13th Episode: From Frontier Tech to Real-World Impact: The Leadership Decisions That Matter Most episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 8, 2026 · 49 MIN

13th Episode: From Frontier Tech to Real-World Impact: The Leadership Decisions That Matter Most

from IEEE TEMS Radio · host TEMS RADIO

Stephen Ibaraki has been building at the intersection of AI and global impact since before most people had heard the term. He built his first AI-enabled computer in 1965. He co-created the networked AI medical database that took a Canadian industry to 80% global market share — all under NDA. He spent over a year working weekly with ITU leadership before the UN ITU AI for Good Global Summit launched in 2017, bringing in speakers, sponsors, and funding largely from his own network. He advises a community of 38,000 CEOs representing $22 million employees across 150 countries. And more than 90% of what he does today, you will never read about.In this episode, host Madhusudan Bangalore Nagaraja sits down with Stephen — Chairman of REDDS Capital, Founder of AI for Good, IEEE TEMS board member, and IEEE Systems Council Industry Ambassador — for a candid conversation on what it actually takes to close the gap between AI adoption and real-world impact.They cover:— Why 88% of organizations use AI but fewer than 40% show a measurable result — and the specific leadership failure at the root of that gap, drawn from Stephen's experience at a private summit of 38,000 CEOs in Sydney— The structured, step-by-step process that separates organizations getting quantifiable AI results from those stuck in pilot theater— What builders and innovators should stop doing (overcomplicating what they can't control) and start doing (Cognitorial thinking — free, combinatorial idea generation — and reading on the edge daily)— Why 2026 is the year CEOs must personally use AI every day, shorten their planning cycles to 90-day windows, and think in 10x innovation terms— Human in the loop as the irreducible governance floor — and why responsible AI frameworks from IEEE, UNESCO, and Microsoft all converge on the same principle— The S11: Stephen's framework of 11 converging technologies to monitor between now and 2028 — from Zetta-scale computing and 6G to quantum utility, autonomous AI scientists, biomedical rejuvenation, and the energy flywheel that underpins all of it— The one action every engineering manager should take this week: read on the edge — IEEE Spectrum, ACM news, and the outlier signals that most leaders missConnect with Stephen Ibaraki:LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/sibarakiTwitter / X: @sibarakiIEEE Systems Council Interview Series: ieeesystemscouncil.org/education/tech-vision-interviews-stephen-ibarakiConnect with your host Madhusudan Bangalore Nagaraja:LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/madhusudannagarajaIEEE Senior Member, Technical Delivery Manager, eSystems Inc. | PMI Infinity Advisory Committee | Researcher, Agentic AI Systems | Irving, Texas, USA IEEE TEMS Radio — Engaging Conversations in Education, Engineering, Management and Technology.Produced by: IEEE Technology and Engineering Management SocietyPlease write to us at [email protected] to share your feedback.

Stephen Ibaraki has been building at the intersection of AI and global impact since before most people had heard the term. He built his first AI-enabled computer in 1965. He co-created the networked AI medical database that took a Canadian industry to 80% global market share — all under NDA. He spent over a year working weekly with ITU leadership before the UN ITU AI for Good Global Summit launched in 2017, bringing in speakers, sponsors, and funding largely from his own network. He advises a...

NOW PLAYING

13th Episode: From Frontier Tech to Real-World Impact: The Leadership Decisions That Matter Most

0:00 49:26

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of IEEE TEMS Radio?

This episode is 49 minutes long.

When was this IEEE TEMS Radio episode published?

This episode was published on April 8, 2026.

What is this episode about?

Stephen Ibaraki has been building at the intersection of AI and global impact since before most people had heard the term. He built his first AI-enabled computer in 1965. He co-created the networked AI medical database that took a Canadian industry...

Can I download this IEEE TEMS Radio episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!