Privacy Perspectives with Jodi Daniels

PP #024: The 3-Letter Phrase My Dad Repeated My Whole Life

10 min · 1. juli 2026
episode PP #024: The 3-Letter Phrase My Dad Repeated My Whole Life cover

Beskrivelse

PP #024: THE 3-LETTER PHRASE MY DAD REPEATED MY WHOLE LIFE Her dad passed in March. His three-letter rule - DYB, Do Your Best - still shapes how she leads today. Episode Summary In this episode of Privacy Perspectives, host Jodi Daniels marks her first Father's Day since her dad passed away in March by sharing seven life lessons he taught her, built around his three-letter philosophy: DYB, Do Your Best. You'll learn why DYB isn't the same as perfectionism, how showing emotion and admitting mistakes build professional trust, and why being scrappy and resourceful still applies to B2B relationships today. Question of the Day 🗣️ What's one lesson someone in your life taught you that still shows up in how you work today? Share it in the comments. Key Take-aways * DYB, Do Your Best, is about effort not perfection, and it still guides her leadership today * Showing emotion at big moments builds trust, even in professional and business settings * The sales cassette tapes he played taught a trust-and-connection principle that still works in B2B buying * Admitting a mistake means picking up the phone, not hiding behind an email * Being resourceful with whatever is on hand beats waiting for the right tools Timestamped Outline ⏱️ 00:00 - Opening: the first Father's Day without her dad 01:02 - Do Your Best (DYB): the family philosophy 02:55 - Show emotions: crying at every big moment 04:03 - Connect with people: the sales cassette tapes and building trust 06:33 - Admit mistakes: the phone call over the easy email 07:19 - Be scrappy and creative: the glass jar and the scrap paper 08:25 - Get hands on: the value of hard work 09:39 - Positive attitude: the glass-half-full outlook 10:24 - Closing: Happy Father's Day Links & Resources 🔗 * Book: "The Ride of a Lifetime: Lessons Learned from 15 Years as CEO of the Walt Disney Company" by Bob Iger → https://www.amazon.com/Ride-Lifetime-Lessons-Learned-Company-ebook/dp/B07PF6XTD8/ [https://www.amazon.com/Ride-Lifetime-Lessons-Learned-Company-ebook/dp/B07PF6XTD8/] * Privacy Perspectives newsletter → https://redcloveradvisors.com/ [https://redcloveradvisors.com/] Connect & CTA 🎯 👉 Enjoyed this? Subscribe & leave a review on Apple Podcasts. 🎁 Every week, Privacy Perspectives breaks down what's happening in privacy, what it means for your business, and how to stay ahead. Subscribe so you don't miss the next one: https://redcloveradvisors.com/ [https://redcloveradvisors.com/] Credits Host: Jodi Daniels © 2026 Red Clover Advisors. All rights reserved.

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12 Episoder

episode PP #024: The 3-Letter Phrase My Dad Repeated My Whole Life cover

PP #024: The 3-Letter Phrase My Dad Repeated My Whole Life

PP #024: THE 3-LETTER PHRASE MY DAD REPEATED MY WHOLE LIFE Her dad passed in March. His three-letter rule - DYB, Do Your Best - still shapes how she leads today. Episode Summary In this episode of Privacy Perspectives, host Jodi Daniels marks her first Father's Day since her dad passed away in March by sharing seven life lessons he taught her, built around his three-letter philosophy: DYB, Do Your Best. You'll learn why DYB isn't the same as perfectionism, how showing emotion and admitting mistakes build professional trust, and why being scrappy and resourceful still applies to B2B relationships today. Question of the Day 🗣️ What's one lesson someone in your life taught you that still shows up in how you work today? Share it in the comments. Key Take-aways * DYB, Do Your Best, is about effort not perfection, and it still guides her leadership today * Showing emotion at big moments builds trust, even in professional and business settings * The sales cassette tapes he played taught a trust-and-connection principle that still works in B2B buying * Admitting a mistake means picking up the phone, not hiding behind an email * Being resourceful with whatever is on hand beats waiting for the right tools Timestamped Outline ⏱️ 00:00 - Opening: the first Father's Day without her dad 01:02 - Do Your Best (DYB): the family philosophy 02:55 - Show emotions: crying at every big moment 04:03 - Connect with people: the sales cassette tapes and building trust 06:33 - Admit mistakes: the phone call over the easy email 07:19 - Be scrappy and creative: the glass jar and the scrap paper 08:25 - Get hands on: the value of hard work 09:39 - Positive attitude: the glass-half-full outlook 10:24 - Closing: Happy Father's Day Links & Resources 🔗 * Book: "The Ride of a Lifetime: Lessons Learned from 15 Years as CEO of the Walt Disney Company" by Bob Iger → https://www.amazon.com/Ride-Lifetime-Lessons-Learned-Company-ebook/dp/B07PF6XTD8/ [https://www.amazon.com/Ride-Lifetime-Lessons-Learned-Company-ebook/dp/B07PF6XTD8/] * Privacy Perspectives newsletter → https://redcloveradvisors.com/ [https://redcloveradvisors.com/] Connect & CTA 🎯 👉 Enjoyed this? Subscribe & leave a review on Apple Podcasts. 🎁 Every week, Privacy Perspectives breaks down what's happening in privacy, what it means for your business, and how to stay ahead. Subscribe so you don't miss the next one: https://redcloveradvisors.com/ [https://redcloveradvisors.com/] Credits Host: Jodi Daniels © 2026 Red Clover Advisors. All rights reserved.

1. juli 202610 min
episode PP #022: "Good Enough" Is How Privacy Programs Fail cover

PP #022: "Good Enough" Is How Privacy Programs Fail

PP #022: "GOOD ENOUGH" IS HOW PRIVACY PROGRAMS FAIL A professional asked for a human and got 'good enough' AI instead - that's where privacy programs start to fail. Episode Summary In this episode of Privacy Perspectives, host Jodi Daniels breaks down why "good enough" AI is quietly eroding privacy programs and customer trust. You'll learn AI's staggering environmental cost, why consumer trust in AI content is falling, and how to spot when a "good enough" privacy notice doesn't match your actual data practices. Question of the Day Where in your privacy program would "good enough" scare you the most - your data inventory, your vendor reviews, your incident response plan, or somewhere else? Drop it in the comments. Key Take-aways * AI data centers use as much electricity as 100,000 households and 5 million gallons of water daily * Consumer trust in AI-generated content dropped from 78% to 58% in just two years * A generic AI privacy notice checks a compliance box but may not reflect your real data practices * Erin Brockovich launched a website mapping AI data centers across the U.S. * Privacy work is deeply human - it requires judgment, context, and curiosity AI can't replicate Timestamped Outline 00:00 - Would you settle for good enough? 00:45 - AI's hidden costs: environment, critical thinking, jobs 01:08 - The environmental footprint behind AI 02:01 - Erin Brockovich maps AI data centers 02:41 - The trust data: consumers can tell the difference 04:25 - The double standard: would you replace yourself? 07:40 - Where good enough carries real consequences 09:06 - Closing: the work deserves a human who cares Links & Resources * Pew Research Center: How Americans View AI and Its Impact on People and Society (2025) → https://www.pewresearch.org/science/2025/09/17/how-americans-view-ai-and-its-impact-on-people-and-society/ [https://www.pewresearch.org/science/2025/09/17/how-americans-view-ai-and-its-impact-on-people-and-society/] * Capgemini: From Hype to Habit study (2025) → https://diginomica.com/consumer-love-gen-ai-now-tempered-privacy-concerns-capgemini-research-suggests-so [https://diginomica.com/consumer-love-gen-ai-now-tempered-privacy-concerns-capgemini-research-suggests-so] * Ipsos Consumer Tracker (2025) → https://www.ipsos.com/en-us/people-still-largely-prefer-humans-create-content-not-ai [https://www.ipsos.com/en-us/people-still-largely-prefer-humans-create-content-not-ai] * Subscribe to Privacy Perspectives → https://redcloveradvisors.com/ [https://redcloveradvisors.com/] Connect & CTA Subscribe & leave a review on Apple Podcasts. Every week, Privacy Perspectives breaks down what's happening in privacy, what it means for your business, and how to stay ahead. Subscribe so you don't miss the next one: https://redcloveradvisors.com/ [https://redcloveradvisors.com/] Credits Host: Jodi Daniels © 2026 Red Clover Advisors. All rights reserved.

24. juni 20269 min
episode PP #019: 8 Privacy Gaps We See in Nearly Every Program cover

PP #019: 8 Privacy Gaps We See in Nearly Every Program

PP #019: 8 PRIVACY GAPS WE SEE IN NEARLY EVERY PROGRAM Eight blind spots show up in nearly every privacy program - and most teams don't know they're there. Episode Summary In this episode of Privacy Perspectives, host Jodi Daniels breaks down the 8 privacy gaps that surface in nearly every program assessment Red Clover runs - regardless of company size, industry, or maturity. You'll learn why "we know which laws apply" is such a common and costly assumption, the data inventory blind spots that appear almost every time, and a privacy rights intake test you can run on your own program today. Question of the Day 🗣️ Which of these would you bet is hiding in your own privacy program right now - the regulatory scoping, the data inventory, or something on the cookie side? Tell us in the comments. Key Take-aways * "We know which laws apply to us" is a common, costly assumption - California employees can still fall under CCPA scope * Data inventories almost always miss sensitive data flags, children's data, and cross-border transfers * A privacy impact assessment that gets filed and ignored is false comfort, not protection * Run the test today: most privacy rights intake processes look functional but quietly break * A cookie banner is a starting point, not a program - and 19 states have passed laws, not just the base 5 Timestamped Outline ⏱️ 00:00 - What keeps showing up when we look under the hood 00:34 - Regulatory scoping - "we know what laws apply to us" 02:21 - Data inventories - the gaps that appear almost every time 04:06 - Privacy impact assessments - inconsistent, or skipped entirely 05:07 - The false comfort problem - assessments that get filed and ignored 05:53 - Privacy rights - the intake process that quietly breaks 07:13 - Privacy notices - outdated, orphaned, and out of sync 08:42 - Cookies - why a banner is not a program 10:26 - Training - security gets the spotlight, privacy gets overlooked 11:36 - Vendor management - where privacy gets left out 12:56 - The bottom line - common issues, all of them fixable Links & Resources 🔗 * Blog: When companies should run a privacy regulatory scoping exercise → https://redcloveradvisors.com/when-do-companies-need-a-privacy-program-assessment [https://redcloveradvisors.com/when-do-companies-need-a-privacy-program-assessment] * Data Inventory Masterclass waitlist (running again this fall) → https://redcloveradvisors.com/data-inventory-masterclass [https://redcloveradvisors.com/data-inventory-masterclass] * Red Clover Privacy Program Maturity Self-Assessment → https://redcloveradvisors.com/privacy-program-maturity-self-assessment [https://redcloveradvisors.com/privacy-program-maturity-self-assessment] * Guide: A Comprehensive Guide to Cookie Governance → https://redcloveradvisors.com/a-comprehensive-guide-to-cookie-governance [https://redcloveradvisors.com/a-comprehensive-guide-to-cookie-governance] * Privacy Perspectives Newsletter → https://redcloveradvisors.com/ [https://redcloveradvisors.com/] Connect & CTA 🎯 👉 Enjoyed this? Subscribe & leave a review on Apple Podcasts. 🎁 Every week, Privacy Perspectives breaks down what's happening in privacy, what it means for your business, and how to stay ahead. Subscribe so you don't miss the next one: https://redcloveradvisors.com/ [https://redcloveradvisors.com/] Credits Host: Jodi Daniels © 2026 Red Clover Advisors. All rights reserved.

17. juni 202613 min
episode PP #018: Stop Writing Longer Privacy Notices - Do This Instead cover

PP #018: Stop Writing Longer Privacy Notices - Do This Instead

PP #018: STOP WRITING LONGER PRIVACY NOTICES - DO THIS INSTEAD Privacy notices don't build trust. One conversation with a 10-year-old proves what actually does. Episode Summary In this episode of Privacy Perspectives, host Jodi Daniels reveals why privacy notices fail at their one job and what works instead. Starting with her daughter's refusal to fill out a camp health form, Jodi shows how just-in-time explanations, collecting only what you need, and honest context at the point of collection transform the customer relationship. Question of the Day 🗣️ What form or sign-up flow have you encountered that made you think "why do they even need this?" Drop it in the comments. Key Take-aways * People share willingly when you explain why you need their data * Just-in-time explanations outperform privacy notices every time * Collect only what you need - birth year vs. month and day matters * Context at the point of collection changes the entire customer relationship * Audit your own forms this week - the gaps will surprise you Timestamped Outline ⏱️ 00:00 - Summer camp season and a pile of forms 00:11 - "This is private" - my daughter's reaction 00:55 - People share when they understand why 01:11 - The privacy notice problem 01:25 - Just-in-time explanations and what actually works 01:47 - Less is more - do you need birth year or just month and day? 02:16 - The coffee shop that asks for your birthday immediately 02:56 - The signing tool that wants your precise location 03:41 - Online quizzes and the data you're sharing 04:20 - Transparency is not just legal compliance 05:08 - A simple thing you can do this week 05:37 - Privacy done well is just honest Links & Resources 🔗 * Privacy Perspectives newsletter - weekly privacy insights → https://redcloveradvisors.com/ [https://redcloveradvisors.com/] Connect & CTA 🎯 👉 Enjoyed this? Subscribe & leave a review on Apple Podcasts. 🎁 Every week, Privacy Perspectives breaks down what's happening in privacy, what it means for your business, and how to stay ahead. Subscribe so you don't miss the next one: https://redcloveradvisors.com/ [https://redcloveradvisors.com/] Credits Host: Jodi Daniels © 2026 Red Clover Advisors. All rights reserved.

10. juni 20265 min
episode PP #017: Keeping Data "Just In Case" Is Making You Less Safe cover

PP #017: Keeping Data "Just In Case" Is Making You Less Safe

PP #017: KEEPING DATA "JUST IN CASE" IS MAKING YOU LESS SAFE The data you're hoarding "just in case" isn't protecting you - it's exposing you. Deleted data can't hurt you. Episode Summary In this episode of Privacy Perspectives, host Jodi Daniels breaks down data minimization - starting with the mountain of printed emails and untouched boxes she found cleaning out her dad's office. You'll learn how data sprawl quietly multiplies a single file into 6-7 copies, the 3 questions to ask before you hit save, and the practical moves that actually get data deleted. Question of the Day 🗣️ Do you have a data minimization strategy that actually works in practice, or is it more of a "we have a policy" situation? Tell us in the comments. Key Take-aways * Digital storage removed the natural limit that used to force a cleanup - sprawl is now the default * Ask 3 questions before you hit save: that's what data minimization actually means in practice * GDPR, CCPA, Connecticut, Maryland's MODPA, and Vermont's proposed SB-71 each define minimization differently * A well-written retention policy is unenforceable if you can't find where the data lives (the 5-CRM story) * Link-don't-attach, smart defaults, and clean-out days are the moves that actually get data deleted Timestamped Outline ⏱️ 00:00 - My dad kept everything (sound familiar?) 01:36 - Nobody actually deletes anything - how data sprawl happens 03:05 - What data minimization actually means - the 3 questions 03:35 - How privacy laws define minimization (GDPR, CCPA, CT) 04:21 - Vermont SB-71 testimony and Maryland's MODPA 05:36 - Connecting data minimization to data retention 05:53 - Having a policy is not the same as doing it 06:31 - The 5-CRM story 07:06 - What actually helps - practical strategies that work 09:19 - My actual summer plan 10:14 - Why do we really keep stuff? 11:23 - When careful becomes a liability - closing thoughts Links & Resources 🔗 * Privacy Perspectives Newsletter → https://redcloveradvisors.com/ [https://redcloveradvisors.com/] Connect & CTA 🎯 👉 Enjoyed this? Subscribe & leave a review on Apple Podcasts. 🎁 Every week, Privacy Perspectives breaks down what's happening in privacy, what it means for your business, and how to stay ahead. Subscribe so you don't miss the next one: https://redcloveradvisors.com/ [https://redcloveradvisors.com/] Credits Host: Jodi Daniels © 2026 Red Clover Advisors. All rights reserved.

3. juni 202611 min