CU 2.0 Podcast Episode 316 Solarity’s David Eldred on Putting AI to Work in a Credit Union
This podcast started at the CU 2.0 Live event in Arizona a few months ago because that’s where a lightbulb went off in David Eldred’s head.
CU 2.0 Podcast Episode 315 Starlight’s Search for $140 Billion In Unclaimed Federal Benefits for the Needy
There’s $140 billion in unclaimed federal benefits and assistance for households in need.
CU 2.0 Podcast Episode 314 Alloy’s Sara Seguin on Fighting Fraud in 2024
Fraud – there’s your five letter word for today and inside many credit unions it’s counted as a curse.
CU 2.0 Podcast Episode 313 Jennifer Oliver Rize Beyond Banking and Ending Poverty
Jennifer Oliver wants to tell you about Rize where the tagline is Beyond Banking. That’s an Irwindale CA based billion dollar institution – formerly SCE Credit Union – but Oliver says that even when she interviewed for the job she already was thinking about a name change.
CU 2.0 Podcast Episode 312 Martin Walker Explains Curcl and Its Fintech Funding
Martin Walker is the man to know if you are a fintech looking for credit union related venture funding and he also is the man to know if you are a credit union looking to invest in fintechs.
CU 2.0 Podcast Episode 311 Rosenthal + McCray on Community Capital, the New Book
Probably you think a book titled Community Capital has to be a snoozefest.
CU 2.0 Podcast Episode 310 Kirk Drake + Chris Otey on AI and Credit Unions
Four years ago Kirk Drake wrote a book that explored how artificial intelligence – AI – would transform financial services.
CU 2.0 Podcast Episode 309 AI Gets Real at One Nevada Credit Union
Artificial intelligence: is it real or a mirage?
CU 2.0 Podcast Episode 308 Michael Heller on CUSOs
Subtitle this show: All You Want to Know about CUSOs but Didn’t Know to Ask.
CU 2.0 Podcast Episode 307 Paul Fiore on WealthNext and Bringing Wealth Services to Credit Unions
You know about Paul Fiore. He’s the man behind Digital Insight, the first big digital banking tool that was acquired by Quicken for $1.35 billion in 2007.