Digital Leaders Q&A: Mike Andrews, Chief Scientist at Impact Radius
Mike Andrews Ph.D is Chief Scientist (Forensiq) at Impact Radius, and is carrying out some fascinating work around digital marketing and ad fraud.
We caught up with Mike to ask him about his work around ad fraud, and what a typical working day is like…
Fighting fraud and identifying emerging threats. Educating the industry and our clients in collaboration with partners including academia.
KPI’s are more for the engineering side, rather than for science per se, but still, at least on the data science side, having more folks making more use of our various fraud databases over time is a good indicator of how well we’re doing.
Making sure everything we do is as scientific as possible, based on state-of-the-art understandings and techniques, “standing on the shoulders of giants” as it were. It’s a challenge because that’s not always the most expedient way of doing things, there’s no shortage of tempting shortcuts or hacks that just don’t work out well.
Science means simple, evidence-based, predictive, and experimental; aka “the scientific method.” also: objective as possible, although i am a big believer in “gut,” at least in the face of uncertainty.
It’s far more than just social media management or branding; one direction it’s evolving is towards promoting unique innovations we make within the company to the market, for example providing thought leadership in the form of studies, like our mobile device hijacking work.
On the pure marketing side separate from our fraud fighting efforts per se, there’s a lot we’re doing on the data science side of marketing campaigns, such as tracking and optimizing engagement.
I love the speed and freedom of cloud computing platforms, and powerful big data systems like warehouses — both open source and paid SaaS. I write a lot of code in go and javascript using my favorite editor emacs, which lets me accomplish much more than any pre-existing toolset would.
Browsers are the greatest things since sliced bread for user interfaces, and I use them that way quite often, although i’ll take a good command-line interface over a graphical one any day.
Ever-deeper understandings of the customer and their state of mind, including being able to predict relevant stuff about what they’ll do generally, especially in a causal way, meaning beyond just finding correlations but actually understanding likely responses to interventions.
Fraudsters will continue innovating and thus so must we in countering.
broad and deep understanding of science & technology, an ability to make complex customized things from scratch, getting along well with both business and technology folks.
A sense of where the industry might be headed to try and get there first, and an ability to assess prospective folks’ talents for doing well on a team.
Starting at 4am, drink some coffee while catching up on the latest in science and technology, which is mostly scanning all the new scholarly & technical papers from universities and tech giants alike; usually there are a handful of significant ones.
Also taking care of most urgent items I’ve “slept on,” like project plans, etcetera. Join a class at the gym 5-6am, then from 6-7am continue working on my highest priority items, like sending some emails i’d like answered later that day. 7-8’ish: breakfast with family and get the kids to school.
8am-5pm: the bulk of the day, may or may not include 3 hours of commuting by foot and train between NJ & NYC; if so, looking forward to a day tilted towards meetings, but if not, WFH and get some seriously productive uninterrupted coding or similar work done.
6-7’ish: have dinner with the family, then afterwards check kids’ homework, make sure they get ready for bed, and hopefully turn in by 8pm the latest!
Really try to understand things from soup to nuts, devil-in-the-details style, as technically and as broadly as possible.
Build working prototypes of your concepts, deploy them if possible too. Do your best to understand the history of how things developed, and keep abreast of ongoing technical conversations and new ideas.
There are no dumb questions! The more you ask, the more you learn.