What happens when speed and trust collide in fintech? In this episode of Product Talk, hosted by CentralSquare Technologies CPO Denise Hemke, Intuit Director of Product Rosa Gonzalez Welton speaks on AI transformation at scale inside one of the most high stakes software environments in the world. When you are shipping into payroll, tax, and workforce management, moving fast is only half the equation. Rosa breaks down how Intuit is putting rapid prototyping tools in everyone’s hands, raising decision velocity, and still protecting reliability through risk rubrics and controlled rollouts.

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Show Notes:

  1. Speed in the age of AI is easy. Building trust at scale is the real product challenge. In mission critical workflows like payroll and compliance, moving fast is only valuable if it does not create downstream consequences that devastate the customers you serve.
  2. The sweet spot is when a real problem meets a seamless solution and the customer feels joy. Intuit’s AI powered SMS payroll collection is a perfect example: it removes a task small business owners hate and delivers a result they can trust in one command.
  3. AI that feels too human creates unexpected problems. When employees thought they were texting a real person rather than an AI tool, it forced a rethink of how the product communicates its role. Designing for the full spectrum of users, including the least tech savvy, is not optional.
  4. Co creation works best when you know exactly who is in the room and who is missing. Power users like accountants give you depth and nuance. But they cannot tell you how a first time employee will experience the same product. Both inputs are essential, and you have to design the process to capture them.
  5. The “Follow Me Home” principle is one of the most valuable things Intuit has ever done. Watching a customer use your software in their actual environment, with all the interruptions, distractions, and competing demands of a real workday, reveals what no survey or advisory council ever will.
  6. Changing customer processes is dangerous if you do not understand them first. If your product does not support the customer’s own goals and workflows, adoption will fail no matter how good your intentions are.
  7. Rapid prototyping does not just speed things up. It changes the quality of the conversation entirely. When abstract ideas become tangible low fidelity prototypes, teams can broaden the audience, move faster, and make better decisions. A prototype is worth a million words.
  8. Organizational transformation moves on three tracks at once. Bottoms up energy from teams who want better tools, top down mandate from leadership to improve decision quality, and customers who are raising the bar by telling you directly what they expect. All three have to be aligned.
  9. The “what” of product management has not changed. The “how” has. Problem identification, solution generation, execution, impact measurement and iteration are still the job. What has changed is whether you are doing all of that with AI enabled speed and experimentation or not.
  10. Performance expectations must evolve to drive behavioral change. Intuit updated its job requirements and performance conversations to reflect the new reality: experimentation mindset, prototyping fluency, and AI enablement are now baseline expectations, not differentiators.
  11. Learning in public accelerates the whole organization. When one team shares a prototype or a customer interview in a staff meeting, other teams immediately see how to apply that same insight in a completely different context. Pockets of innovation become shared infrastructure.
  12. Leaders need to do more and less at the same time. More means pushing the bar on magical customer experiences. Less means stepping back, letting teams experiment and play, and removing the overhead and review cycles that slow innovation down.
  13. Compliance is the permanent promise that cannot be disrupted. At Intuit, speed always operates in service of the core commitment: help customers hire, pay, and stay compliant. The gas pedal is exciting. But the brakes exist for a reason.
  14. Risk rubrics are how you operationalize the balance between speed and trust. Rather than a blanket rule, Intuit evaluates each rollout against its potential downstream consequences and expands access accordingly, slow rollout to a targeted population or broader launch depending on the risk calculus.
  15. The innovation that fails is the innovation that leads with the solution instead of the problem. New prototyping tools and AI capabilities create a real temptation to find problems that fit the solution. The discipline to stay problem first is a perpetual tension worth actively managing.
  16. Hackathons and concentrated innovation events work best when paired with a continuous culture of experimentation. Concentrated events spark ideas that become roadmap features. But the daily habit of sharing, testing, and learning in public is what makes those sparks spread.
  17. Product leaders who scale are the ones who stay open to change without losing sight of the goal. Leaders who get stuck are identifiable by a specific pattern: less innovation from their teams, top performers who disengage, and a quiet resistance to new ways of working.
  18. One of the oldest product tenants may need to be unwound. “Do not show up with a solution looking for a problem” was the rule. In the age of AI, where genuinely new capabilities exist, the better question is where this can be meaningfully applied. The paradigm is shifting.
  19. “Don’t show up without your PRD” has become “don’t show up without your prototype.” That single shift in expectation captures the entire transformation happening inside forward looking product organizations right now.
  20. Community is one of the most underrated tools for staying relevant as a product leader. Conversations that challenge your assumptions and expose you to new approaches are where you stay sharp in a landscape that is changing faster than any individual can track alone.
About the speaker
Rosa Gonzalez Welton Intuit, Director of Product Member
About the host
Denise Hemke NEOGOV, CPO

As the Chief Product Officer at NEOGOV, Denise leads the strategy for public sector HR and Public Safety software, driving innovation, customer satisfaction, and excellence. Her experience at Checkr as Chief Product Officer saw her delivering customer-focused products and promoting a fairer future. Denise’s notable career spans over two decades, with significant roles including GM for Analytics at Workday, where she launched new products and grew the business to over $200 million in ARR. Her background includes leadership positions at Platfora, Salesforce, HSBC, and AT&T, showcasing her expertise in enterprise product development and a commitment to technological advancement and customer success.

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