
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


If you’ve ever rolled out a “smart” system at work only to find your people hate it, this episode is for you. Using the World Cup as a live case study, the hosts unpack how well‑intentioned AI and data can quietly make an experience worse—on the pitch and inside your business.
They start with the new sensor‑equipped match ball and semi‑automated offside decisions. Technically, the system is brilliant: accelerometers in the ball stream data into models that track each player’s joints to millimeter precision, interpolating body position at the exact moment of the pass. In theory, that should make decisions fairer. In practice, 72% of fans in a UK YouGov survey say technology hasn’t improved the game. The problem isn’t the hardware; it’s how the tech now dominates the experience, pushing referees into deferring to “objective” AI even when it undermines the spirit and flow of the match.
From there, the conversation shifts into business. The same pattern is showing up in AI‑generated SEO audits, reports, and “strategy” documents: clients and employees copy‑paste uncontextualized AI output—what the hosts call “AI slop”—into critical decisions. The result is frustration on both sides and a sense of loss long before any tangible gain arrives.
Throughout the episode, they explore core ideas leaders can apply immediately: define the real purpose of AI before deploying it; keep a strong human “referee” in the loop; manage the interface between data and people; and treat AI as one half of “collective intelligence” rather than a replacement for judgment. They close by highlighting the massive change‑management miss at the World Cup—no real communication to a billion stakeholders about why and how the tech would be used—and draw a direct line to what happens when organizations introduce AI without clear outcomes, explanation, or buy‑in.
Highlights
Important Concepts and Frameworks
Tools & Resources Mentioned
Calls to Action
Key Quotes
Chapters
00:28 — World Cup nerves, superstition, and why venue choices feel decisive
05:31 — Sensors in the match ball and semi‑automated offside decisions explained
08:12 — When ‘more accurate’ makes the game worse: fan backlash against tech
10:33 — Human in the loop under pressure: referees vs. AI and public replays
16:28 — From missed goals to toenail offsides: over‑precision as a design flaw
19:04 — Data, transparency, and who should stand between AI and your people
23:32 — AI slop in business: uncontextualized audits, reports, and “story arcs”
28:10 — AI‑generated fans and content: the new media layer around sport
31:40 — Tactical AI for coaches and the coming wave of on‑field augmentation
33:12 — Inches, seconds, and dynamic complexity: what AI should really illuminate
36:20 — World Cup as a failed AI change‑management case study
40:06 — Looking ahead: cool tech, confused roles, and why humans aren’t leaving the cockpit
Meet the Crew
Mike Richardson – Agility, Peer Power & Collective Intelligence
Website: https://mikerichardson.live/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/agilityexpertmikerichardson/
Mark Redgrave – Agility, People and Performance...
By Mike Richardson, Mark Redgrave, Ryan Neimann & Tom AdamsIf you’ve ever rolled out a “smart” system at work only to find your people hate it, this episode is for you. Using the World Cup as a live case study, the hosts unpack how well‑intentioned AI and data can quietly make an experience worse—on the pitch and inside your business.
They start with the new sensor‑equipped match ball and semi‑automated offside decisions. Technically, the system is brilliant: accelerometers in the ball stream data into models that track each player’s joints to millimeter precision, interpolating body position at the exact moment of the pass. In theory, that should make decisions fairer. In practice, 72% of fans in a UK YouGov survey say technology hasn’t improved the game. The problem isn’t the hardware; it’s how the tech now dominates the experience, pushing referees into deferring to “objective” AI even when it undermines the spirit and flow of the match.
From there, the conversation shifts into business. The same pattern is showing up in AI‑generated SEO audits, reports, and “strategy” documents: clients and employees copy‑paste uncontextualized AI output—what the hosts call “AI slop”—into critical decisions. The result is frustration on both sides and a sense of loss long before any tangible gain arrives.
Throughout the episode, they explore core ideas leaders can apply immediately: define the real purpose of AI before deploying it; keep a strong human “referee” in the loop; manage the interface between data and people; and treat AI as one half of “collective intelligence” rather than a replacement for judgment. They close by highlighting the massive change‑management miss at the World Cup—no real communication to a billion stakeholders about why and how the tech would be used—and draw a direct line to what happens when organizations introduce AI without clear outcomes, explanation, or buy‑in.
Highlights
Important Concepts and Frameworks
Tools & Resources Mentioned
Calls to Action
Key Quotes
Chapters
00:28 — World Cup nerves, superstition, and why venue choices feel decisive
05:31 — Sensors in the match ball and semi‑automated offside decisions explained
08:12 — When ‘more accurate’ makes the game worse: fan backlash against tech
10:33 — Human in the loop under pressure: referees vs. AI and public replays
16:28 — From missed goals to toenail offsides: over‑precision as a design flaw
19:04 — Data, transparency, and who should stand between AI and your people
23:32 — AI slop in business: uncontextualized audits, reports, and “story arcs”
28:10 — AI‑generated fans and content: the new media layer around sport
31:40 — Tactical AI for coaches and the coming wave of on‑field augmentation
33:12 — Inches, seconds, and dynamic complexity: what AI should really illuminate
36:20 — World Cup as a failed AI change‑management case study
40:06 — Looking ahead: cool tech, confused roles, and why humans aren’t leaving the cockpit
Meet the Crew
Mike Richardson – Agility, Peer Power & Collective Intelligence
Website: https://mikerichardson.live/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/agilityexpertmikerichardson/
Mark Redgrave – Agility, People and Performance...