Discover
Making Sense of Martech
Making Sense of Martech
Author: Juan Mendoza + Jacqueline Freedman
Subscribed: 17Played: 243Subscribe
Share
© The Martech Weekly
Description
Unfiltered takes on the biggest shifts in marketing technology. We spotlight what matters, who's leading (or lagging), and what's next. In Martech, clarity is power — and we're here to deliver it.
99 Episodes
Reverse
"The only thing propping up Martech budgets right now is AI." — JuanAI adoption pressure has become one of the defining pain points in marketing technology, and the numbers make the case starkly. In this Office Hours episode, Jacqueline and Juan dig into the $1.4 billion-to-$1.48-trillion explosion in AI spending from 2023 to 2025, the Gartner prediction that at least 30% of gen AI projects would be abandoned post-POC, and the uncomfortable reality driving it all: executives are demanding AI strategies from Martech teams that are still fighting foundational data and stack issues. This is the fifth in a six-part pain point series, and it may be the most urgent.The conversation covers three interlocking dynamics: the "virus" of AI hype spreading from boardrooms to vendor positioning, the peril-versus-promise tension forcing every executive to pick a side, and new enterprise research showing that companies without a dedicated AI budget face a 60% decrease in Martech investment versus a 65% increase for those who have one. They also walk through a role-play scenario, offering practical language for Martech leaders when asked, "What's your AI strategy?" and why pushing back is often the most valuable thing you can do.Timestamps00:41 — Pain point five: AI adoption pressure without clear value realization02:35 — The "I Love You" virus and the Y2K parallel — why AI hype rhymes with tech history06:07 — The 100x spending surge and why 30% of gen AI POCs are abandoned09:54 — AI theater in Martech: when every vendor renames itself an "agentic intelligence platform"13:10 — Peril vs. promise: LLMs as the first marketing channel that talks back, and AI as cloud cover for layoffs19:14 — The budget data shock: companies without an AI budget face a 60% decrease in Martech investment22:03 — The Trojan Horse strategy: using AI budget to fix your broken stack23:06 — Role-play: how to push back when an executive demands an "agentic AI strategy in 30 days"SponsorBrought to you by Hightouch, the leading composable CDP and decisioning platform trusted by brands like Domino's, Chime, and Aritzia. 90% of customers have a real use case live within their first week, delivering world-class personalization at scale. Learn more at hightouch.com/msom.Connect & SubscribeSubscribe to Making Sense of Martech wherever you get your podcasts. Follow us on TikTok, LinkedIn, and don't forget to like and subscribe on YouTube.
"We built an entire industry on the promise of precise measurement, and most of us don't actually trust the numbers." — JuanMarketing technology promised precision, but the reality is far messier. In practice, only 3% of CMOs can reliably demonstrate ROI on more than half their total marketing spend. In this Office Hours episode, Jacqueline and Juan unpack the measurement and attribution crisis plaguing enterprise marketing teams. From data fragmentation and siloed dashboards to leadership instability and organizational misalignment, the conversation covers why the ROI gap persists, and what to actually do about it.They go deeper than dashboards, introducing the concept of an "epistemological crisis" in analytics: when teams can't agree on what's true, the entire measurement stack collapses.But it’s not all doom and gloom. Jacqueline and Juan break down practical ways forward from fixing taxonomy and defining a measurement tree to embracing uncertainty and speaking the CFO’s language. Better decisions, not perfect data, should be the goal.Timestamps00:20 — Martech World Forum recap, data releases, and renewal horror stories04:34 — The uncomfortable truth about ROI and attribution gaps07:08 — The “epistemological crisis” and why marketers don’t trust data13:32 — Leadership churn, siloed teams, and broken measurement24:27 — Fixing the foundation: taxonomy, definitions, and data hygiene28:11 — Measurement trees, North Star metrics, and the case for measuring less33:57 — Speaking the CFO’s language: customer margin and commercial impactSponsorBrought to you by Hightouch, the leading composable CDP and decisioning platform trusted by brands like Domino's, Chime, and Aritzia. 90% of customers have a real use case live within their first week, delivering world-class personalization at scale. Learn more at hightouch.com/msom.Connect & SubscribeSubscribe to Making Sense of Martech wherever you get your podcasts. Leave a review, share with your team, and send us your questions and confessions.LinkedInTikTok
Martech and data strategy promise control, personalization, and scale, but in practice, they often deliver technical debt, fragile systems, and operational chaos. In this episode, Ian Reisman brings a hard-earned perspective from 17 years inside Paramount, where he managed billions of emails across in-house platforms, enterprise tools, and high-stakes moments like March Madness war rooms that stretched well past midnight.From 3 AM warehouse refreshes to a Salesforce Marketing Cloud migration, this conversation breaks down the build vs. buy dilemma from both sides. Ian explains why no vendor demo survives real data, how DIY martech quietly accumulates risk, and why most organizations underestimate the operational burden of scaling personalization.The discussion goes deeper into platform trade-offs: why Braze raises the floor but lowers the ceiling, how Adobe CDP failed to scale in practice, and why Salesforce’s most powerful features are often the least marketed. Along the way, Ian calls out the hidden costs of consulting agencies, the compounding impact of layoffs on martech operations, and why AI in marketing is still just predictive intelligence — not magic.Timestamps05:20 — Ian's very first Martech platform and early in-house systems13:40 — The DIY mindset: great in theory, brutal in practice 20:40 — March Madness war rooms and real-world stress testing24:14 — Braze vs. Salesforce Marketing Cloud: raising the floor, lowering the ceiling 27:07 — Three years of Adobe CDP and nothing to show for it31:03 — The consulting agency trap and how to keep them on rails 37:47 — Martech fragility and leadership blind spots41:33 — When institutional knowledge disappears overnight42:04 — AI in Martech: predictive intelligence, not magicSponsorBrought to you by Hightouch, the leading composable CDP and decisioning platform trusted by brands like Domino's, Chime, and Aritzia. 90% of customers have a real use case live within their first week, delivering world-class personalization at scale. Learn more at hightouch.com/msom.Connect & SubscribeSubscribe to Making Sense of Martech wherever you get your podcasts. Follow us on TikTok, LinkedIn, and don't forget to like and subscribe on YouTube.
Jeff Lee doesn't just build marketing campaigns. He engineers lifecycle systems that quietly power billions of customer interactions. As the lifecycle marketing technical lead at Calm, Jeff runs a team of four, shipping 240+ distinct email campaigns a year and moving data across Databricks, Iterable, and Amplitude with precision most teams can't match. In this conversation, he makes the case for marketing engineering as a distinct discipline, sitting between data engineering, product, and marketing to solve problems no one else owns. We dig into the "Sorting Hat" automation that prioritizes message delivery at scale, why he'd never build an ESP in-house again, the downstream cost of a three-line code bug that tanked opt-ins by 60%, and why attribution, personalization, and end-to-end lifecycle orchestration depend on engineers who think like marketers and marketers who think like systems architects. Timestamps 05:12 — The three-line code bug that killed 60% of email opt-ins overnight 22:03 — Inside the "Sorting Hat": How Calm prioritizes lifecycle messaging without global caps 31:47 — Why cutting your martech budget by 50% should start with list hygiene, not tools 37:14 — Jeff's dream stack and why CDPs are overrated 46:16 — Where AI breaks in lifecycle marketing 52:26 — Making "marketing engineer" a real job title Sponsor Brought to you by Hightouch, the leading composable CDP and decisioning platform trusted by brands like Domino's, Chime, and Aritzia. 90% of customers have a real use case live within their first week, delivering world-class personalization at scale. Learn more at hightouch.com/msom. Connect & Subscribe Subscribe to Making Sense of Martech wherever you get your podcasts. Engage with the community on TikTok and follow Making Sense of Martech on LinkedIn, and don't forget to like and subscribe on YouTube. Leave a review, share with your team, and send us your questions and confessions. We may feature you in an upcoming episode! Questions: https://themartechweekly.com/podcast/question/ Confessions: https://themartechweekly.com/podcast/confession-corner/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/making-sense-of-martech
"Personalization is finding that balance — you can give customers everything they want, but it doesn't make the business happy. True personalization is finding the perfect balance." – Eloise Personalization only works when the infrastructure beneath it is built for business reality, not hype. In this episode, Jacqueline sits down with Eloise Gillespie, Associate Director of Personalization and Martech at Optus, to unpack what it actually takes to make AI and personalization deliver at scale. Eloise brings hard-won experience from telecom, wagering, and hospitality, including managing a nine-figure bet budget and building customer-level optimization engines that won CFO approval by anchoring every decision in margin, ROI, and commercial viability. They cover the infrastructure work that must happen before AI can deliver value, why treating data as a product changes everything, and how to make personalization credible to finance teams. If you're done with quick fixes, this one is for you. Sponsor Brought to you by Hightouch, the leading composable CDP and decisioning platform trusted by brands like Domino's, Chime, and Aritzia. 90% of customers have a real use case live within their first week, delivering world-class personalization at scale. Learn more at hightouch.com/msom. Timestamps 01:19 — The biggest bet: betting on yourself 04:14 — How Salesforce Marketing Cloud changed everything 08:45 — Why LTV is dead (or at least overrated) and what metric actually matters 18:05 — Leading with commercial impact: a $XXX,XXX,XXX budget gap to win CFO trust 26:08 — Proving personalization to the CFO: Leading with dollars, not fluff 38:22 — System of record vs. system of context: What CDPs actually do 45:38 — Building an incentive optimization engine across bet types, margins, and interaction contexts 52:07 — AI-driven personalization: What's real today vs. what's still on the horizon Connect & Subscribe Subscribe to Making Sense of Martech wherever you get your podcasts. Engage with the community on Reddit and follow Making Sense of Martech on LinkedIn, and don't forget to like and subscribe on YouTube. Leave a review, share with your team, and send us your questions and confessions. We may feature you in an upcoming episode! Questions: https://themartechweekly.com/podcast/question/ Confessions: https://themartechweekly.com/podcast/confession-corner/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/making-sense-of-martech TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@msompodcast
"If you don't understand your internal customer, you're failing both the internal customer and the business." Jacqueline Jacqueline and Juan tackle Martech's second-biggest pain point: integration complexity, data silos, and the operational fragmentation that's threatening to cost the industry $215 billion by 2027. Drawing on McKinsey's latest research and exclusive insights from enterprise leaders preparing for Martech World Forum Melbourne, the hosts dissect why marketing technology stacks are still failing to connect — and what you can do about it. From the composability-versus-suite debate to the cultural dynamics between marketing and IT, this episode explores how Martech professionals can move from reactive duct-taping to proactive, federated infrastructure. Whether you're navigating AI decisioning demands or simply trying to get your CDP and engagement platforms to speak the same language, this conversation delivers practical, no-BS guidance on governance, data gravity, and working forward instead of backward. The episode also previews the newly launched Enterprise Martech Outlook (EMO) research project, a major initiative mapping the evolving enterprise Martech landscape. Timestamps 00:00 — Enterprise Martech Outlook (EMO) research launch and Melbourne conference preview 05:05 — The $215 billion black hole: McKinsey's warning on Martech losses 09:50 — Three root causes of integration complexity: language, legacy, and IT dependency 18:30 — Interoperability planning and working forwards, not backwards, and misaligned incentives 28:00 — Data gravity and governance: Identifying your center of gravity and mapping data flows 35:30 — Best-of-breed and the monolith vendor problem Sponsor Brought to you by Hightouch, the leading composable CDP and decisioning platform trusted by brands like Domino's, Chime, and Aritzia. 90% of customers have a real use case live within their first week, delivering world-class personalization at scale. Learn more at hightouch.com/msom. Connect Subscribe to Making Sense of Martech wherever you get your podcasts. Engage with the community on Reddit and follow Making Sense of Martech on LinkedIn, and don't forget to like and subscribe on YouTube. Leave a review, share with your team, and send us your questions and confessions. We may feature you in an upcoming episode! Always feel free to email us at podcast@theMartechweekly.com. Questions Confessions Reddit
"Martech isn't complex - we've made it complex." - Satya In this episode, Jacqueline sits down with Satya Upadhyaya to unpack one of enterprise Martech's most expensive problems: the forever consulting engagement. Drawing on 15+ years inside banks and large-scale transformations, Satya explains why capability transfer fails, how vague scorecards fuel dependency, and why 70% of digital transformations miss the mark. The conversation challenges analyst-led buying, Gartner-driven procurement, and lift-and-shift thinking. Instead, Satya argues for practitioner-led architecture, simpler operating models, and building internal muscle before buying more tech. Key insights Forever engagements thrive when companies measure spend, not capability gained. Analyst frameworks optimize for procurement safety, not operational fit. Real Martech maturity comes from governance, marketing ops, and knowing what problem you're actually solving. Timestamps 05:40 The three phases of martech transformation 11:45 When help becomes dependency 16:30 Procurement safety vs operational fit 22:55 Lift-and-shift isn't transformation 30:35 The chief marketing technologist identity crisis 46:20 Strategy is easy. Execution is the real test 59:30 Audit first. Build muscle. Then buy tech. Sponsor Brought to you by Hightouch - the leading composable CDP and decisioning platform trusted by brands like Domino's, Chime, and Aritzia. 90% of customers have a real use case live within their first week, delivering world-class personalization at scale. Learn more at hightouch.com/msom. Connect Subscribe to Making Sense of Martech wherever you get your podcasts. Engage with the community on Reddit and follow Making Sense of Martech on LinkedIn, and don't forget to like and subscribe on YouTube. Leave a review, share with your team, and send us your questions and confessions. We may feature you in an upcoming episode! Always feel free to email us at podcast@themartechweekly.com. Questions Confessions Reddit
"At Nike, we learned the hard way — tech wasn't the constraint. The operating model was." – LindaMartech leaders love to talk about AI in marketing, next-best-action, personalization at scale, and the promise of a composable CDP, but most teams still struggle to connect data strategy to an operating model that can actually ship. In this episode, Jacqueline sits down with Linda Cereda, former Global VP of Marketing Data at Nike and the first GM of the SNKRS app, to unpack how one of the world's most iconic brands built a marketing data engine that didn't collapse under its own ambition.Linda shares her journey from digitizing scarcity-driven product drops on SNKRS to overseeing global next-best-action models and enterprise measurement systems. She breaks down the real work behind decisioning: defining the actions worth nudging, ranking them by LTV, aligning cross-functional teams around measurable business goals, and building model families that connect audience, timing, channel, and content — without turning the organization into a science fair.We also explore why so many companies are "stuck in 2017" despite owning expensive tools, and why buying a vendor contract feels like progress but rarely is. From reducing forecasting error by 44% using zero-party data to rethinking seasonal planning in favor of contextual, real-time nudges, Linda makes one thing clear: modern AI tooling is useless if your workflows, governance, and measurement rhythm aren't built to support it.Timestamps01:02 From Men in Black with Raybans to Nike 08:00 Why global brands struggle to update their "operating system" and the trap of tool-led progress 16:32 Building the SNKRS app: Solving scarcity, hype, and the #IAmUpset consumer crisis 20:44 Using machine learning and zero-party data to slash forecasting errors and improve fairness 29:20 The reality of Nike's $XXm Adobe deal and the risks of vendor lock-in 40:02 The future: Composable CDPs, AI decisioning engines, and synthetic personas 48:37 Automation versus transformation: Why you shouldn't buy a Ferrari without a driver or fuelSponsorBrought to you by Hightouch — the leading composable CDP and decisioning platform trusted by brands like Domino's, Chime, and Aritzia. 90% of customers have a real use case live within their first week, delivering world-class personalization at scale. Learn more at www.hightouch.com/msom.Subscribe to Making Sense of Martech wherever you get your podcasts. Engage with the community on Reddit and follow Making Sense of Martech on LinkedIn, and don't forget to like and subscribe on YouTube.Leave a review, share with your team, and send us your questions and confessions. We may feature you in an upcoming episode! Always feel free to email us at podcast@themartechweekly.com.QuestionsConfessions Reddit
In this Office Hours episode, Jacqueline and Juan unpack why marketing technology feels simultaneously stable and deeply uncertain. Q4 earnings show revenue holding steady, yet the market is re-pricing everything around one question: when does AI translate into real revenue? As AI roadmaps stretch into long-term infrastructure bets, pressure to monetize now is exposing the gap between AI adoption and measurable ROI. They also examine the identity crisis around "platform" positioning and customer data platforms (CDPs), where many vendors claim ecosystem status but operate as point solutions. Increasingly, leverage belongs to companies that own high-quality customer data, not just strong product narratives. From there, they tackle enterprise marketing's biggest challenge: data fragmentation. With few organizations achieving a true Customer 360 view, they break down why the problem persists and what it takes to build disciplined, commercially grounded data practices instead of buying another dream. Timestamps 03:49 — The "mirage" quarter: revenue stability vs strategic risk 05:38 — AI doesn't always equal value, and monetization is the bottleneck 06:33 — Category identity crisis: "platform" branding vs point solutions 10:20 — Gartner's CDP Magic Quadrant: hype, churn, and composability confusion 17:56 — The cost of data fragmentation 25:43 — The "Jenga tower" of org complexity and how stacks collapse 45:54 — The playbook: define customer data ideals and don't let vendors drive Sponsor Brought to you by Hightouch — Went all-in on a big marketing suite but still struggling to get value? You're not alone. Our sponsor, Hightouch, spoke with 50+ enterprise teams and found 79% are frustrated by high costs, slow innovation, and rising complexity, often needing specialized teams just to keep things running. They'll share the full findings in a live webinar on February 12, plus what they're seeing from organizations updating their Martech stacks. Get the report and register! Connect & Subscribe Subscribe to Making Sense of Martech wherever you get your podcasts. Engage with the community on Reddit and follow Making Sense of Martech on LinkedIn, and don't forget to like and subscribe on YouTube. Leave a review, share with your team, and send us your questions and confessions. We may feature you in an upcoming episode! Always feel free to email us at podcast@themartechweekly.com. Questions Confessions Reddit
Why impressions — not clicks — reveal email's real power, and who's quietly profiting from your inbox. Email is still treated like a messaging channel, and that mistake is quietly destroying value. In this episode, Jacqueline sits down with Dela to challenge the default rules of email marketing and reframe the inbox as what it actually is: owned media and intent infrastructure. Nearly every sacred KPI is put on trial, including opens, clicks, suppression, and frequency caps, and replaced with a media-first lens focused on reach, impressions, and long-term behavior. Dela breaks down why email only feels "free" because you are the product, how Gmail captures behavioral data at a massive scale, and why unopened and even archived emails still drive search, site visits, and revenue weeks later. The takeaway is blunt. Brands overpay for paid media while underusing the cheapest, most measurable audience they already own. Sponsor Brought to you by Hightouch — Went all-in on a big marketing suite but still struggling to get value? You're not alone. Our sponsor, Hightouch, spoke with 50+ enterprise teams and found 79% are frustrated by high costs, slow innovation, and rising complexity, often needing specialized teams just to keep things running. They'll share the full findings in a live webinar on February 12, plus what they're seeing from organizations updating their Martech stacks. Get the report and register! Timestamps 00:55 — The lie at the center of email marketing 08:55 — Gmail didn't give you free email: it took your data 12:10 — How unopened emails still create intent and sales 18:20 — Advertising works even when attribution fails 29:10 — Why "inactive" subscribers are your most valuable audience 43:05 — Your list is a legal right, not a platform asset Connect & Subscribe Subscribe to Making Sense of Martech wherever you get your podcasts. Engage with the community on Reddit and follow Making Sense of Martech on LinkedIn, and don't forget to like and subscribe on YouTube. Leave a review, share with your team, and send us your questions and confessions. We may feature you in an upcoming episode! Always feel free to email us at podcast@themartechweekly.com. Questions Confessions Reddit
Pilots to Proof: AI Agents in the Enterprise with Keanu Taylor AI agents are being positioned as the answer to shrinking budgets and rising expectations, but most enterprise teams are still stuck in pilot mode. In this Office Hours episode, Jacqueline is joined by guest host and industry analyst Keanu Taylor to examine what's actually working inside large organizations. Drawing on insights from his research, the conversation explores why many "AI strategies" amount to fragmented experiments, and what it really takes to move from internal pilots to external decisioning. Instead of chasing one all-powerful agent, leading teams are breaking work into hierarchies of specialized micro-agents, backed by better data context and governance. ROI shows up in unexpected ways: efficiency gains often unlock deeper strategic insight rather than just cost savings. And none of it works without adoption, which means real hand-holding, expectation management, and treating data governance as infrastructure, not a meeting-room exercise. Timestamps 00:04 - Introducing Keanu Taylor and the marketing technology shift 01:42 - What 13 enterprise consumer brands are testing with AI agents 02:56 - Navigating the era of doing more with less in martech 07:10 - Why autonomy doesn't mean AGI: the rise of micro-agent hierarchies 10:33 - AI decisioning agents explained and how they're finally delivering value 15:02 - Two-sided ROI: efficiency gains that unlock effectiveness and insight 20:52 - Adoption reality: mistrust, user inertia, and the need for hand-holding 31:21 - Moving data governance from meeting rooms to infrastructure Sponsor Brought to you by Hightouch - Went all-in on a big marketing suite but still struggling to get value? You're not alone. Our sponsor, Hightouch, spoke with 50+ enterprise teams and found 79% are frustrated by high costs, slow innovation, and rising complexity, often needing specialized teams just to keep things running. They'll share the full findings in a live webinar on February 12, plus what they're seeing from organizations updating their Martech stacks. Get the report and register! Connect & Subscribe Subscribe to Making Sense of Martech wherever you get your podcasts. Engage with the community on Reddit and follow Making Sense of Martech on LinkedIn, and don't forget to like and subscribe on YouTube. Leave a review, share with your team, and send us your questions and confessions. We may feature you in an upcoming episode! Always feel free to email us at podcast@themartechweekly.com. Questions Confessions Reddit
"Suite Fatigue is the moment you realize you're paying more every year for less flexibility and less value." — Adam Marketing was supposed to get simpler. Instead, it got more expensive, harder to operate, and increasingly rigid. Jacqueline sits down with Adam Greco (previously at Salesforce, Adobe, and Amplitude) to unpack the rise of "Suite Fatigue," the growing frustration with all-in-one marketing technology platforms that promised the world but delivered fragments. They get into why this moment feels different, how renewal pressure and slow innovation are turning "one vendor" into a long-term liability, and why the data warehouse is increasingly becoming the backbone of modern marketing stacks. The big question underneath it all: if you were starting from scratch today, would you still choose the same suite? Sponsor Brought to you by Hightouch — Went all-in on a big marketing suite but still struggling to get value? You're not alone. Our sponsor, Hightouch, spoke with 50+ enterprise teams and found 79% are frustrated by high costs, slow innovation, and rising complexity, often needing specialized teams just to keep things running. They'll share the full findings in a live webinar on February 12, plus what they're seeing from organizations updating their Martech stacks. Get the report and register! Timestamps 01:05 — Suite Fatigue defined: when the "simpler stack" turns into a tax 10:57 — What people admit out loud vs. what they only say off-record 15:54 — The core symptoms: lock-in, slow innovation, and forced migrations 18:12 — The Franken-suite reality: shallow integrations + pay-to-play support 27:33 — Why speed to activation breaks first in legacy stacks 43:02 — "Okay, boomer." Can suites make a comeback? 53:08 — What to do next when the math stops working Connect & Subscribe Subscribe to Making Sense of Martech wherever you get your podcasts. Engage with the community on Reddit and follow Making Sense of Martech on LinkedIn, and don't forget to like and subscribe on YouTube. Leave a review, share with your team, and send us your questions and confessions. We may feature you in an upcoming episode! Always feel free to email us at podcast@themartechweekly.com. QuestionsConfessions Reddit
"We've seen companies locked into vendors for a decade with no way out." – Juan Jacqueline and Juan kick off 2026 with a quick reality check: stepping away from screens feels great, but the Martech stack doesn't magically get simpler while you're gone. They get brutally practical, drawing on conversations with 300+ brand-side marketers to map the six biggest pain points emerging across enterprise teams right now. They dig into why "Customer 360" is still mostly a fantasy, how integration complexity turns stacks into brittle Jenga towers, and why AI pressure is creating more chaos than value. From auto-renewal horror stories to redundant CDPs and initiatives chasing optics instead of ROI, the message is consistent: confidence comes from evidence, not experience bias — and the cost of getting it wrong has never been higher. Sponsor Brought to you by Hightouch — Went all-in on a big marketing suite but still struggling to get value? You're not alone. Our sponsor, Hightouch, spoke with 50+ enterprise teams and found 79% are frustrated by high costs, slow innovation, and rising complexity, often needing specialized teams just to keep things running. They'll share the full findings in a live webinar on February 12, plus what they're seeing from organizations updating their Martech stacks. Get the report and register! Timestamps 02:10 — An exclusive announcement for listeners 03:50 — Why experience-based advice keeps failing enterprise teams 07:45 — Six themes from 300+ marketer conversations: what's breaking in enterprise 10:50 — Data fragmentation and the myth of Customer 360 15:00 — Why evidence-based decisions are the only way forward 18:20 — Integration complexity, legacy sprawl, and cross-team coordination failures 26:15 — AI pressure without value: herd mentality of GenAI, risk, and bad customer experiences 31:00 — Adoption and operating model problems: utilization dropping, skills gaps growing 36:00 — Measurement, attribution, and ROI proof gaps: why nobody trusts the numbers 41:30 — Scaling personalization and execution speed: the bottlenecks no tool can fix Connect & Subscribe Subscribe to Making Sense of Martech wherever you get your podcasts. Engage with the community on Reddit and follow Making Sense of Martech on LinkedIn, and don't forget to like and subscribe on YouTube. Leave a review, share with your team, and send us your questions and confessions. We may feature you in an upcoming episode! Always feel free to email us at podcast@themartechweekly.com. Questions Confessions Reddit
Email feels free, but the economics are brutal: zero-cost sending makes abuse infinitely scalable. In this episode, Jacqueline sits down with Mariska and Jakub to unpack the "bot layer" that's quietly wrecking modern email: security scanners, crawlers, and malicious automation that inflate clicks, poison dashboards, and trigger the wrong automations. They get specific about why bad actors iterate faster than platforms, why "heuristic guesswork" leads to painful false positives, and how beehiiv opted for radical transparency by showing verified clicks alongside raw data. The conversation also jumps channels: Jakub argues RCS could undercut SMS on price and become the next high-volume abuse playground. This episode was recorded in October 2025. Any references to global events were included as illustrative context, not as commentary on current news. Sponsor Brought to you by Hightouch - the leading composable CDP and decisioning platform trusted by brands like Domino's, Chime, and Aritzia. 90% of customers have a real use case live within their first week, delivering world-class personalization at scale. Learn more at www.hightouch.com/msom. Timestamps 01:20 – Worst unsubscribe nightmares, Roman aqueducts, and unexpected heroes 05:40 – Why "free" email creates systemic abuse (and why volume hides the bad actors) 08:06 – How threat actors bypass trust indicators 11:02 – The reality check: protection isn't getting easier, it's getting more complicated 19:02 – Defining non-human interactions (NHI) and bot detection 24:12 – Bot detection: definitive data vs heuristics, and why false positives hurt more 26:20 – Elevating verified human engagement at Beehiiv 33:13 – RCS vs SMS: the pricing lever that could supercharge abuse 46:14 - Global privacy legislation and the future of trust Connect & Subscribe Subscribe to Making Sense of Martech wherever you get your podcasts. Engage with the community on Reddit and follow Making Sense of Martech on LinkedIn, and don't forget to like and subscribe on YouTube. Leave a review, share with your team, and send us your questions and confessions. We may feature you in an upcoming episode! Questions: https://themartechweekly.com/podcast/question/ Confessions: https://themartechweekly.com/podcast/confession-corner/ Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/MSoMPodcast/comments/1morng8/office_hours_questions/
Farewell, 2025 — what a year. It marked the revival of Making Sense of Martech, and we owe it all to you and the incredible guests who took a chance on us. Here are a few standout moments. Wishing you happy holidays and a brilliant new year! Connect & Subscribe Subscribe to Making Sense of Martech wherever you get your podcasts. Engage with the community on Reddit and follow Making Sense of Martech on LinkedIn, and don't forget to like and subscribe on YouTube. Leave a review, share with your team, and send us your questions and confessions. We may feature you in an upcoming episode! https://theMartechweekly.com/podcast/question/ https://theMartechweekly.com/podcast/confession-corner/ https://www.reddit.com/r/MSoMPodcast/comments/1morng8/office_hours_questions/
Merry everything and more. Here's your very own present from us to you! Connect & Subscribe Subscribe to Making Sense of Martech wherever you get your podcasts. Engage with the community on Reddit and follow Making Sense of Martech on LinkedIn, and don't forget to like and subscribe on YouTube. Leave a review, share with your team, and send us your questions and confessions. We may feature you in an upcoming episode! https://theMartechweekly.com/podcast/question/ https://theMartechweekly.com/podcast/confession-corner/ https://www.reddit.com/r/MSoMPodcast/comments/1morng8/office_hours_questions/
As 2025 closes out, Juan and Jacqueline team up with Keanu Taylor, The Martech Weekly's Head of Research, to read the tea leaves on what 2026 has in store for marketing technology. Their forecast is a "make or break" year in which the winners won't be the loudest early adopters, but the teams whose data and operating habits are clean enough for AI actually to stick. Keanu predicts a sharper split between the AI "haves" and "have-nots," with organizational readiness acting like gravity on every agent, model, and workflow. The bet: 2026 will expose which stacks are built for decisions, not demos — and which ones were never ready for either. Timestamps 01:08 ExactTarget's 25th Birthday/Anniversary 03:54 Prediction 1: AI Agent Adoption and Readiness 10:35 Prediction 2: The Rise of AI Decisioning Silos 21:48 Prediction 3: CDP and CEP/ESP Stack Consolidation Brought to you by Hightouch - the leading composable CDP and decisioning platform trusted by brands like Domino's, Chime, and Aritzia. 90% of customers have a real use case live within their first week, delivering world-class personalization at scale. Learn more at www.hightouch.com/msom. Connect & Subscribe Subscribe to Making Sense of Martech wherever you get your podcasts. Engage with the community on Reddit and follow Making Sense of Martech on LinkedIn, and don't forget to like and subscribe on YouTube. Leave a review, share with your team, and send us your questions and confessions. We may feature you in an upcoming episode! https://theMartechweekly.com/podcast/question/ https://theMartechweekly.com/podcast/confession-corner/ https://www.reddit.com/r/MSoMPodcast/comments/1morng8/office_hours_questions/
"Marketing to marketers is the dream job, but it makes everything that much more high stakes." – Jacqueline In this Hot Seat episode, Jacqueline sits down with Jason, CMO at Customer.io, to ask a simple question: what would it actually take to make martech cool again? Drawing on stints at Dropbox, BetterCloud, and Microsoft, he unpacks how brand storytelling, design, and experience can turn forgettable software into something people genuinely want to be around — and why so many teams lost that plot after the early cloud-era glory days. From Bob Ross livestreams to "Raiders of the Lost Lifecycle," this is a playbook for injecting swagger back into marketing without sacrificing pipeline, rigor, or credibility. Sponsor Brought to you by Hightouch - the leading composable CDP and decisioning platform trusted by brands like Domino's, Chime, and Aritzia. 90% of customers have a real use case live within their first week, delivering world-class personalization at scale. Learn more at www.hightouch.com/msom. Timestamps 00:25 – First Martech tools, Mixpanel obsession, and Jason's weekly grilled cheese ritual 06:30 – Shaping brand storytelling: experience at Dropbox, BetterCloud, Microsoft 11:43 – What made early Salesforce so magnetic and why Martech lost its spark 16:40 – Making Martech cool again: inside Customer.io's Bob Ross, Hot Ones, and Raiders of the Lost Lifecycle concepts and playful brand identity 20:00 – What modern marketers actually want from live experiences 25:55 – Can mascots, memes, and influencers bring consumer fandom dynamics to Martech? Connect & Subscribe Subscribe to Making Sense of Martech wherever you get your podcasts. Engage with the community on Reddit and follow Making Sense of Martech on LinkedIn, and don't forget to like and subscribe on YouTube. Leave a review, share with your team, and send us your questions and confessions. We may feature you in an upcoming episode! Questions: https://themartechweekly.com/podcast/question/ Confessions: https://themartechweekly.com/podcast/confession-corner/ Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/MSoMPodcast/comments/1morng8/office_hours_questions/ Production Credit: Edited and produced by @the32collective_ / https://www.the32collective.co/
"Adobe didn't just buy an SEO tool – it bought a negotiating position with the AI overlords of discovery." – Juan Jacqueline and Juan unpack what "more human" marketing actually looks like when AI is mediating everything from search to Black Friday deals. They break down Adobe's acquisition of Semrush, quarterly Martech earnings, the Black Friday/Cyber Monday shift toward mobile-plus-AI shopping, BNPL's surge, and ChatGPT's three-year impact on how people search, think, and buy. Brought to you by Hightouch — the leading composable CDP and decisioning platform trusted by brands like Domino's, Chime, and Aritzia. 90% of customers have a real use case live within their first week, delivering world-class personalization at scale. Learn more at www.hightouch.com/msom. Timestamps 00:04 – MWF NYC debrief and why this year felt like a turning point for Martech 05:10 – Stranger Things and what "good" co-marketing actually looks like 10:30 – Woo-Woo vs data: how much of marketing is still intuition dressed up in dashboards 16:20 – Adobe buys Semrush: GEO data, media consolidation, and why Adobe blinked on AI search 24:40 – Quarterly Martech earnings: mid-market outpaces the enterprise and AI narratives without ROI 33:30 – BFCM early numbers: mobile-plus-AI shopping, BNPL growth, and fewer margin-killing discounts 36:56 – ChatGPT's third anniversary: national rollbacks and the societal risks of AI 42:15 – Subscriber question: How to drive change inside organizations when tooling and incentives clash? Connect & Subscribe Subscribe to Making Sense of Martech wherever you get your podcasts. Engage with the community on Reddit and follow Making Sense of Martech on LinkedIn, and don't forget to like and subscribe on YouTube. Leave a review, share with your team, and send us your questions and confessions. We may feature you in an upcoming episode! https://theMartechweekly.com/podcast/question/ https://theMartechweekly.com/podcast/confession-corner/ https://www.reddit.com/r/MSoMPodcast/comments/1morng8/office_hours_questions/
"If you're not treating deliverability as revenue insurance, you're already losing money." — Matt This Hot Seat episode puts Matt McFee, an email veteran and founder of Inbox Monster, under the microscope. Jacqueline digs into how he went from Wall Street and Yahoo to co-founding BriteVerify, acquired by Validity, and why he thinks most brands are still wildly underestimating deliverability. He unpacks why inbox placement is really a revenue insurance program, not just a technical hygiene task, and why the real customer "moment of value" usually happens months after the contract is signed. Brought to you by Hightouch - the leading composable CDP and decisioning platform trusted by brands like Domino's, Chime, and Aritzia. 90% of customers have a real use case live within their first week, delivering world-class personalization at scale. Learn more at www.hightouch.com/msom. Timestamps 01:03 – What would make Martech better? 05:22 – What 25 years in email have taught him about the inbox 07:32 – Lightbulb moment that led to found BriteVerify and Inbox Monster 11:58 – AI previews, creative rendering, and why annotations actually matter 15:48 – What marketers should be paying more attention to in deliverability 19:55 – Quantifying deliverability as a revenue insurance program for stakeholders 25:02 – Opinions on industry innovation and consolidation 28:23 – What vendors can do to better help marketers Connect & Subscribe Subscribe to Making Sense of Martech wherever you get your podcasts. Engage with the community on Reddit and follow us on LinkedIn, and don't forget to like and subscribe on YouTube. Leave a review, share with your team, and send us your questions and confessions. We may feature you in an upcoming episode! Questions: https://themartechweekly.com/podcast/question/ Confessions: https://www.themartechweekly.com/podcast/confession-corner/ Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/MSoMPodcast/comments/1morng8/office_hours_questions/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/making-sense-of-martech























