them even attended my wedding. That was the kind of relationship Xerox built with its customers. It was not simply selling machines. It was becoming part of the operation and, in many cases, part of the story of the businesses it served. I never ended up working for Xerox, although I came close once. Instead, I spent much of my career watching Xerox from the outside, following its successes, its challenges, and its continuing evolution. That history is part of what made my recent visit to Go Inspire Group, a Xerox company, in Leicester, UK, so interesting and, in a way, so personal. Go Inspire is part of Xerox’s Digital Services business, but it also represents something larger: a possible window into what Xerox is becoming. A Different Kind of Acquisition Why would Xerox purchase a print service provider? This is not the first time Xerox has looked beyond equipment to expand its role in business services. In 2010, it acquired Affiliated Computer Services, which became the foundation of its business-process-outsourcing operation before being separated as the independent company Conduent in 2017. Go Inspire represents a different type of services strategy, but that history makes Xerox’s decision to acquire a services company worth examining. For those who remember the old Xerox Reproduction Centers, or XRCs, the relationship between Xerox and service providers was sometimes complicated. XRCs often focused on legal copying, scanning, and document production. In many markets, they were viewed as competitors by the very customers Xerox also served. XRCs no longer exist, and the acquisition of Go Inspire in 2022 feels fundamentally different. Rather than extending Xerox deeper into a traditional print-services model, the acquisition reflects a broader understanding of what customers need today. Go Inspire is a very different business operating in a different market context. That was one of the questions I wanted to explore when I had the opportunity to connect with Danny Cook. Danny described the rationale for the acquisition in simple terms: “I think it’s more directional.” That forward-looking statement says a lot. Go Inspire was not simply an attractive print operation in the UK. Xerox saw a business already moving toward strategy, data, creative services, and omnichannel communications. Today, businesses are no longer looking for isolated solutions. They are looking for partners who can help orchestrate communication across channels, departments, and customer touchpoints. The challenge is no longer simply producing documents. It is connecting experiences to outcomes. A customer may receive a printed statement, scan a QR code, visit a website, receive an email, engage through a mobile device, and ultimately complete a transaction through a digital workflow. Increasingly, organizations want those interactions managed as part of a coherent business strategy rather than a collection of disconnected systems and solutions. That is where Go Inspire becomes interesting. Beyond Print For years, industry observers have framed conversations around print as a debate between physical and digital communications, but the reality is far more nuanced. Customers do not think in channels. They think in outcomes. As Danny explained, “We’re an outcome-based business. It’s not about digital or print first.” That captures the larger shift. The starting point is not the channel. It is understanding what the customer is trying to achieve and then working backward to determine the right combination of data, creative services, technology, digital delivery, and print. Customers want information when they need it, in the format that makes the most sense at that moment. Sometimes that is digital. Sometimes it is physical. Often it is both. Organizations that understand this are increasingly focused on customer journeys rather than communication silos. That shift creates opportunities for companies capable of bridging worlds that have historically operated separately and turning those combined capabilities into repeatable solutions that can be scaled across operations, customers, and markets. “The value is further up the chain,” Danny said. It is found in understanding who to target, why the communication matters, and how the channels should work together and not simply in producing more output. Go Inspire brings deep expertise in production, compliance, personalization, data, creative services, and delivery. Xerox adds technology, automation, scale, customer relationships, and a broader digital-services infrastructure. The opportunity lies in bringing those capabilities together as a unified, repeatable solution. Viewed through that lens, Xerox’s investment in Go Inspire begins to look less like an acquisition and more like a strategic marker. The Xerox Renaissance The opportunity has never been to abandon the expertise Xerox and Go Inspire have built over decades. It is to use that experience as the foundation for something bigger. As my friend Ray Stasieczko would say, “You can either drag the past into the future or bring the future into the present.” The difference is whether legacy becomes a constraint or an advantage. Viewed that way, Xerox’s history in production, information management, service, and customer relationships is not something to escape. It is something to build on. I believe Xerox may be entering a renaissance of sorts. It has been through a difficult period of financial and operational restructuring, but it does not appear to be trying to recreate the company it once was or relive the glory days of copiers and office equipment. Instead, it appears to be leveraging the assets that made Xerox successful in the first place: trusted customer relationships, deep expertise in business communications, operational scale, technology, and an understanding of how information moves through organizations. Building the Future As businesses struggle to connect physical and digital experiences, manage increasingly complex customer journeys, and navigate rapidly changing communication preferences, the need for integrated platforms will only grow. The companies that succeed will not be those that choose paper or digital. They will be the ones that understand how to make both work together. The company that fascinated me as a teenager may not look the same today. But the opportunity in front of it may be every bit as significant as the one that made Xerox a household name in the first place. And that makes this next chapter for Go Inspire, and Xerox itself worth paying attention to. TreelinePress is built for this kind of work: connecting corporate strategy, market transformation, and the larger stories reshaping customer communications. I work with organizations through executive interviews, sponsored podcasts, event coverage, market commentary, and custom media projects designed to explain not only what a company is doing, but why it matters. Connect with me at TreelinePress.com [https://www.treelinepress.com/] Get full access to TreelinePress at treelinepress.substack.com/subscribe [https://treelinepress.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

18 de jun de 202655 min
Portada del episodio CCM’s New Enterprise Role

CCM’s New Enterprise Role

I met Amy Machado of IDC earlier this year in Chicago and knew right away we would have a great conversation. So I was really looking forward to sitting down with her for this episode #27 of Above the Treeline. Partly because Amy is an industry analyst. A true market researcher. Someone who has spent years doing the disciplined work of tracking markets, briefing vendors, asking better questions, and separating signal from noise. I like to believe I do some of that too. But if I am honest, I am probably more observer and commentator than traditional analyst. I watch, listen, and ask questions. I look for the patterns and try to make sense of what is changing before the industry has fully agreed on what to call it. Not only do Amy and I share a stylish taste in eyewear, but we also share a real interest in the future of customer communications and how data, governance, content, and AI are changing what this market is becoming. That is why I wanted to talk with Amy. Two CCM nerds talking about the market without much of an agenda. We agreed on a lot, but also brought different perspectives. Hers is grounded in real market data and structured research. Mine is shaped by a lifetime of experience across nearly every corner of the business. TreelinePress is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. From Print to Something Bigger The conversation started with a simple question. Where was the CCM industry 15 or 20 years ago? Amy’s answer was immediate. Print. We were both there. Xplor 2002 in Anaheim, California. Disneyland. The Angels had just won the World Series. Amy was working for InfoTrends. I was there with IKON Office Solutions demoing a web-to-print platform called WebPrint. Yes, we had the internet. Yes, digital was already part of the conversation. But it was mostly on the edges, and certainly not the way companies interacted with or informed customers. Bills, statements, notices, and most regulated customer communications were still deeply connected to paper and mail. That is where much of customer communications management aka “CCM” came from, a fixed, linear, output manufacturing process. For many years, that has been the gravitational center of the customer communications market, and in many ways, in certain sectors it still remains. But that center has moved especially in markets outside of the U.S. That is where Amy’s perspective became especially useful. From Output to Enterprise Information For years, customer communications were often treated as the final step in a business process. The job to be done was to compose the document correctly, produce it reliably, archive it properly, and deliver it through the right channels. In regulated industries, that matters a great deal. But the role of those communications is changing inside the enterprise. The documents, archives, metadata and customer histories that sit inside CCM environments are not just operational outputs. They are being recognized as part of the enterprise information layer and corporate memory. That is why this market is getting more interesting, not less. CCM is no longer just about the document, composition or even print. It is about the data, governance, orchestration, and intelligence that surround the document. The Lines Are Blurring Amy also described a market where the old category lines are getting harder to defend. CCM, ECM, file sync and share, capture, intelligent document processing, enterprise search, content services, workflow, archive, and analytics have historically been treated as separate functions. That structure made sense when the business process was linear. But the enterprises no longer operate that way. Customer interactions now move across channels, teams, systems, and moments. The information going out to a customer is increasingly connected to the information coming in from a customer. The full content and document lifecycle is becoming more connected, and the next phase of the market will not be defined by who can generate the best-looking document or manage the most efficient print stream. It will also be defined by who can connect context, data, governance, and delivery in a way that supports the future enterprise. Why the U.S. Still Talks So Much About Print One of the recurring questions in my own work is why the U.S. customer communications market still talks so much about print and mail compared with other parts of the world. Amy pointed to a mix of history, compliance, regulation, legal risk, and legacy adoption patterns. In other markets, particularly in parts of Asia, the path was different. Populations were significantly larger, but a much smaller share of people had checking accounts, credit cards, or the same legacy banking and billing infrastructure that shaped the U.S. market. As a result, many of those markets did not have to unwind decades of paper-based customer communication habits. They were able to move more directly into mobile-first and digital-first models. The U.S., by contrast, has been carrying the weight of its own history. Its legacy infrastructure worked well enough for long enough that replacing it has become more complicated than simply choosing a better channel. In the U.S. paper remains because it is familiar, provable, and perceived as lower risk than the alternatives, even if it could be accomplished digitally. That does not mean print and mail will remain the future center of the U.S. market. Rather, it continues to operate as a risk-management mechanism. Thanks for reading TreelinePress! This post is public so feel free to share it. AI Is Not the Strategy No conversation about the future of customer communications can avoid AI, and ours did not. But one of the things I appreciated most about Amy’s view of AI is how grounded it was. AI is not the strategy, and AI should not be used for its own sake. It has to solve a real problem. It has to produce measurable value such as reduced cost, increased revenue, improve productivity or support better outcomes. That sounds obvious. It is also often missing from the current AI conversation. For the last couple of years, many organizations have been under pressure to answer a boardroom-level question: what are we doing with AI? The better question is: where can AI create value without compromising accuracy, compliance, explainability, or trust? Amy’s point was not that companies should avoid AI. It was that they should be careful about using AI simply so they can say they are using it. If the core of your business operation has not changed, or does not need to change, then the role of AI should be considered carefully. It has to solve a real problem, support a measurable outcome, or improve a process that actually matters. Amy made another point that should matter to every CCM leader: modernization and migration still come first. That may not sound as exciting as AI, but it is probably more important. Many enterprises cannot fully take advantage of AI-enabled capabilities because their underlying systems, repositories, and workflows are not ready. Before many organizations ask what AI can do with their communications, they may need to ask whether their content, metadata, archives, and workflows are ready for AI at all. The Knowledge Layer The industry has long talked about a single source of truth. I have never been completely convinced that phrase captures how enterprises actually work. The future may be less about a single repository and more about a trusted, accessible, governed knowledge layer that can support secure and accurate outcomes across the enterprise. Collecting, rationalizing, governing, and coordinating enterprise knowledge may be one of the most important future roles of CCM. It is also an area that could potentially be delivered as a service. The future is not just producing the communication as output. It is managing the knowledge, context, rules, evidence, and governance that make the communication reliable in the first place. The Competitive Set Is Expanding CCM vendors are no longer only competing with other CCM vendors. The competitive set now includes ECM vendors, content services platforms, intelligent document processing providers, data platforms, enterprise search providers, marketing technology platforms, CRM systems, workflow platforms, and AI-enabled enterprise software companies. CCM is no longer operating in a contained category. It is being pulled into a much larger technology conversation, and that larger conversation is increasingly about data, orchestration, governance, and customer intelligence. If Salesforce, ServiceNow, Adobe, Snowflake, OpenText, Box, Hyland, and other enterprise platforms move closer to customer communications, then the CCM industry has to decide whether it will defend its historic footprint or expand into adjacent territory. Amy framed the issue clearly. Other platforms may come after CCM’s piece of the pie. The question is whether CCM vendors are prepared to go after theirs. You May Not Be as Far Behind as You Think But the part of the conversation I hope people hear most clearly came near the end. Amy said that IT teams and enterprises responsible for CCM may not be as far behind as they think they are. That should come as welcome news to a lot of people dealing with the pressure of digital transformation, AI modernization, migration, governance, and the never-ending expectation to do more with systems that were built for a different era. But many CCM environments already manage approved content, business rules, customer data, delivery logic, archives, audit trails, and compliance workflows. These systems may not have received the same attention as data lakes, CRM platforms, marketing automation, or analytics programs. But they are not insignificant. In fact, they may be exactly where the next phase of enterprise modernization needs to look. The issue is not that CCM is hopelessly behind, it is that many organizations have treated it as downstream infrastructure instead of strategic enterprise infrastructure. So the question is how to use what CCM already knows how to do such as govern content, manage approvals, preserve evidence, and deliver communications reliably, as part of the enterprise’s future data, governance, and AI strategy. Customer communications is no longer just about sending messages. It is becoming part of the trusted knowledge layer of the enterprise. TreelinePress is built for this kind of work: connecting the dots between customer communications, martech, AI, print, mail, and the enterprise systems now reshaping the market. If your organization is trying to understand where CCM is headed, how digital adoption is changing the economics of customer communications, or how AI and context will alter the role of regulated communications, connect with me at TreelinePress.com [https://www.treelinepress.com/] Get full access to TreelinePress at treelinepress.substack.com/subscribe [https://treelinepress.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

11 de jun de 202646 min
Portada del episodio What Healthcare Taught Me About Mission-Critical Communications

What Healthcare Taught Me About Mission-Critical Communications

Clients have asked me several times why I do not spend more time looking at the healthcare industry. Honestly, I have avoided it because healthcare communications are differently complex compared to other regulated industries like financial services, P&C insurance, and utilities. I knew that was true, but I could never quite explain why it was more complex or how it was so different. After all, when you are manufacturing a regulated printed piece and putting it into the mail, the processes are effectively the same regardless of the vertical industry. Gratefully, my conversation with Wylie Blanchard changed that and helped me understand both what I have been avoiding, and what other regulated industries could learn from healthcare innovation. Healthcare Is Different Healthcare may be one of the most important categories of customer communications, and also one of the most specialized. It is not just statements and bills. It is test results, appointment reminders, pre-care and post-care information, and more. And unlike a monthly bank statement, healthcare communications can be acute but infrequent, or chronic and overwhelming. Patient-facing innovation in this area moves slowly, and usually for good reasons. As Wylie put it, there are lots of hidden threats. Like other verticals, the outcomes are highly regulated, the workflows and systems are deeply embedded, and the decisions often involve clinicians, scientists, and technologists trying to balance innovation against the very real consequences of failure. Many times, the people in charge of these decisions in a clinical setting did not go to school for IT. They went to learn medicine. In industries outside of healthcare, when something goes wrong, fines, legal action, and brand reputation are on the line. But in healthcare, it can truly be life and death. Innovation in Mission-Critical Environments In Above the Treeline podcast episode #26, I spoke with Wylie Blanchard, author of Zero-Downtime Care and now an Amazon #1 bestseller. I came away with a much better understanding of why healthcare modernization is so difficult. Wylie and his team have worked across payer and provider environments, public health programs, consulting, and healthcare technology projects. In his book, he shares practical, hands-on experience: what works, what does not, and more importantly, how to engage leadership and organize an approach that keeps compliance, security, and usability in mind. The book is clearly rooted in healthcare, but the framework reaches well beyond it. Nearly any highly regulated, mission-critical environment can learn from this approach. The AI Counterweight Wylie deliberately avoided making AI the centerpiece of his book. In fact, it is not included at all. For a book published in 2025, that is actually refreshing, because almost every technology conversation today seems to get pulled toward AI within a few minutes. The noise is everywhere. Wylie’s perspective is a useful counterweight. It also speaks to a practical, measured, and thoughtful approach to innovation. In a mission-critical environment, it is not enough to say a system is intelligent. Someone has to own the output. Someone has to explain the process. Someone has to understand what happens when the system is wrong, late, incomplete, misunderstood, or operating outside the intended guardrails. That is especially true in healthcare, but it is not limited to healthcare. The same issue applies anywhere regulated communications intersect with automation, decisioning, personalization, and customer-facing interactions. It also helps explain why AI is discussed so frequently, yet its use in applications across highly regulated fields is still limited. Zero Downtime Beyond Healthcare Wylie’s work gives anyone working in a mission-critical environment a useful framework for thinking about transformation and digital innovation. Every regulated industry is being pushed to modernize. Every organization is being asked to move faster, become more digital, provide a better experience, and introduce more intelligence into customer-facing systems. The question is not whether modernization happens. The question is whether organizations understand what cannot be allowed to break along the way. Check out Wylie’s new book on Amazon. [https://a.co/d/01AzsEzf] TreelinePress is built for this kind of work: connecting the dots between customer communications, martech, AI, print, mail, and the enterprise systems now reshaping the market. If your organization is trying to understand where CCM is headed, how digital adoption is changing the economics of customer communications, or how AI and context will alter the role of regulated communications, connect with me at TreelinePress.com [https://www.treelinepress.com/] Get full access to TreelinePress at treelinepress.substack.com/subscribe [https://treelinepress.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

5 de jun de 202655 min
Portada del episodio Built for Distance: How USAA Engineered Digital Access Long Before “Digital Transformation” Became a Strategy

Built for Distance: How USAA Engineered Digital Access Long Before “Digital Transformation” Became a Strategy

Episode 25 of Above the Treeline features Andy Keller, a 42-year veteran of USAA Insurance who began his career in 1984 as part of a government-sponsored IT co-op program and retired as a Technical Architect Lead. Over four decades, Keller worked across core claims systems, document composition, image capture, e-delivery, cloud migration, and enterprise modernization initiatives. With renewed conflict in the Middle East and American service members once again deployed into harm’s way, it feels appropriate to pause and acknowledge the families who carry that weight. USAA was built to serve them. As a non-veteran member of USAA, my connection is through family. My father served in the Marine Corps. My wife’s father served in the Army. Like many members, our relationship to USAA is generational. It is rooted not only in financial products, but in service. Because long before “digital transformation” became an industry strategy deck, USAA was solving a practical problem: how do you serve members who may be anywhere in the world, often far from home, often in unstable environments, and still ensure continuity of their financial lives? That question shaped architecture. It shaped communications. And, in this episode Andy Keller makes clear, it pushed USAA toward digital access decades before much of the broader customer communications industry began to move. From COBOL to Cloud Keller entered USAA at a time when customer communications were inseparable from mainframe logic. COBOL, PL/I, assembler, JCL. Xerox MetaCode driving print streams. AFP conversion. Automated document factories. Inserters. Postal optimization. Paper was not a channel choice. It was infrastructure. One of his early assignments involved what would later become a precursor to digital document rendering: capturing output, overlaying data, managing fonts via XY coordinates, and enabling internal service representatives to view member documents electronically. That work predated widespread internet adoption. The architectural seeds of digital were present long before the market language caught up. Digital as Operational Necessity USAA’s founding constraint serving military families who could be deployed anywhere in the world shaped its communications strategy long before “digital transformation” became an industry phrase. Keller was part of the team that helped implement USAA’s early electronic delivery capabilities. By the early 2000s, the organization was delivering policies and statements through web and mobile platforms. Adoption was slow and steady—approximately three percent per year over two decades, until digital became the behavioral norm. Today, digital adoption exceeds 70 percent. More importantly, the cultural posture has shifted. Paper is no longer presumed. It is optional. The Regulatory Gate Keller describes the most significant early barrier not as technical, but legal. Compliance teams interpreted statutory language such as “written notice” as inherently requiring physical mail. Only when regulatory clarity explicitly permitted electronic delivery did institutional momentum accelerate. This is a recurring pattern across regulated industries. Technology capability precedes regulatory comfort. The constraint is interpretation, not innovation. The Seven-Foot Stack One memory Keller shared is instructive: a member once stacked every piece of USAA mail received over time. The pile stood roughly seven and a half feet tall. That visual reframes the direct mail debate. From the sender’s perspective, each piece fulfilled an obligation or represented opportunity. From the recipient’s perspective, it accumulated as volume. As waste. As digital access matured, paper increasingly became triage sorted over a recycling bin, with only urgency determining survival. The authority of the printed artifact erodes when redundancy became visible. Charging for Paper USAA experimented for years with incentives to encourage electronic adoption. The inflection point came when paper statements carried a modest monthly fee and digital adoption jumped materially from 3–4% to 7% or more. The lesson is uncomfortable but clear: cost shifts behavior faster than encouragement. As institutions approach 80 percent digital participation, similar economic signals will likely become even more common. Obligation vs. Opportunity Keller frames the internal divide as obligation versus opportunity. Operational communications such policies, disclosures, statements are compliance bound. Marketing communications pursue growth and brand reinforcement. Historically, these streams operated in parallel stacks. Different systems. Different governance. Different incentives. The unresolved challenge is integration: how to fragment content dynamically for experience optimization while maintaining regulator-approved language structures that were designed for fixed layouts and immutable pagination. This becomes not a print-versus-digital debate, but an orchestration problem. The Postal Dimension Keller also served for decades in local public office, including as mayor of a small Texas municipality. That dual exposure of enterprise architecture and public governance shaped his view of institutional inertia. The Postal Service, constitutionally embedded, is not obsolete. But its operating assumptions were built for a correspondence era. Return mail volume such as checks mailed back to billers was the first major collapse. Electronic bill presentment and payment removed a foundational volume from the postal stream. The next shift is subtler: as transactional communications become digitally default, physical mail concentrates into parcels, logistics, and selective high-value touchpoints. AI: Accelerator, Not Apocalypse From Keller’s technical perspective, AI is less existential than evolutionary. Its most immediate value lies in interrogating legacy systems, extracting business rules embedded in decades-old code, and accelerating modernization cycles that historically stalled under technical debt. Insurance products often contain state-specific logic encoded in languages whose original authors have long retired. AI’s opportunity is institutional memory recovery. The risk is governance complacency. Garbage in, garbage out still applies. AI does not absolve accountability. The Default Is Moving Andy Keller’s career arc from mainframe-based document factories to cloud-based digital orchestration mirrors the broader shift underway across regulated industries. Paper began as infrastructure.Digital began as an accommodation.Digital is now becoming the default. The decisive transition is not channel substitution. It is authority migration. It is gravity pulling the center of customer communications to a new place. When the mobile interface becomes the starting point of the customer relationship, gravity shifts upstream into data, orchestration logic, compliance architecture, and AI-assisted intelligence layers. USAA was built to serve members at a distance.A century later, that distance remains, and connecting matters more than ever. Notice Special thanks to Andy for his time and insights. It should be stated that Andy’s opinion’s are his own and do not reflect the position or views of USAA Insurance. Get full access to TreelinePress at treelinepress.substack.com/subscribe [https://treelinepress.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

3 de mar de 202651 min