Built to Be Picked

13/05/2025 6 min Temporada 2 Episodio 18

Listen "Built to Be Picked"

Episode Synopsis

Visa Just Redefined the Playing FieldSummer Will Be Travel’s First Tariff TestFinancial Profiles Q1 2025Credit Card Application Behavior ReportFulcrum Thought: If AI is choosing what gets bought, are your products built to be picked or ignored? Visa Just Redefined the Playing FieldVisa’s 2025 Product Drop wasn’t an update; it was a full-blown platform shift. In a single move, Visa reimagined its role from processor to intelligent infrastructure; powering everything from AI shopping agents to stablecoin-linkedcards, with Visa Intelligent Commerce as the crown jewel.This new platform allows AI agents to search, buy, and payon behalf of consumers; securely, autonomously, and at scale. Think of it as making your card not just mobile-wallet ready, but machine-wallet ready (is this a word, yet).What this means for issuers, and marketers:We’re no longer marketing to just people. We’remarketing to algorithms.Our credit card isn’t just competing on points and perksanymore. It’s fighting to be selected by a consumer’s AI assistant. It’s racing to be defaulted into digital agents that shop across chat, apps, voice, and virtual space. In this world, adaptability, interoperability, and embedded utility aren’t nice-to-haves. They’re table stakes.We’ve talked about this before, but let’s be clear: AI agents making purchase decisions isn’t the future; it’s already happening.If your product, your brand, and your data architecture aren't ready to play in this ecosystem, you're not just behind, you’re invisible.I use Visa's product drop as an excuse to raise some alarmbells again. Mastercard is doing almost the same things, too. And with Discover reborn under Capital One, don’t underestimate the competitive heat that’s coming. Summer Will Be Travel’s First Tariff TestAs summer travel is front and center for most marketers, Mike’s piece on impact of tariff’s on travel is very timely. Also, as with most of Mike’s reports, this one is excellent too. Early signs suggest tariffs won’t clip the wings of U.S. travelers, at least not yet. Bookings remain solid, pricing hasn't spiked dramatically, and most consumers are still in go-mode for summer vacations. For now, travel appears insulated from the ripple effects hitting other consumer sectors.But second-order effects of tariffs may hit the consumer by late summer. As higher costs work their way through supply chains, think airfare, rental cars, and imported travel gear, the pressure on price-sensitive consumers could grow. Brandscounting on a carefree summer season should be watching for subtle shifts in booking windows, trip lengths, and spend per trip. It could be the first real yield test of travel’s post-pandemic momentum.