Technology & Innovation
Exploring cutting-edge tools and emerging tech trends that transform how the debt collection and financial services industries operate, from automation to AI-driven analytics.
Abstract: In 2026, digital collections performance depends less on adding channels and more on orchestrating them with measurable, compliance-engineered
Abstract: Artificial intelligence is reshaping receivables management, but not in the way many expected. Rather than replacing human roles,
Self-service payments are no longer a peripheral feature in debt collection; they are the new norm across the entire
Artificial intelligence has moved rapidly from experimentation to expectation across receivables operations. Collection agencies, debt buyers, and creditors increasingly
The U.S. receivables industry continues to operate on infrastructure and behavioral assumptions developed decades ago. Many of these no
AI context orchestration for collections is increasingly recognized as a structural requirement rather than a technical enhancement. As artificial
Digital settlement platforms are often discussed as if they are a simple channel change, moving a negotiation from phone
Artificial intelligence is now a permanent component of debt collection operations. While early adoption focused on experimentation and proof-of-concept
The deployment of conversational AI in collections has progressed beyond experimentation. AI voice systems are now interacting with consumers,
The challenge of responding to security threats has expanded far beyond the confines of information technology departments. Across regulated
Abstract: In 2026, digital collections performance depends less on adding channels and more on orchestrating them with measurable, compliance-engineered
Abstract: Artificial intelligence is reshaping receivables management, but not in the way many expected. Rather than replacing human roles,
Self-service payments are no longer a peripheral feature in debt collection; they are the new norm across the entire
Artificial intelligence has moved rapidly from experimentation to expectation across receivables operations. Collection agencies, debt buyers, and creditors increasingly
The U.S. receivables industry continues to operate on infrastructure and behavioral assumptions developed decades ago. Many of these no
AI context orchestration for collections is increasingly recognized as a structural requirement rather than a technical enhancement. As artificial
Digital settlement platforms are often discussed as if they are a simple channel change, moving a negotiation from phone
Artificial intelligence is now a permanent component of debt collection operations. While early adoption focused on experimentation and proof-of-concept
The deployment of conversational AI in collections has progressed beyond experimentation. AI voice systems are now interacting with consumers,
The challenge of responding to security threats has expanded far beyond the confines of information technology departments. Across regulated
Artificial intelligence in debt collection has evolved from experimental to operational. It is no longer a future ambition and
The receivables industry is entering a critical 18-month window where AI adoption will shape operations for years to come.
The adoption of AI in receivables has accelerated, but vendor selection remains a high-stakes decision. This article outlines a compliance-first
Abstract Evaluating digital consumer journeys is about far more than user experience design. In this article, I share why
Submit a Press Release
Submit your press release editorial consideration. We welcome articles highlighting trends, innovations, and updates in the collections industry.
Latest News
- Delaware Court Recommends Summary Judgment for Transworld Systems in TCPA, FDCPA Case
- Malaysia Court Dismisses RM9 Million Compensation Claim Against Indah Water
- The 2026 Washington Insights Fly-In: What ACA Members Heard in DC
- Thailand’s Cash Subsidy Program Expected to Support Debt Collection and Asset Quality
- UK Government Reforms Council Tax Debt Collection as Yorkshire Arrears Top £258 Million