Forsidebilde av showet Human in the Loop

Human in the Loop

Podkast av Teikametrics

engelsk

Business

Tidsbegrenset tilbud

2 Måneder for 19 kr

Deretter 99 kr / MånedAvslutt når som helst.

  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • Gratis podkaster
Kom i gang

Les mer Human in the Loop

This brand new show explores the dynamic intersection of human intelligence and cutting-edge technology within the ever-evolving landscape of ecommerce. From in-depth discussions on artificial intelligence, to viral brands that launched on TikTok, to the stories behind today’s biggest technology companies, brands, and sellers.. Welcome to the forefront of the ecommerce revolution, where being a Human in the Loop is not just a just a strategy... But the very essence of progress.

Alle episoder

46 Episoder

episode Announcing Market IQ: AI-Enabled Competitive Intelligence for Amazon & Walmart cover

Announcing Market IQ: AI-Enabled Competitive Intelligence for Amazon & Walmart

Marketplace competition on Amazon and Walmart is a 24/7 problem — and most sellers don't have the time, data, or tooling to stay ahead of it. In this episode of HITL, we announce the launch of Market IQ, an AI-enabled competitive intelligence engine designed to tell sellers exactly who they're competing against, where their ad dollars are going, and what to do next to win page-one rank. We walk through the core problem Market IQ solves, why page-one visibility drives roughly 89% of clicks and sales, and how the product distinguishes between true substitutes, adjacent competitors, and "auction inflators" creating noise. We also dig into how Market IQ uses 13+ signals — including pricing, reviews, inventory, and listings — to surface insights that generic AI tools and ChatGPT-style lookups simply can't match. Finally, we cover what's coming next: in-app workflows launching in the next 60 days that will let sellers take action directly inside the product, plus how Market IQ fits into the broader Teikametrics ecosystem as the "navigation compass" for advertising and catalog decisions. 2. Key Takeaways * Competition on Amazon and Walmart is a 24/7 challenge — new sellers, new pricing, and new ad strategies emerge constantly, and human teams can't track it all manually. * Page one is where ~89% of clicks and sales happen, which is why Market IQ is laser-focused on page-one visibility for both paid and organic results. * Market IQ is built on real ad-spend data, not generic competitor lookups — it shows you exactly who's competing against you on the keywords you're already investing in. * The product uses 13+ signals (pricing, reviews, inventory, listings, and more) to classify competitors into meaningful buckets: direct substitutes, adjacents, and auction inflators. * Not all competitors deserve the same response — Market IQ helps sellers decide when to play defense, when to go on the attack, and when to ignore noise. * Market IQ is the connective tissue of the Teikametrics platform — feeding insights into advertising, catalog (Smart Pages), and listing optimization workflows. * It's available now for advanced and enterprise customers, with in-app action workflows shipping in the next ~60 days. * The earlier you plug in, the better — Market IQ compounds in value as the AI continues to learn your category and competitive set. Chapters: 00:00 Cold Open: Why Sellers Can't Keep Up With the Competition 00:46 The Biggest Problem Sellers Face on Amazon & Walmart Today 01:32 What Is Market IQ? 02:00 Why Page One Is the Real Battleground 02:18 How Market IQ Works 03:24 Why 89% of Clicks & Sales Happen on Page One 03:51 What Sets Market IQ Apart 05:07 The Three Types of Competitors 05:47 Market IQ + the Teikametrics Platform 07:00 Who Market IQ Is Built For 07:51 What's Next: In-App Action Workflows 08:41 Why Plugging In Early Matters 09:08 How to Get Access Join our free in-depth Market IQ webinar at the end of this month for a full product walkthrough with live visuals. The link is in the description below — register now to see Market IQ in action.

20. mai 2026 - 10 min
episode How to Break Through on TikTok: Lessons for Big Spenders & Breakthrough Brands cover

How to Break Through on TikTok: Lessons for Big Spenders & Breakthrough Brands

Is TikTok really for every brand? Ali Tatarzyn, Director of Product at Teikametrics, breaks down what's working — and what's not — for brands on TikTok in 2026. TikTok has officially moved past the experimental phase. Brands are allocating real budgets, building dedicated teams, and treating it as a serious growth channel — but most are still getting stuck. In this episode, Ali Tatarzyn, Director of Product at Teikametrics, breaks down what she's hearing from brands every week, from enterprise players investing heavily to smaller brands just dipping a toe in. She shares why TikTok isn't a fit for every brand, the two very different conversations happening across the industry right now, and the mindset shift required to actually win on the platform. Whether you're trying to prove halo impact to leadership or just trying to get your first piece of content to land, this conversation lays out where brands get stuck — and how to break through. Key Takeaways TikTok isn't for every brand — it rewards a specific way of operating that's fast, content-heavy, and creator-driven, and brands unwilling to adapt will struggle. The real challenge isn't ad spend or optimization, it's content. Most brands aren't built for the speed and volume TikTok demands. Organic, affiliate, and paid aren't separate strategies — they form a loop. Test organically, scale with affiliates, amplify winners with paid. Two distinct conversations are happening right now: mature brands focused on halo impact and measurement, and breakthrough brands trying to figure out why nothing is sticking. Big spenders get stuck on attribution and proving incrementality to leadership. Breakthrough brands get stuck producing content that's too polished and too brand-heavy. Letting go of creative control is one of the hardest — and most important — shifts brands need to make. Trust your creators to do what they do best. The time to invest is now. With Ulta, Sally Beauty, and other major retailers joining TikTok Shop, the platform is only getting more serious — but it's not too late. Don't bring your Amazon or Meta playbook to TikTok. Speed, volume, and creative iteration win over structure and control. Chapters 00:00 — Intro: Why Ali has a front-row seat to the TikTok conversation 00:54 — Is TikTok for every brand? A spicy take 03:20 — The biggest questions brands are asking right now 06:00 — The organic, affiliate, and paid loop 09:02 — The two camps of brands on TikTok 11:00 — Where big-investment brands get stuck (and how to fix it) 14:08 — The halo effect and the measurement problem 15:33 — Where breakthrough brands get stuck 17:22 — Why relinquishing creative control matters 18:38 — Final takeaways: the time is now 21:45 — Ulta, Sally Beauty, and what big retail moves signal for TikTok

13. mai 2026 - 22 min
episode TikTok Halo: Discover on TikTok, Buy on Amazon cover

TikTok Halo: Discover on TikTok, Buy on Amazon

The dominant consumer pattern of 2026 isn't buy on TikTok — it's discover on TikTok, buy on Amazon . That's great for the brands paying attention. It's a measurement nightmare for everyone else. In this episode, Cameron Yoder is joined by Alasdair McLean-Foreman, CEO and Founder of Teikametrics to break down the TikTok Halo: Why traditional attribution falls apart between the two platforms, why the discounting strategy that works for native TikTok Shop products actively hurts established brands, and how creator behavior — including off-message claims like "this product is being discontinued" — turns into a brand-safety problem the moment a video goes viral. The conversation gets practical: what big brands should actually measure (hint: not direct ROAS), why TikTok belongs in an experimental, upper-funnel bucket for most established brands, why the content engine is the muscle to start building today even if you can't justify the spend yet, what Amazon tried and abandoned on the discovery side, and why the DTC brands that swore off Amazon five years ago are quietly leaning back in — using Amazon Prime as a fulfillment layer rather than a competing channel. Takeaways at the end, and a tease that this won't be the last TikTok Halo conversation on the show. Timestamps / Chapters 00:00 — Cold open: discover on TikTok, buy on Amazon Prime 00:44 — What "TikTok Halo" actually means: the attribution gap, defined 01:55 — Why discounting blows up the strategy for established brands 03:39 — Consumer trust: Amazon Prime vs. TikTok, and the younger-audience split 04:46 — When creators go off-script: the beauty brand and pet food cases 07:00 — The metrics question: why direct ROAS will disappoint you 09:21 — The right framing: experimental bucket, upper-funnel marketing 11:36 — Build the content muscle now (and why Amazon's TikTok-style feed failed) 15:00 — DTC's quiet pivot: leaning back into Amazon as a fulfillment layer 16:28 — Key takeaways and what's next Key Topics / Talking Points What you'll learn in this episode: What the TikTok Halo is and why it's the dominant cross-channel pattern in 2026 Why "discover on TikTok, buy on Amazon" is the strategy big brands need to plan around — even if it's harder to measure Why the discounting playbook that works for native TikTok Shop brands actively damages established brands' merchandising How consumer trust differs between TikTok and Amazon, and where the younger-audience exception applies Real examples of creator-driven brand risk (e.g., false discontinuation claims) and how to think about brand control on a content-first platform The metrics big brands should and shouldn't use to evaluate TikTok performance Why TikTok belongs in an "experimental bucket" — and what that bucket should fund Why building the content engine today matters more than nailing the ROAS math What Amazon tried on the discovery side, why it didn't work, and what that says about platform moat Subscribe on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube and beyond for more AI-related content!

6. mai 2026 - 18 min
episode What the hell is MCP — and can it actually run your marketplace business? cover

What the hell is MCP — and can it actually run your marketplace business?

Alasdair and Cameron debate whether you can really plug Claude into Amazon, let it rip on a $500K/month ad budget, and call it a business. Episode Summary: Everyone's talking about MCP — Model Context Protocol — and the dream of plugging a large language model like Claude straight into Amazon to run an entire marketplace business. In this episode, Cameron Yoder and Alasdair McLean-Foreman cut through the LinkedIn buzz to define what MCP actually is (spoiler: it's effectively a glorified API), where it genuinely shines today, and where the wheels come off when you try to hand a $500,000/month ad budget to a model with no middle layer. They get into the specifics: which use cases are ready right now (analytics, querying, cross-channel data exploration), why running an enterprise marketplace business demands more than a pipe between an LLM and a database, and what an MCP-native operating model actually looks like — including how it might compress headcount, why you'd want to build your own data layer, which categories of SaaS are most exposed (HubSpot Breeze, Zapier, legal tools all come up), and the Nvidia executive's "every software company becomes a token factory" line. Key Topics / Talking Points What MCP (Model Context Protocol) actually is — and why "it's a glorified API" is the right mental model Why plugging Claude directly into a large Amazon brand is, at this moment, a stretch — and what specifically breaks The use cases that already work today: analytics, ad-hoc querying, replacing BI/spreadsheet workflows The use cases that don't work yet: autonomous bid management, full-budget campaign edits, cross-channel optimization Why a "middle layer" — your own database and interface — is non-negotiable for serious marketplace operators How MCP changes headcount math: not zero people, but maybe one person doing three jobs The Anthropic "one-person marketing team" precedent and what it does and doesn't prove The Nvidia "token factory" thesis and which SaaS categories are most exposed Why HubSpot Breeze and Zapier hint at where mainstream B2B software is heading The real competitive threat to incumbent marketplace SaaS: lean, AI-native, agentic-from-day-one startups Why the right move for most operators is to test MCP — not bet the business on it Timestamps / Chapters 00:00 — Cold open & opening positions: can you really plug Claude into Amazon? 01:33 — What MCP actually is: the "glorified API" definition 03:42 — The "right" use cases: where Claude shines vs. where it breaks 05:11 — Would you let it run a $500K/mo ad budget? The middle-layer debate 07:04 — The data gap: cross-channel signals and why a pipe isn't enough 09:28 — The "token factory" thesis and headcount implications 11:17 — Architecting it yourself: which SaaS categories get displaced 14:04 — HubSpot Breeze, Zapier, and the AI-native competitor threat 17:17 — Takeaways and the buy-a-brand experiment tease If you got value from this episode: * Subscribe to Human in the Loop on Spotify and YouTube so the next episode lands in your feed. * Follow Cameron and Alasdair on LinkedIn — that's where the between-episode debates and experiment updates live. * Try the test yourself. Spin up an MCP connection on a small slice of your business and see what it can actually do — you don't have to bet the budget to learn something. * Tell us what to sell. We're seriously considering buying a brand and running it with AI in the loop. Reply on LinkedIn or email the show with what category we should pick. * Rate the show wherever you're listening — it's the single biggest thing that helps new operators find us.

29. april 2026 - 19 min
episode Introducing ARI: Artificial Retail Intelligence with Alasdair McLean-Foreman cover

Introducing ARI: Artificial Retail Intelligence with Alasdair McLean-Foreman

In this episode, Cameron sits down with Alasdair McLean-Foreman, CEO & Founder of Teikametrics, to unpack ARI (Artificial Retail Intelligence), the most significant platform evolution in Teikametrics history. The conversation clarifies what ARI is, why it matters now, and how it represents a fundamental shift from ad optimization toward a unified, AI-powered orchestration layer that helps brands manage and scale their intellectual property across multiple retail channels. Key Takeaways * ARI is a platform shift, not a feature release It marks Teikametrics’ evolution beyond ads into a holistic retail intelligence and orchestration layer. * Intellectual property is the core asset ARI optimizes Product content, listings, imagery, and brand IP are treated as strategic inputs that fuel performance across channels. * Generative AI enables what wasn’t possible before Advances in AI over the last 6–12 months made ARI feasible at a quality level brands can trust. * Multichannel growth becomes operationally simpler ARI is designed to help brands move faster across Amazon, Walmart, TikTok, and beyond without duplicating effort. * Teikametrics is expanding into a new category ARI positions the company closer to product information management, feed management, and channel orchestration—powered by AI. Episode Timeline * 00:00  | Introduction and why ARI matters now * 00:55  | What ARI is and how the concept was formed * 01:40  | How ARI differs from previous Teikametrics solutions * 03:10  | The role of generative AI and why timing matters * 04:30  | ARI’s impact on multichannel ecommerce strategy * 05:25 | How ARI aligns with Teikametrics’ long-term mission * 06:30 | Future implications for sellers, partners, and employees * 08:10 | Closing thoughts and what’s coming next Key Quotes 1. “ARI is the most important thing we’ve ever done—it’s the evolution of our company beyond ads.” 2. “Brands have intellectual property, and ARI is about orchestrating that IP across channels using AI.” 3. “When you shift the problem from ads to content and IP management, you enter a completely new category.”

7. jan. 2026 - 9 min
Enkelt å finne frem nye favoritter og lett å navigere seg gjennom innholdet i appen
Enkelt å finne frem nye favoritter og lett å navigere seg gjennom innholdet i appen
Liker at det er både Podcaster (godt utvalg) og lydbøker i samme app, pluss at man kan holde Podcaster og lydbøker atskilt i biblioteket.
Bra app. Oversiktlig og ryddig. MYE bra innhold⭐️⭐️⭐️

Velg abonnementet ditt

Mest populær

Tidsbegrenset tilbud

Premium

20 timer lydbøker

  • Eksklusive podkaster

  • Ingen annonser i Podimo shows

  • Avslutt når som helst

2 Måneder for 19 kr
Deretter 99 kr / Måned

Kom i gang

Premium Plus

100 timer lydbøker

  • Eksklusive podkaster

  • Ingen annonser i Podimo shows

  • Avslutt når som helst

Prøv gratis i 14 dager
Deretter 169 kr / måned

Prøv gratis

Bare på Podimo

Populære lydbøker

Kom i gang

2 Måneder for 19 kr. Deretter 99 kr / Måned. Avslutt når som helst.