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What IIEX North America 2026 revealed about research operations, AI and data quality

A couple of weeks ago, we wrapped up a great few days at Greenbook’s IIEX North America 2026 in DC. The conference topics this year focused heavily on the operational realities shaping research teams. Across the agenda, discussions centered on AI implementation, workflow integration, insight activation, respondent authenticity and the growing complexity of maintaining research quality at scale.

The growing challenge of identifying fraudulent responses

Our fun session, “The Great Fraud Face-Off: Quality Data vs. Fool’s Gold,” approached those issues through a live game-show format. Rep Data’s Steven Snell and Google’s Jake Weidman presented real survey responses, behavioral signals and respondent patterns and asked an esteemed panel of on-stage participants as well as the audience to identify which responses came from legitimate participants… and which were fraudulent or manipulated. The game show demonstrated how difficult respondent validation has become.

Several manipulated responses we presented appeared polished, detailed and internally consistent. Legitimate human responses often contained typos, inconsistencies, shorthand or incomplete phrasing. The session reinforced a broader issue discussed throughout the conference about how surface-level review is no longer sufficient for evaluating research quality. Many sessions addressed similar concerns from different angles.

AI adoption is accelerating faster than validation frameworks

Presentations on AI-assisted moderation, synthetic data, automated qualitative analysis and scaled insight generation consistently returned to the same operational challenge: maintaining confidence in research quality as workflows become faster and more automated. Sessions including “Data Wars: Fighting Fraud in a Digital World,” “Beyond the Hype: When Synthetic Sample Adds Value,” and “Creating an Active Intelligence System” focused on validation, governance, workflow integration and the growing pressure to operationalize insights continuously across organizations.

Of course, AI implementation also appeared throughout nearly every track. Speakers discussed applications spanning advertising, segmentation, qualitative research, recruitment and behavioral modeling, alongside the limitations teams are encountering around inconsistent outputs, insufficient validation frameworks and interpreting automated analysis at scale. 

Research operations and quality management took center stage

Research quality and workflow design remained central throughout the conference. Speakers discussed fragmented vendor ecosystems, inconsistent operational standards, scaling pressures and the growing volume of automated outputs entering research processes. Conversations around fraud prevention extended beyond panel management and focused more broadly on maintaining confidence across the full research lifecycle.

The broader takeaway from IIEX North America 2026

The conversations throughout IIEX North America 2026 reflected an industry adapting to larger volumes of data, faster operational cycles and expanding AI integration while continuing to address validation, governance and respondent quality challenges. 

Thanks to everyone who connected with us at the show, attended our game show session or stopped by our booth throughout the week in Washington, D.C. Want to catch up on what we learned? Reach out to us.