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Signal and Noise
Signal and Noise
Author: ROI Rocket, Brian Lamar and Andrew DeCilles
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© ROI Rocket, Brian Lamar and Andrew DeCilles
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Marketing Research veterans Brian Lamar and Andrew DeCilles bring you the honest conversations that the research industry needs. From trends to breaking news to ugly conversations others won’t touch; no subject is off limits. Join us for an unfiltered take on mrx with storied guests speaking their minds, expert takes on the hottest topics, and tales from those who’ve been in the trenches. Marketing Research has never been in such a season of change and outcry—we’ll help you separate the signal from the noise.
24 Episodes
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Brandon Richard returns to Signal and Noise for his second appearance, joining Brian and Andrew in person at The Link Group’s Durham, North Carolina, office. The conversation picks up where their previous AI discussion left off, diving deeper into what has actually changed in the past few months and what has not.As an AI enthusiast and healthcare research leader, Brandon shares how The Link Group approaches AI pragmatically. Rather than chasing every new tool, the team focuses on understanding core AI categories such as conversational surveys, synthetic data, knowledge management, and generative productivity tools. The number of vendors may be exploding, but the foundational capabilities remain relatively stable.The episode also explores a bigger existential question for the research industry. If AI can generate longitudinal synthetic respondents and analyze business questions directly, what role does market research play? Brandon argues that the value of research lies not just in answers but in the collaborative process. The refinement of business questions and the strategic intuition researchers bring to the table are difficult to replicate with a single AI prompt.Key Takeaways:AI tools are multiplying fast, but the core research use cases have not changed much.Synthetic data still makes the most sense as augmentation, not replacement.The magic of research is in the process, not just the answer.AI is most powerful as a thinking accelerator.If research becomes “question in, answer out,” the industry is in trouble.If you loved the episode, have comments, or want to appear on the show, connect with us down below!Connect with us:LinkedInYouTubeROI RocketConnect with Brandon:LinkedIn
In this special in-person episode of Signal and Noise, the hosts sit down with Beth Finn, CEO, and Jason Ebbing, COO of The Directions Group, for a wide-ranging conversation on the future of insights leadership.Beth and Jason share their career paths, how The Directions Group approaches integrated intelligence, and what it means to move beyond siloed research toward clearer signals that drive real business action. The discussion also explores data quality, speed to insight, pricing research based on value, and how artificial intelligence should support rather than replace human thinking.This episode offers a candid look at modern leadership in the insights industry and how organizations can stay relevant as decision-making accelerates and expectations rise. Key Takeaways:Clients are overwhelmed with data but still struggle with clarity and decision-makingIntegrated intelligence works best when multiple data sources are planned together from the startResearch teams gain influence when insights are tied directly to business actionsData quality must be usable, credible, and actionable to create real valueAI should amplify human judgment, not replace it, especially in strategy and leadershipIf you loved the episode, have comments, or want to appear on the show, connect with us down below!Connect with us:LinkedInYouTubeROI RocketConnect with Beth:LinkedInConnect with Jason:LinkedIn
In this episode of Signal and Noise, Brian Lamar sits down with Frank Kelly, one of the most experienced voices in panel management, sampling, and respondent engagement, to unpack what is actually broken in online research and how the industry can fix it.Frank reflects on nearly four decades working across every major panel model, from postal and telephone panels to online access panels at Nielsen, Kantar, Ipsos, and now Virtual Incentives. He explains why today’s fraud and data quality challenges are not new problems, but the result of incentives, engagement, and trust being systematically undervalued for years.A central theme of the conversation is compensation. Frank makes the case that low incentives drive fraud, disengagement, and professional respondents, while fair and meaningful incentives expand the pool of real people willing to participate. He challenges the assumption that higher incentives automatically increase fraud and explains why the opposite is often true.The discussion also explores how conversational AI, video, and smarter profiling can radically improve panel quality if paired with the right incentive strategy. Frank outlines a future where premium panels support deeper qualitative work, smaller samples, and AI-powered synthesis, all while maintaining higher standards of validation and trust.Key Takeaways:Low incentives shrink the respondent pool and invite fraudFair compensation expands access to real, engaged participantsIncentive strategy is as important as fraud detection technologyConversational AI and video can improve quality when paired with better payPremium panels will be essential as big qualitative research growsIf you loved the episode, have comments, or want to appear on the show, connect with us down below!Connect with us:LinkedInYouTubeROI RocketConnect with Frank Kelly:LinkedIn
In this episode of Signal and Noise, Brian Lamar and Andrew DeCilles are joined by leaders from CASE4Quality for a candid and deeply informed conversation on the state of data quality in market research.The discussion features Mary Beth Weber, founder of CASE4Quality, alongside Tia Maurer - Data Quality Guru, Efrain Ribeiro - Godfather of Sampling, and Karine Pepin - Data Fairy. Together, they unpack how the industry arrived at its current data integrity challenges and why progress has been slower than many expected.The episode explores the realities of online sampling, fraud, and professional respondents, including how the promise of unlimited and inexpensive sample has distorted incentives across the ecosystem. The guests explain how aggregation, lack of transparency, and pressure for speed and cost reduction have quietly undermined confidence in research outputs.The conversation also addresses the growing tension between AI-driven research and poor-quality input data. The panel warns that synthetic data and advanced analytics cannot solve quality problems if the underlying data is flawed. Throughout the episode, the group emphasizes the need for transparency, accountability, and brand-led standards to restore trust and long-term viability to the research industry.Key Takeaways:The industry operates under the false assumption that unlimited high quality sample existsSpeed and low cost have consistently been prioritized over data integrityFraud and professional respondents remain widespread and often undetectedAggregated and opaque sampling practices make validation nearly impossibleAI and synthetic data amplify risk when built on compromised data foundationsAI can improve efficiency in research, but human judgment is still essential for understanding emotion, taste, humor, and nuance.If you loved the episode, have comments, or want to appear on the show, connect with us down below!Connect with us:LinkedInYouTubeROI RocketLearn More About CASE4Quality:CASE4QualityConnect with Mary Beth Weber:LinkedInConnect with Tia Maurer:LinkedInConnect with Efrain Ribeiro:LinkedInConnect with Karine Pepin:LinkedIn
In this episode of Signal and Noise, hosts Brian Lamar and Andrew DeCilles sit down with Samuel Cohen, Ph.D., CEO of Fairgen, to explore how generative AI and advanced statistical modeling are reshaping the way consumer research is conducted, validated, and scaled.Samuel shares his international academic journey, from studying mathematics and synthetic data research at Oxford to working with AI in industry labs before launching Fairgen. He explains how rising costs and declining data quality in traditional market research led him to build a platform focused on generating reliable, usable insights from limited samples.The conversation breaks down the difference between partial simulation and full simulation, clarifying how Fairgen uses statistical models to amplify real survey data rather than replacing it outright. Samuel walks through real-world applications, including how enterprise clients use data amplification to unlock granular insights across small or hard-to-reach segments without dramatically increasing budgets or field time.The hosts and Samuel also discuss where AI works well and where it falls short, particularly in high-stakes research, governance-driven projects, and complex quantitative methods like advanced conjoint analysis. The episode closes with a forward-looking perspective on how budgets, decision risk, and organizational governance will shape the future role of simulated data in consumer research. Key Takeaways:Generative AI can amplify small samples into enterprise-level insight without multiplying cost or field time.There is a critical difference between simulating data and strengthening real data, and most people get it wrong.Fairgen’s approach shows how math and models can reveal patterns humans cannot see at scale.Not all research should use AI, especially when decision risk and governance are high.The future of insights may be fewer surveys, smarter modeling, and faster strategic confidence rather than bigger sample sizes.AI can improve efficiency in research, but human judgment is still essential for understanding emotion, taste, humor, and nuance.If you loved the episode, have comments, or want to appear on the show, connect with us down below!Connect with us:LinkedInYouTubeROI RocketConnect with Samuel:LinkedIn
In this special New Year episode of Signal and Noise, Brian Lamar and Andrew DeCilles return with a candid conversation about what 2026 may hold for the market research and insights industry. Drawing from months of conversations with researchers, technology leaders, and clients, the hosts share a grounded but optimistic view of an industry entering a period of economic repositioning, technological acceleration, and rising expectations for data quality.The discussion opens with reflections on personal and professional goals before shifting into a wide-ranging outlook on volatility, global and political uncertainty, and how those forces shape research budgets and decision-making. Brian and Andrew explore why market research is well positioned to benefit from artificial intelligence, even as pricing pressure, consolidation, and competition continue to intensify.Key Takeaways:The economic and political factors shaping research budgets in 2026Why artificial intelligence may reduce cost and time while raising expectations for qualityThe rising importance of verified and high-quality online samplesThe growth of synthetic data and hybrid research approachesHow the role of the researcher is shifting toward insight and strategyIndustry consolidation and what it means for agencies and panelsWhy innovation and experimentation will define competitive advantage in 2026If you loved the episode, have comments, or want to appear on the show, connect with us down below!Connect with us:LinkedInYouTubeROI Rocket
In this episode of Signal and Noise, hosts Brian Lamar and Andrew DeCilles sit down with Craig Alter, an experienced consumer insights leader at Perfetti Van Melle, to explore how consumer behavior, impulse buying, and innovation research intersect inside the world of candy, gum, and mints.Craig shares his nontraditional path into market research, explaining how early experience in finance, marketing, and brand management shaped his ability to connect subtle consumer insights to measurable business outcomes. He discusses why many professionals discover research later in their careers and why diverse business backgrounds are a strength for the insights industry.Craig also discusses innovation and product testing as one of the most rewarding areas of consumer research. He walks through central location tests, flavor development, texture evaluation, and how research can serve both product refinement and selling stories with retail buyers. Throughout the discussion, he highlights how qualitative and quantitative methods increasingly blend together to solve real business problems.The episode concludes with a thoughtful discussion on the role of artificial intelligence in research. Craig offers a pragmatic perspective on where AI can add speed and efficiency, such as summarization and early screening, and where human nuance remains irreplaceable, particularly in humor, taste, emotion, and impulse-driven behavior.Key Takeaways:Impulse-driven categories like candy are difficult to research because consumers often cannot explain why they buy in the moment.Observational and in-context research is critical for understanding real shopper behavior, especially at the shelf or checkout.Consumer behavior changes significantly by channel, so insights must be tailored for grocery, convenience, club, and digital environments.Innovation research works best when qualitative and quantitative methods are combined to refine products and tell compelling business stories.AI can improve efficiency in research, but human judgment is still essential for understanding emotion, taste, humor, and nuance.If you loved the episode, have comments, or want to appear on the show, connect with us down below!Connect with us:LinkedInYouTubeROI RocketConnect with Craig Alter:LinkedIn
In this episode of Signal and Noise, hosts Brian Lamar and Andrew DeCilles welcome Ellen Houston and Jordan Harper from Qualtrics Edge, marking the first time the podcast has featured guests from Qualtrics. The conversation dives into the future of AI, synthetic data, and the evolution of modern research inside one of the most influential insights platforms in the world.Ellen, who leads the Edge Center of Excellence, outlines how her team focuses on the intersection of market research and artificial intelligence, particularly in developing synthetic respondents and next-generation research tools. Jordan, a senior principal thought leader, brings a scientific and strategic perspective shaped by his background in astrophysics, engineering, technology, and agency leadership. Together, they explain how Qualtrics Edge is working across product, engineering, delivery, and customer teams to establish a rigorous foundation for AI in research.Throughout the episode, the conversation highlights the opportunities and challenges of AI, including research design, niche audience modeling, accuracy signals, and the role of synthetic respondents in uncovering deeper truths and exposing issues in survey construction. Both guests share examples of experiments, such as priming tests and concept evaluations, that reveal how synthetic respondents behave compared to humans and how these differences can expand the insight landscape.Key Takeaways:Qualtrics Edge is focused on using AI to advance market research, especially through synthetic respondents.Synthetic respondents are meant to support human research, not replace it.The Qualtrics model is trained on decades of real survey data, giving it a unique advantage.Synthetic respondents help reveal issues in survey design and respondent behavior that humans may hide or overlook.Future developments include niche synthetic audiences and expanded AI tools across the entire research process.If you loved the episode, have comments, or want to appear on the show, connect with us down below!Connect with us:LinkedInYouTubeROI RocketConnect with Jordan Harper:LinkedInConnect with Ellen Houston:LinkedIn
In this episode of Signal and Noise, hosts Brian Lamar and Andrew DeCilles sit down with Brandon Richard, Senior Vice President at The Link Group and a long-time AI enthusiast who has been leading multiple AI initiatives across qualitative and quantitative research. Together, they unpack what is actually happening in the research industry as companies race to understand and apply artificial intelligence.The episode also explores the limits of AI-generated synthesis, the need for trust and human verification, the challenges of capturing nuance in qualitative work, and why the industry must avoid falling into the trap of faster and cheaper at the expense of true insight. Brandon highlights the importance of friction in the research process, explaining that many of the valuable ideas and breakthroughs come from the messy and human parts of research, not simply the final deliverable.Key Takeaways:Where AI synthesis supports analysts and where it still falls shortPractical examples of AI being used before and after qualitative workA balanced view of synthetic samples, digital twins, and personasWhy accurate forecasting and real-time insight remain difficult for AIThe risks of creating research that is fast and cheap but not meaningfulWhy friction in research often produces the best insightsWhat the future of human plus AI collaboration should look likeIf you loved the episode, have comments, or want to appear on the show, connect with us down below!Connect with us:LinkedInYouTubeROI RocketConnect with Brandon Richard:LinkedInThe Link Group
In this episode of Signal and Noise, hosts Brian Lamar and Andrew DeCilles talk with Lindsay Zaltman, Chief Executive Officer and Partner at Olson Zaltman, the firm known for creating the widely respected ZMET qualitative insight methodology. Together, they explore how deep psychological structures influence the way people think, feel, and make decisions, and why traditional research methods often miss these hidden drivers.Lindsay explains how deep metaphors guide human behavior at a subconscious level and how they reveal the emotional stories people use to make sense of the world. He shares how Olson Zaltman uncovers these underlying meanings through imagery, personal narratives, and symbolic thinking. The discussion highlights how these insights help brands uncover motivations that consumers cannot easily verbalize and how they lead to more effective strategies, stronger creative ideas, and clearer paths for innovation.Key Takeaways:Why traditional research struggles to reveal emotional truthHow ZMET identifies the subconscious patterns that shape behaviorThe role of imagery and storytelling in uncovering hidden needsExamples of deep metaphors that changed brand strategyWhy emotional meaning is the foundation of consumer decision makingHow deep metaphors support creative development and positioningThe value of psychological depth in a fast-moving and automated worldWhat it means to understand the stories behind customer choicesIf you loved the episode, have comments, or want to appear on the show, connect with us down below!Connect with us:LinkedInYouTubeROI RocketConnect with Lindsay Zaltman:LinkedInWebsite
In this episode of Signal & Noise, hosts Brian Lamar and Andrew DeCilles speak with Ben Cortese, Vice President of Decision Sciences and Innovation at KS&R, to explore how custom AI chatbots are reshaping the way research insights are accessed, shared, and expanded beyond traditional deliverables.Ben explains how his team is combining qualitative and quantitative research with secure AI systems to build proprietary chatbots that allow clients to interact naturally with their own data. These tools help stakeholders ask new questions, explore nuances, and identify early opportunities without re-fielding studies or relying solely on static reports.The discussion covers how KS&R structures these models to remain accurate, safe, and aligned with proven research findings. Ben also walks through the technical evolution of the tool, including early failures, the role of system guardrails, the importance of loading structured data, and why transparency and validation matter more than speed or novelty.Key Takeaways:What it means to extend insights beyond traditional deliverablesHow custom chatbots are powered by proprietary qualitative contentWhy guardrails are essential to prevent drift, hallucination, and off-topic responsesThe process of grounding AI output to match known research narrativesHow AI can support ideation, early concept testing, and faster client explorationWhere AI can accelerate the workflow versus where human judgment remains irreplaceableHow researchers may evolve into curators, validators, and strategic translatorsThe future role of AI in tracking, longitudinal analysis, and blended data environmentsIf you loved the episode, have comments, or want to appear on the show, connect with us down below!Connect with us:LinkedInYouTubeROI RocketConnect with Ben Cortese, PhD:LinkedIn
In this episode of Signal & Noise, hosts Brian Lamar and Andrew DeCilles welcome the team from Verisoul, a company redefining fraud detection in market research. The guests include Henry LeGard, Founder and CEO, Joey Maddox, Chief Strategy Officer, and Erinn Taylor, who joins the conversation to explore how Verisoul uses banking-grade technology to detect and eliminate fraud while keeping real respondents in the data set.Henry and Joey explain how Verisoul’s background in cybersecurity and fintech enabled them to develop invisible fraud-prevention tools that identify bots, VPN spoofers, and fraud rings in real time. The team discusses how their system detects human behavior through device patterns, network signals, and even physics-based methods like latency and impossible travel analysis, all without disrupting survey participants.Brian and Andrew dive into how legacy fraud detection tools often over-block legitimate respondents, creating bias and frustration. The Verisoul team outlines how their approach balances protection with precision, reducing false positives and improving data integrity across the research industry. They also share insights from Verisoul’s large-scale fraud study that analyzed more than 50 million sessions, revealing global fraud trends and the role of device types in fraud rates.Key Takeaways:How Verisoul applies banking-level fraud detection to market researchThe global scale of organized fraud farms and location spoofingThe impact of false positives on respondent experience and data qualityPrivacy compliance across global marketsInsights from Verisoul’s fraud research and data quality reportThe concept of real-time fraud and value scoringThe growing importance of authenticated AI agents in fraud preventionIf you loved the episode, have comments, or want to appear on the show, connect with us down below!Connect with us:LinkedInYouTubeROI RocketConnect with Joey:LinkedInConnect with Henry:LinkedInConnect with Erinn:LinkedInLearn more about Verisoul:Website
In this no-filter episode of Signal & Noise, hosts Brian and Andrew dive into one of the most pressing issues in market research: the misuse of fraud detection platforms. They unpack how digital fingerprinting tools, while valuable, are often implemented in ways that damage data quality and block legitimate respondents.Brian and Andrew explain how overly-aggressive fraud settings can create non-response bias, limit sample diversity, and frustrate real participants. They reveal why using multiple fraud detection tools or relying solely on automation can lead to distorted data and wasted resources.They share lessons from industry research, stories of clients who turned off their fraud filters and saw better outcomes, and practical insights into balancing data protection with respondent experience. The conversation builds toward Brian’s “Eight Steps to Winning,” a clear framework to improve quality, restore trust, and move the industry forward.Key Takeaways:Why misusing fraud detection tools can do more harm than goodHow false positives block real people and skew your dataThe hidden consequences of using multiple fraud platformsThe Eight Steps to Winning framework for better data qualityIf you loved the episode, have comments, or want to appear on the show, connect with us down below!Connect with us:LinkedInYouTubeROI Rocket
In this episode, Brian and Andrew sit down with Isaac Rogers, CEO of Sago Health, for an in-depth conversation about the rapidly changing world of healthcare research.Isaac shares his path from technology entrepreneur to leading one of the most respected names in healthcare insights. Together, they explore how qualitative and quantitative research are merging, how artificial intelligence is shaping the future of patient and physician studies, and why the healthcare sector is becoming one of the most innovative areas in the research industry.Isaac’s Journey: How a single lunch meeting with Jim Bryson set the stage for an unexpected and rewarding career in market research.Sago Health’s Mission: What the company’s new independent structure means for clients and the healthcare research community.Hybrid Research: Why integrating qualitative and quantitative methods provides a more complete view of both patient and physician experiences.AI and Synthetic Data: How technology is helping researchers reach hard-to-find audiences and improve efficiency in healthcare studies.Industry Trends: How pharmaceutical companies, medical device manufacturers, and healthcare systems are adopting new methodologies faster than ever before.Stay tuned until the very end of the episode to hear blends of expertise, humor, and practical insights!Connect with Isaac Rogers on LinkedIn: Isaac RogersConnect with us:LinkedInYouTubeROI Rocket
In this episode of Signal & Noise, Brian Lamar sits down with Dan Foreman, one of the most influential voices in market research, to reflect on a 30-year career that has shaped the industry’s evolution from clipboards to AI. From launching global operations at FocusVision to investing in next-gen insight startups like Zappi, Dan has always been on the leading edge of innovation.Dan shares his fascinating career path - starting as a researcher at Research International, then moving through marketing, consulting, and entrepreneurship - culminating in advisory roles across more than a dozen companies. He also dives deep into the founding of the ESOMAR Foundation, created to support researchers in crisis zones, and the impact of building community-driven change in a global industry.The conversation explores Dan’s investment philosophy, how he evaluates new ventures using a mix of “science and X-factor,” and his latest venture into biotech and longevity through initiatives like The Infinite Games. With stories that span continents, boardrooms, and industries, this episode is a masterclass in staying curious, connected, and committed to meaningful innovation.Key Takeaways:Career Longevity & Reinvention - How Dan’s career evolved through constant curiosity and boundary-pushing.ESOMAR Foundation Origins - The moving story behind founding a global nonprofit supporting researchers in need.Entrepreneurial Insight - What Dan looks for when investing: purpose, innovation, and a positive impact on the industry.M&A and Industry Shifts - His perspective on the Qualtrics-Press Ganey-Forsta merger and what it signals for the future.Biotech & Longevity Crossover - How Dan’s new ventures explore the intersection of human health, data, and innovation.🔗 Connect with Dan Foreman on LinkedIn: Dan ForemanConnect with us:LinkedInYouTubeROI Rocket
In this episode of Signal & Noise, Andrew and Brian are joined by Alex Millet, CEO of Brandtrust, for a thought-provoking conversation on the intersection of emotion, insight, and innovation. Alex explains how Brandtrust helps companies uncover the deeper psychological and emotional forces that shape consumer behavior, what they call “Human Truth.”The discussion dives into how brands can balance data-driven decisions with empathy-driven understanding, especially in an era increasingly dominated by automation and AI. Alex shares his perspective on how human-centered storytelling, narrative research, and empathy-based strategy can transform how organizations connect with customers and build loyalty.From uncovering the subconscious motives behind purchasing behavior to redefining what authentic branding means in a digital-first world, this episode is a reminder that even as AI advances, emotion remains the ultimate differentiator.Key Takeaways:The Role of Emotion in Insight - Why understanding emotional motivation creates stronger, more resonant brand connections.Human Truth as a Competitive Edge - How Brandtrust’s approach helps organizations move beyond surface-level data to uncover deeper meaning.Empathy in a Digital Age - The importance of integrating humanity into strategy, storytelling, and leadership.AI Meets Emotion - How technology can support, but not replace, the human side of research and decision-making.Leading Through Story - Alex’s reflections on how great brands leverage emotional truth to inspire change from the inside out.🔗 Learn more about Brandtrust: https://brandtrust.com/who-we-are/ 🔗 Connect with Alex Millet on LinkedIn: Alex MilletConnect with us:LinkedInYouTubeROI Rocket
In this episode of Signal & Noise, Andrew and Brian are joined by pollster Jeremy Zogby for a deep dive into the state of American politics, the growing power of independents, and what the future might hold for voters caught between two increasingly polarized parties.Jeremy shares his perspective as Managing Partner of John Zogby Strategies, where he has led groundbreaking work on independent voter behavior, including his role as lead pollster for RFK Jr.’s 2024 presidential campaign. With a historian’s lens and decades of polling experience, he unpacks how political violence, economic uncertainty, and global shifts are reshaping the electorate.Key Takeaways:The Rise of Independents - Why unaffiliated voters made up over a third of the electorate in 2024 and how they may shape the next cyclePolarization & Violence - How rising rhetoric and high-profile acts of violence could impact voter sentiment and long-term party alignmentThird-Party Hurdles - Why structural barriers make it nearly impossible for a viable third-party movement, despite a strong public appetiteGlobal & Economic Pressures - How shifting power toward the East, BRICS alliances, and U.S. economic instability could influence voter prioritiesThe Next Generation’s Concerns - Housing affordability, retirement security, and job uncertainty as unifying issues across political linesJeremy also reflects on lessons from history, generational cycles, and his own family’s legacy in polling to frame today’s turbulence within a broader context.🔗 Learn more about John Zogby Strategies & The Zogby Report podcast: johnzogbystrategies.com 🔗 Connect with Jeremy on LinkedIn: Jeremy ZogbyConnect with us:LinkedInYouTubeROI Rocket
In this episode of Signal & Noise, Howard Fienberg, Senior VP, Advocacy at Insights Association, returns for a wide-ranging conversation on the policies shaping the insights industry. With over 25 years of government affairs experience, Howard has been named a Top Lobbyist by the National Institute for Lobbying and Ethics and continues to be one of the strongest voices advocating for research professionals in Washington, D.C.In this episode:The Privacy Patchwork - Why 20 states now have their own privacy laws, how California and Washington are setting the pace, and why a federal standard remains criticalWhat Counts in Census 2030 - How upcoming tests, government shutdown risks, and funding gaps could impact the next decennial count and why it matters for research professionalsAI in the Crosshairs - The latest on state and federal AI regulations, transparency requirements, and how the Insights Association’s Code of Standards is evolving to cover new technologiesIndependent Contractors & Incentives - The ripple effects of state-level attempts to redefine independent contractors and even mandate minimum payments for research participantsPractical Takeaways for Researchers - Why compliance depends on where respondents live, the risks of pseudonymous data, and how companies can prepare for shifting definitions of privacyLearn more about us, the Insights Association, and Howard down below!Connect with us:LinkedInYouTubeROI RocketConnect with Howard:LinkedIn
In this episode of Signal & Noise, Andrew and Brian take you behind the curtain again on one of the most buzzworthy topics in market research: synthetic panels. After meeting with four different providers in a single day, they share candid reactions, surprising truths, and why the future may not be what you think.But first, Brian gives a quick recap of his trip to CrimeCon in Denver, a subculture of true crime enthusiasts that had eerie parallels to how niche communities form in market research.This episode is part myth-busting, part roadmap, and part rallying cry for researchers curious (and cautious) about synthetic data. Tune in now to filter out the noise!Connect with us:LinkedIn YouTubeROI Rocket
In this episode of Signal & Noise, Andrew and Brian sit down with David Butler, President of PureSpectrum, to unpack the company’s newly expanded partnership with Qualtrics and what it means for the future of synthetic data in market research.David shares insights on:His journey at PureSpectrum and transition into the role of President.The collaboration with Qualtrics to enhance synthetic respondent capabilities.How PureSpectrum is leveraging micro-surveys and longitudinal data to fine-tune synthetic models.Opportunities and challenges in using synthetic panels for sensitive research, difficult-to-reach populations, and faster iteration.The ongoing importance of human data in grounding AI-driven insights.The conversation also covers broader industry themes like data quality, the shift toward shorter, more engaging surveys, and how synthetic insights could reshape research practices in the years ahead.To lighten things up, the episode ends with a round of rants from the headaches of time zones to the value (or lack thereof) of conferences.Connect with Signal & Noise:LinkedIn YouTubeROI RocketConnect with David:LinkedIn




