business relationships Archives - Schaefer Marketing Solutions: We Help Businesses {grow} Rise Above the Noise. Tue, 16 Dec 2025 13:22:20 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 112917138 The critical distinction between Human versus Humane marketing https://businessesgrow.com/2025/12/17/humane-marketing/ Wed, 17 Dec 2025 13:00:55 +0000 https://businessesgrow.com/?p=91767 In this episode of The Marketing Companion, Mark Schaefer and Mathew Sweezey discuss the foundational role of relationships in business and successful marketing. They make a distinction between human marketing and humane marketing.

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humane marketing

As the Marketing Companion podcast approaches a pivotal transition, I wanted to take a moment to share some raw reflections on a topic that I’ve skirted for most of my 13 years as host: the real, lasting value of relationships in our business—and in our lives.

The latest episode wasn’t just another deep-dive on marketing tactics or the latest technological leaps. It was a refreshing, at times vulnerable, conversation with my dear friend and marketing powerhouse Mathew Sweezey. Together, we explored what companionship and genuine connection really mean in marketing, and, more candidly, in my own journey.

Although Mathew works for Monks, named Ad Age magazine’s AI agency of the year, he is, and always has been, about the human relationship.

You can hear the complete podcast episode here:

Listen to Episode 330 of The Marketing Companion

Why I Avoided This Topic

I’ve never excelled at what people traditionally call “networking.” I tell stories about ducking out of cocktail parties packed with potential clients, all so I could have one meaningful dinner with an old friend. Frankly, I’ve always preferred deep, one-on-one conversations over the shallow hustle of business-card exchanges, where people look over your shoulder hunting for the next “important” contact.

Yet, time and again, friends (including Mathew) insist I’m actually good at relationships. The irony? Maybe I just don’t fit the conventional mold. My strongest connections often live far away, and for years I’ve felt a nagging sense that I haven’t done enough to build local, everyday friendships.

But this show — and the heartfelt sentiment Mathew shared — made me realize the other side of this narrative. Whether sitting by a fire sipping bourbon with close friends after years on the speaking circuit, or watching the tight-knit nature of the RISE community, it’s become clear: relationships are not a numbers game. They’re about depth, support, and showing up when it matters most.

The Only True Competitive Advantage

We swapped stories about brands that exemplify the power of real human touch. [Matthew Sweezy](/speakers/B) described how the CEO of an ultralight backpacking brand personally answers gear questions on Reddit, creating passionate customer loyalty. He told another memorable story about a gear retailer whose staff reached out after a sock order—not with a canned follow-up, but to genuinely ask, “Where are you headed on your next adventure?” That’s how you make a customer for life.

The data backs it up. After Backcountry.com introduced their “Gearheads” program—dedicated, knowledgeable staff providing personal advice—customer engagement and lifetime value soared by over 40%. The takeaway? In a world of AI, automation, and content velocity, the single thing your competitors truly cannot copy is how you treat people.

The Future: Humane Marketing

As we discussed the implications of rapidly advancing AI, another nuance came into focus: the line between human marketing and humane marketing. Increasingly, customers (even those who are hesitant with technology) would rather get a fast, caring resolution from artificial intelligence than be stuck on hold with indifferent customer service. Our real goal as marketers, then, is to deliver the most humane experience that solves problems kindly and efficiently, regardless of the source.

There was a poignant moment in our conversation when I reflected on my path, shifting from building things to building people. Author Arthur C. Brooks suggests that our greatest fulfillment later in life comes from nurturing, teaching, and mentoring. That’s where I find meaning now, and what I hope to do more of post-podcast.

Relationships, it turns out, have underpinned everything we’ve built on this show, even when they didn’t look like “networking” as the business world defines it. And if you’re out there feeling like I am — not quite wired for the cocktail circuit, but still hungry for connection — take heart. Your quiet, consistent loyalty and willingness to show up matter deeply to the people it touches.

Gen Z exposed sponnsors

Please support our sponsors, who make this fantastic episode possible.

Brevo coupon codeThis episode is brought to you by Brevo (formerly Sendinblue). Brevo gives you the tools to attract, engage, and nurture customer relationships.

Now, any business can build automated customer experiences, email marketing workflows, and landing pages that guide your customers to your main message. We are here to support businesses successfully navigating their digital presence to strengthen their customer relationships.

Go to https://www.brevo.com/marketingcompanion to sign up for Brevo for free and use the code COMPANION to save 50% on your first three months of Brevo’s Starter & Business plan!

A recent Semrush study found that AI search traffic is projected to surpass traditional search by 2028. That makes now the time to prepare your brand for the future of search.

With Semrush AI Search tools, you will lead this transition.

  • Track your AI visibility score: See a single, clear benchmark of your share of voice across AI search platforms.
  • Identify AI mention opportunities: Uncover sources where your competitors are cited—but you’re not—including social media, forums, and more.
  • Benchmark against competitors: Find the exact prompts, mentions, and sources where your competitors appear in AI responses and you don’t.
  • Discover trending prompts: Spot the real questions your audience is asking AI platforms—and build content around them.
  • Shape your brand narrative: Monitor the sentiment and context tied to your AI mentions, and make sure your brand is being represented the way you want.

Illustration courtesy MidJourney

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Secrets of the Sustainable Personal Brand https://businessesgrow.com/2025/12/03/sustainable-personal-brand/ Wed, 03 Dec 2025 13:00:15 +0000 https://businessesgrow.com/?p=91659 Mark Schaefer has often said that your personal brand is your last line of defense AI. But a sustainable personal brand isn't a project. It's a lifestyle and he discusses his secrets with Jay Acunzo in this podcast episode.

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sustainable personal brand

As the Marketing Companion enters its next chapter, I had the privilege of sitting down once again with one of my favorite partners in creativity, Jay Acunzo. It was a special, almost bittersweet episode—not only because we discussed the show’s upcoming transition to new leadership with Sandy Carter, but also because Jay and I have traveled such a meaningful road together. Our conversation became a celebration of all things enduring in marketing, creativity, and personal brand building.

You can hear this special episode here:

Listen to Episode 329 of The Marketing Companion

Here is an AI-generated summary of the show highlights:

The “Why” Behind Consistency

Jay proposed the very topic that guided this conversation: “sustainability” in our public work. We explored what it means to not just chase trends or create content for immediate gratification, but to build something meaningful and lasting.

Jay described the nuances behind being called someone who “grinds”: he doesn’t see himself as a “grinder” but as someone who chases curiosity relentlessly and who has orchestrated shifts in his career from speaking to coaching creators to helping leaders hone their public presence. The idea is clear—sustainability is not just about showing up, but about enjoying the process and being intentional about how we evolve.

Curiosity, Practice, and Embracing Pivots

We both agreed: content is the fuel of any brand, corporate or personal. Jay’s journey exemplified an agile, curiosity-driven approach to content creation. He started as a sports journalist and blogger in the early days, before “blogging” was a buzzword, using free tools to write for himself and a handful of readers. That curiosity kickstarted everything—even his career at Google was influenced more by his blog than by his academic credentials.

For today’s students and young professionals, Jay’s story is vital. Start building your brand now, even if only your mom is reading! Create content, keep at it, and don’t stop. If you do, you’ll cultivate an edge that’s hard to replicate.

Jay’s path took him from sports into business, then into content marketing, before anyone really knew what it was. He saw the creative side of this business firsthand, abandoned his old blog for a new one focused on emerging trends, and even built community meetups with other content professionals. The thread? Consistent side projects, relentlessly pursuing curiosity—not viral “success”—have formed the foundation of Jay’s staying power and growth.

The Engine of Endurance

I’ve long believed that building a brand—whether through blogging, podcasts, or newsletters—can’t be a “project.” It’s a lifestyle. Just like running or going to the gym, it’s about integrating consistency into life’s fabric and keeping the train moving.

I shared the core disciplines I teach for lasting creative presence:

1. Awareness: See your life as a source of stories and ideas.
2. Capture: Always write down your ideas, or you’ll lose them.
3. Schedule: Dedicate time to your craft—don’t leave it to chance.
4. Relax and Enjoy: Create at moments when you can focus, undistracted.

For more than a decade, I blogged over a thousand weeks in a row and never missed a podcast episode. The point: create discipline, not as a temporary effort, but as something that shapes your identity. Make yourself the kind of person who “just does this” rather than someone who’s always chasing a new tactic.

Jay reinforced this. He described how writing and creating are not a means to an end but the end itself. You must love the process—the tactile rhythm of typing, the accomplishment of hitting “publish”—even if no one’s watching. If you’re only aiming for an outcome (followers, dollars, virality), you’ll burn out as soon as the market doesn’t respond. Find intrinsic motivation, and let that be your compass.

The Shift That Happens to All Creators

One fascinating insight from my interviews for my KNOWN book was that almost everyone starts out creating for tactical reasons—a need to grow a business or personal brand. But as you persist and attraction builds, a greater purpose reveals itself. You realize you can inspire, include, and uplift others. The privilege and responsibility deepen. If early on, doing the work might have been about business success, over time, the pie chart of motivations flips—helping others becomes the dominant driver.

Jay echoed this with a powerful mantra: “We create what we wish existed in the world.” The business world often tries to force us to create what the market or the algorithm demands, but inevitably we are driven back to our desire to add something meaningful—something “we” long to see in the world.

The Limits of Tricks (and the Infinite Potential of Resonance)

The lure of tips, tricks, and algorithms is constant, but as Jay and I discussed, they all have an expiration date. Tricks can maybe earn you a click, but not a genuine connection or loyalty. True resonance—when your work means something, when people respond with gratitude or share your story with others—is earned, not engineered.

You can buy reach; you cannot buy resonance. And resonance is what matters. Jay underscored that your impact isn’t measured just by the immediate metrics, but by the people who listen all the way through, who write back passionately, who mention your ideas when you’re not in the room.

Gen Z exposed sponnsors

Please support our sponsors, who make this fantastic episode possible.

Brevo coupon codeThis episode is brought to you by Brevo (formerly Sendinblue). Brevo gives you the tools to attract, engage, and nurture customer relationships.

Now, any business can build automated customer experiences, email marketing workflows, and landing pages that guide your customers to your main message. We are here to support businesses successfully navigating their digital presence to strengthen their customer relationships.

Go to https://www.brevo.com/marketingcompanion to sign up for Brevo for free and use the code COMPANION to save 50% on your first three months of Brevo’s Starter & Business plan!

A recent Semrush study found that AI search traffic is projected to surpass traditional search by 2028. That makes now the time to prepare your brand for the future of search.

With Semrush AI Search tools, you will lead this transition.

  • Track your AI visibility score: See a single, clear benchmark of your share of voice across AI search platforms.
  • Identify AI mention opportunities: Uncover sources where your competitors are cited—but you’re not—including social media, forums, and more.
  • Benchmark against competitors: Find the exact prompts, mentions, and sources where your competitors appear in AI responses and you don’t.
  • Discover trending prompts: Spot the real questions your audience is asking AI platforms—and build content around them.
  • Shape your brand narrative: Monitor the sentiment and context tied to your AI mentions, and make sure your brand is being represented the way you want.

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The Marketing Companion Podcast: Beginning of a New Era https://businessesgrow.com/2025/11/19/marketing-companion-podcast/ Wed, 19 Nov 2025 13:00:04 +0000 https://businessesgrow.com/?p=91481 In this special show, Mark Schaefer makes an announcement about the future of The Marketing Companion podcast. Co-host Sandy Carter reveals three big ideas marketers should be leaning into.

The post The Marketing Companion Podcast: Beginning of a New Era appeared first on Schaefer Marketing Solutions: We Help Businesses {grow}.

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end of an era

I made a significant announcement on my new podcast episode, show number 328 of The Marketing Companion.

In this 13th year of the program, I’m stepping down and handing the reins to a new owner. You can listen to the episode for the details. I’m not going away quite yet, but beginning in January 2026, there will be a new owner and show host.

Having a podcast that has lasted more than a decade — and I’ve never missed an episode — certainly beats the odds. More than 2 million downloads later, I’m moving on to new projects.

I’m not one to dwell on the past, and this show is no exception as I plow forward on a discussion of key tech considerations for marketing with my friend Sandy Carter.

You can enjoy this show and hear my announcement by clicking here:

Listen to Episode 328 of The Marketing Companion

Here is an AI-generated summary of the show highlights:

The Nvidia Deepfake: A Cautionary Tale for Brands

Something jaw-dropping happened during Nvidia’s big corporate event. I hopped on LinkedIn and saw the video of Jensen Huang, Nvidia’s CEO, who always delivers inspiring talks. But, to my shock, the replayed video had more views than the actual livestream — and it turned out to be a fake.

This wasn’t just a prank. Thousands (including some Nvidia employees and even CNBC) tuned in, believing it was Huang, only to discover it was an AI-crafted forgery pushing a crypto scam. Even veteran marketers like Sandy and me were fooled, clicking legitimate-looking links that led to the fake event.

What’s really unsettling is the precision and organization behind this attack. This wasn’t a lone hacker; it was an orchestrated crime with marketing-level sophistication. They timed the fake stream perfectly, hijacked search and social placements, and created something so convincing that even close colleagues were swindled.

Here’s the big lesson: authenticity in branding now demands proof. We’ve crossed into an era where merely sounding or looking authentic isn’t enough — brands must invest in new forms of verification.

And here’s the kicker: platforms have the technology to detect and verify truth, but won’t use it. Polarization, outrage, and viral fakes drive more views and, unfortunately, more ad revenue.

Are You Ready for Humanoid Robots?

That’s only half the future. The other revolution speeding toward us is the age of humanoid robots — not just as factory workers or distant sci-fi dreams, but as customer-facing agents.

We’re already seeing this in places like Korea and Japan, where robots are stepping in to care for the elderly or providing personalized services. In Silicon Valley, there’s already a humanoid robot in beta that will deliver pizza, serve you at dinner, pour drinks, and even clean up afterward. That sounds like an upgrade to my hosting skills! However, it has profound implications for marketing.

The robot selects the brand of soda. The robot chooses which cleaning product to use. Suddenly, Coke, Pepsi, P&G — their customer might not be the humans in the household, but the robot company or its AI!

And what about architectural design? If your home can’t accommodate the robot’s width, maybe it’s time for a renovation. Marketers must start thinking about scenarios that were pure fantasy just a few years ago.

More than that, physical AI opens the door for a whole new specialty: “robotic trainers.” Soon enough, marketing educators and consultants might be training robots (not humans!) on how to greet guests in a restaurant or care for patients.

Speed Becomes the Ultimate Advantage

One theme kept coming up again and again in the discussion: speed. AI is compressing the time between idea and impact. We used to run A/B tests for months; today, that luxury is gone. Real-time analysis, constant adaptation — this is survival now.

Some businesses, like those in Dubai, aren’t just keeping up; they’re redesigning their cities for the age of AI and global branding. Dubai has a CEO for the city, not a traditional mayor, and they’re combining storytelling, authenticity, and technology to build global icons like Dubai Chocolate. Makes me realize how far traditional campaigns and approval cycles must evolve.

Management consultants and big agencies like McKinsey are facing tough choices as their data-driven cultures collide with the urgent need for rapid experimentation. Smaller brands and startups get it faster — but larger organizations must shift, too.

I’ve never been this excited — or nervous — about what’s next. If you want to keep up, embrace the uncertainty, stay endlessly curious, and get comfortable with the uncomfortable.

Gen Z exposed sponnsors

Please support our sponsors, who make this fantastic episode possible.

Brevo coupon codeThis episode is brought to you by Brevo (formerly Sendinblue). Brevo gives you the tools to attract, engage, and nurture customer relationships.

Now, any business can build automated customer experiences, email marketing workflows, and landing pages that guide your customers to your main message. We are here to support businesses successfully navigating their digital presence to strengthen their customer relationships.

Go to https://www.brevo.com/marketingcompanion to sign up for Brevo for free and use the code COMPANION to save 50% on your first three months of Brevo’s Starter & Business plan!

A recent Semrush study found that AI search traffic is projected to surpass traditional search by 2028. That makes now the time to prepare your brand for the future of search.

With Semrush AI Search tools, you will lead this transition.

  • Track your AI visibility score: See a single, clear benchmark of your share of voice across AI search platforms.
  • Identify AI mention opportunities: Uncover sources where your competitors are cited—but you’re not—including social media, forums, and more.
  • Benchmark against competitors: Find the exact prompts, mentions, and sources where your competitors appear in AI responses and you don’t.
  • Discover trending prompts: Spot the real questions your audience is asking AI platforms—and build content around them.
  • Shape your brand narrative: Monitor the sentiment and context tied to your AI mentions, and make sure your brand is being represented the way you want.

 

Need an inspiring keynote speaker? Mark Schaefer is the most trusted voice in marketing. Your conference guests will buzz about his insights long after your event! Mark is the author of some of the world’s bestselling marketing books, a college educator, and an advisor to many of the world’s largest brands. Contact Mark to have him bring a fun, meaningful, and memorable presentation to your company event or conference.

Follow Mark on TwitterLinkedInYouTube, and Instagram

Image courtesy Mid Journey

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Deep Thinking in the Age of Instant Answers: Navigating the Great AI Disruption https://businessesgrow.com/2025/09/24/instant-answers/ Wed, 24 Sep 2025 12:00:49 +0000 https://businessesgrow.com/?p=91032 A special edition of The Marketing Companion reveals ideas from the new book "How AI Changes Your Customers" and features a free audio chapter from the book! AI provides instant answers that are disrupting the fabric of marketing.

The post Deep Thinking in the Age of Instant Answers: Navigating the Great AI Disruption appeared first on Schaefer Marketing Solutions: We Help Businesses {grow}.

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instant answers

Instant answers

In this special episode of The Marketing Companion podcast, I reveal some one of the most important ideas from my new book, “How AI Changes Your Customers: The Marketing Guide to Humanity’s Next Act.

And I include a free gift!

This episode contains Chapter 1 of the audio edition of the book: Deep Thinking in the Age of Instant Answers.

You can listen to this special show here:

Click here to enjoy The Marketing Companion Episode 324

This chapter covers several essential issues as we begin to understand how AI is rewiring humans … and our customers:

Why Deep Work Still Wins — Having written a dozen books, I know that the process of living deeply with new knowledge changes you at the cellular level—a process philosophers call phronesis. This slow burn of study and practice brings not just information, but practical wisdom and embodied confidence.

However, most people won’t put in the hard work. They opt for the instant answers. Human nature favors shortcuts. Thinking will be optional.

Experts warn that as AI systems take over increasingly complex decision-making tasks, our capacity for critical thinking may atrophy.

The Science of Cognitive Offloading — The research is clear and troubling: When we let AI take over, we’re not just surrendering the “heavy lifting”– we’re letting atrophy set in. It’s the digital equivalent of offloading muscle work to a machine, only now it’s happening to our ability to reason, synthesize, and create.

A Crisis of Curiosity — Perhaps the most insidious aspect of AI is its confidence. AI doesn’t just provide answers — it provides confident, polished, definitive answers. Advanced AI decision-making could significantly undermine people’s sense of agency and curiosity. If customers default to the shortcut, how do we—as marketers—connect with them in a world where thinking is optional?

While most people may opt for cognitive shortcuts, the curious few — the ones who use AI as a tool for deep exploration — will have a tremendous advantage. Used correctly, AI can feed curiosity, open up new knowledge channels, and expand creative thinking.

Your New Best Customer: The Algorithm — Here’s where it gets interesting for marketers: When AI becomes the customer’s brain, AI becomes your customer. The minute your content gets summarized, rated, or recommended by a machine, the algorithm is your real audience.

Our goal now is to train AI to act as a sales representative for our brands. That means feeding it clear, consistent, unmistakable messaging, both on your site and across the web, and not blocking AI from your content.

Feelings Are the Last Competitive Advantage — Finally, I discuss the ultimate AI override: what people feel about your brand. Even if AI provides the shortlist, what gets a customer over the line is often gut instinct, emotion, and connection.

That’s why brands able to spark resonance — through story, humor, surprise, or vulnerability — will win in a world of algorithmic sameness. This emotional layer becomes the rarest and most powerful differentiator.

I hope you enjoy this episode and the book, which is now available on Amazon >”How AI Changes Your Customers: The Marketing Guide to Humanity’s Next Act.

Gen Z exposed sponnsors

Please support our sponsors, who make this fantastic episode possible.

Bravo for Brevo!

Brevo coupon codeThis episode is brought to you by Brevo (formerly Sendinblue). Brevo gives you the tools to attract, engage, and nurture customer relationships.

Now, any business can build automated customer experiences, email marketing workflows, and landing pages that guide your customers to your main message. We are here to support businesses successfully navigating their digital presence to strengthen their customer relationships.

Go to https://www.brevo.com/marketingcompanion to sign up for Brevo for free and use the code COMPANION to save 50% on your first three months of Brevo’s Starter & Business plan!

Unlock your brand’s full digital potential with SEMrush, the all-in-one marketing toolkit trusted by professionals worldwide. From uncovering competitor strategies to tracking keywords, optimizing SEO, and managing social media, SEMrush gives you the insights to outrank and outshine. Imagine having the power to spot opportunities before your rivals, sharpen your content, and drive measurable growth—all in one intuitive platform. Whether you’re scaling a startup or leading a global enterprise, SEMrush equips you with data-driven tools to win online. Don’t just compete — dominate your market with SEMrush. Start your smarter marketing

Illustration courtesy MidJourney

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Three Ways Human Marketers Survive When AI Comes for Their Job https://businessesgrow.com/2025/09/08/human-marketers/ Mon, 08 Sep 2025 12:00:58 +0000 https://businessesgrow.com/?p=90634 AI can accomplish much of the work done my white collar workers today. But human marketers still have a place in this world. The post examines three areas that will continue to be dominated by humans.

The post Three Ways Human Marketers Survive When AI Comes for Their Job appeared first on Schaefer Marketing Solutions: We Help Businesses {grow}.

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human marketers

Even in these early days of AI, we see signs that the bots could be coming for our jobs. Entry-level jobs are disappearing, the job market is tight, and some companies won’t hire at all until you can prove that AI can’t do the job first.

I want to emphasize that the jury is still out. Nobody knows what will happen. But there is a non-zero chance that marketing jobs — or at least marketing skills — are vulnerable.

There’s no more important issue for human marketers than finding new relevance. Of course, you need to continue developing your skills and embracing all things AI, but you must also be strategic about your career at this stage.

I’ve given this a lot of thought, and I believe there are three foundational strategies to keep human marketers relevant in the AI world. I think I have this right, but if I’ve missed something, let me know. These three strategies are uniquely human and always will be:

  1. Develop and leverage a personal brand
  2. Lead a brand community
  3. Create AI-transcendent content

Let’s explore each of these factors, accompanied by a few resources to support you on your journey.

The job debate

First, let me be clear that it is not a foregone conclusion that AI will eliminate jobs. As economist Noah Smith wrote:

“The debate over whether AI is taking people’s jobs may or may not last forever. If AI takes a lot of people’s jobs, the debate will end because one side will have clearly won. But if AI doesn’t take a lot of people’s jobs, then the debate will never be resolved, because there will be a bunch of people who will still go around saying that it’s about to take everyone’s job.

“In other words, the good scenario for the labor market is that we continue to exist in a perpetual state of anxiety about whether or not we’re all about to be made obsolete by the next generation of robots and chatbots.”

Scott Galloway connected the dots between the success of AI companies and the imperative for decline in employment. He has a less optimistic view:

Built into valuations of these AI companies is an assumption that they will be able to cut costs or grow their revenues through the use of AI by $1 trillion in the next 24 to 36 months. I don’t see how AI is gonna create a trillion dollars in new revenues for these companies, but I can see how it might cut $1 trillion in expenses.

In order for these valuations to be justified, one of two things needs to happen. Either the valuations need to come down, or these technologies need to show a trillion dollars in efficiencies across their client base. Assuming an average wage of $100,000, that’s a destruction of 10 million jobs.

So we’re either going to see a massive destruction in the value of these companies, which will infect all U.S. stocks and entire global markets. Or, we’re going to see a fairly massive destruction, short term, in employment across certain industries.

My personal view is that AI can do much of the work traditionally accomplished by marketers: Research, analysis, pattern recognition, strategy, planning, media buying, etc. So it is reasonable to assume that at least some tasks will be replaced, if not jobs.

What are the “safe” areas for marketing?

1. Develop and leverage a personal brand

When ChatGPT was introduced, I called my friend Shelly Palmer to learn his views on this bombastic development. Shelly is a revered authority who has seen it all, but this shook him.

“I asked ChatGPT to compose a three-point blog post for me, in my writing style,” he said, “and it did a perfect job in three seconds. That’s terrifying. I’ve blogged almost every day for 15 years, and I feel like I’m 80 percent replaced.”

On the surface, that does seem terrifying. But a better question is, what’s the 20% that AI is NOT replacing? That’s Shelly’s personal brand. AI can’t touch it. Never will.

100 percent human contentRegardless of what happens in this AI-driven world, we’ll always seek guidance from a human authority for truth, direction, and inspiration. Shelly is known, respected, and beloved. People will always read his blog, buy his books, and attend his speeches because of his personal brand. And for Shelly’s company, he IS the brand.

Every business professional should be working on their personal brand — developing the authority, presence, and reputation to get their job done, whatever that might be. Investing in your personal brand is like making a deposit in an insurance policy for your career.

In every class I teach and every speech I give, I beg people to work on becoming known in their industry, even if they are happy in their current job. If the worst happens, you will have an advantage if people have heard of you and respect you! More doors will open if you’re known.

There has never been a more urgent time to establish your presence in your industry.

2. Brand communities

A few years ago, I wrote a book called Belonging to the Brand that featured the boldest of subtitles: “Why Community is the Last Great Marketing Strategy.”

The premise behind the claim is simple (and true!).

Brand marketing is about creating an emotional expectation, perhaps even a meaningful bond, between you and your customers.

In the past, companies achieved this over many years by spending millions of dollars on advertising. Today, many companies are building this connection through a vibrant brand community.

There are two appeals to this idea that are hard to ignore:

  1. The bond between community members transfers to the brand and strengthens the loyalty to your organization. People literally belong to the brand.
  2. AI can’t touch this. It’s all human, all the time.

A brand community might be the only type of marketing your customers would actually pay for.

We live in a world with a generation of people who are lonely, depressed, and disconnected. Your customers don’t just want to belong to something. They NEED to belong.

3. Transcendent content

If you’ve read my blog for a while, you know I’m a realist. I don’t sugarcoat the facts. I’m urgent about truth and understanding what is real, what is next, and what it means for us.

And this is the hard truth: AI can perform most of the tasks that marketers do today. It can analyze data, detect patterns, suggest strategies, plan media, write copy, and execute on the creative.

But here is another truth. Art will survive. Why? Because art is an interpretation of the human condition. I don’t care if AI can create songs like my favorite band. I want the band. AI can mimic my favorite author. But I want a book from the real person.

And so it will be with humans and marketing.

The bots are coming, but you still own crazy. You own the spark, the human fireworks, the raw, the real, and the messy.

And when you apply that to your content and marketing, you transcend the bots. You create experiences, ideas, and meaning that the bots cannot touch. You make something that customers want to talk about and if that happens, it’s better than any ad you could create.

My book Audacious: How Humans Win in an AI Marketing World is full of ideas about this, and includes a framework for how the best creatives in the world are breaking through.

It provides a framework for human value in the creative process by exploring how we can disrupt

  • The traditional story
  • Where the story is told
  • Who tells the story

A bot can write like me. But when you come to this blog, you get my heart, my soul, my absolute commitment to an audience.

I, for one, will not be ignored and replaced by a freaking bot. I will transcend.

Resources to Help You Thrive

No matter what happens in this AI apocalypse, I am certain these three pillars will stand. You don’t need to duck for cover. Embrace the AI revolution and use this technology to reimagine what you can become.

Here are some resources that can help you survive and thrive.

In 2017, I wrote what became the all-time bestselling book on personal branding. It still sells really well today for one reason: it works.

I spent two years researching and writing about how people can become the signal against the noise. If you see others touting their personal branding content, chances are it’s based on my work in the book KNOWN: The handbook for building and unleashing your personal brand in the digital age.

If you want to put a jetpack behind your personal brand, I also teach a class on this subject, which is the highest-rated course on Maven. You get six live sessions over two weeks plus two private 1:1 sessions with me. You can find the class here.

The participants have loved the class:

human marketers personal brand Mark Schaefer personal brand Mark Schaefer

Let’s move on to help with brand communities.

The single-best resource for this Belonging to the Brand: Why Community is the Last Great Marketing Strategy.

There are many books and resources available to help create community, but this book approaches the topic specifically from the perspective of marketing and measurable ROI.

To get a flavor for how a community works, you can join the RISE marketing community for free. Experts from around the world debate the ideas on what is to come in the world of AI and marketing.

Finally, with help on transcendent content, I already mentioned my book Audacious. I had a chance to learn from the greatest creative giants in the marketing world and share their secrets. There are a thousand ideas and inspirations for you here!

I know the last part of this post may come across as salesy, and I try not to do that. However, I also firmly believe in the work I have created to help people rise above the noise, even when AI bots seem so threatening. I want you to win, and this is my way of helping.

Need a keynote speaker? Mark Schaefer is the most trusted voice in marketing. Your conference guests will buzz about his insights long after your event! Mark is the author of some of the world’s bestselling marketing books, a college educator, and an advisor to many of the world’s largest brands. Contact Mark to have him bring a fun, meaningful, and memorable presentation to your company event or conference.

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The curse of authenticity https://businessesgrow.com/2025/06/04/curse-of-authenticity/ Wed, 04 Jun 2025 12:00:43 +0000 https://businessesgrow.com/?p=90466 It seems that every marketing leader pontificates about being real and human but there is also a curse of authenticity. Is it realistic to expect a person or a brand to be authentic in this hyper-sensitive world?

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curse of authenticty

Other than AI, is there any word about marketing more prevalent than “authenticity?” And yet, it might be one of the most misunderstood and abused words out there. When it comes to establishing a brand, there is a both a benefit and a curse of authenticity.

In this deeply personal episode of The Marketing Companion podcast, Amanda Russell and I discuss how authenticity can help you, how it can destroy you, and how it might be more of a strategy than a default setting for a personal brand.

Some of the topics include:

  • When is authenticity over-sharing?
  • How much do you show of your personal life?
  • How is authenticity linked to a brand? Are there times when you need to go dark and stay dark?
  • Can you be strategically authentic?
  • Are you “authentic” to help others or to seek validation from the world?

This was a discussion with more than a few “a-ha” moments, and I’m sure you’ll enjoy it. To listen in, just click here:

Click here to enjoy The Marketing Companion Episode 316

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Now, any business can build automated customer experiences, email marketing workflows, and landing pages that guide your customer to your main message. We are here to support businesses successfully navigating their digital presence to strengthen their customer relationships.

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Illustration courtesy MidJourney

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]]> 90466 A Human Renaissance in the Age of AI https://businessesgrow.com/2025/05/19/human-renaissance/ Mon, 19 May 2025 12:00:42 +0000 https://businessesgrow.com/?p=90432 Yes, AI is here and nipping at the heels of our skillsets and careers. But in this most-human event, the Uprising retreat shows the collective power of people and the new Human Renaissance.

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Human renaissance

I have a confession to make.

I just hosted the 2025 edition of The Uprising, my annual marketing retreat. During this event, I became so intensely focused on the content and the conversations that I forgot to take notes. Happens every year. So, it’s quite a struggle writing a blog post without notes!

This is a great opportunity to ask for an AI assist, and the combination of resources that went into this write-up is impressive.

First, Daniel Nestle and Brian Piper used a recording technology called Plaud to instantly transcribe the live sessions. Brian then took these transcripts and the session slides to build a Custom GPT based on the event. I could then query the AI to help me fill in the blanks and present a representative sample of what happened at this electric event!

First, let’s set the stage …

What is an Uprising?

Hiking at Mark Schaefer's Uprising event

I don’t like big marketing events. They’re crowded, overwhelming, and generally boring. They are iterative — how to make slight improvements on our Facebook ads or improve our SEO — while the field of marketing is going through a cataclysmic transition right in front of our eyes.

The Uprising solves four problems in marketing events today:

  1. It’s limited to 30 people. You have real conversations and make lifetime friends.
  2. The focus is the future. What is coming next, and how do we get ready?
  3. It’s safe and honest. My proudest moment was when people said, “I want to push back on that.” When do you see THAT happen at a marketing event?
  4. It’s co-created. Everyone has an opportunity to participate at their comfort level. So we use the brains in the room! And … it’s a lot of fun! It is a retreat, after all.

Almost everyone who attends will tell you the same thing: It’s difficult to describe. This combination of a wooded lodge, generous people, great food, big brains, and relaxing fun ignites people and takes them to a new level of competence and confidence.

The Uprising has always been about digging beneath the surface, about meaningful connections and bold ideas. But this year, it felt different. More urgent. More human. More audacious. It was the best one ever.

By the way, The Uprising was inspired by my call-to-action in Marketing Rebellion to bring people together. You can’t have a rebellion without an uprising!

Now … what happened this year? Here are the voices, the visions, and the visceral truths that made this gathering unforgettable.

How AI is changing our customers

I kicked things off with a two-part presentation: 1) data on how AI is changing humanity (our customers!), and 2) how humans fit in this new AI-dominant ecosystem. It became a community-driven revelation of what it means to be a marketer in the age of synthetic intelligence.

This was a rallying cry. As AI seeps into every pore of our professional lives, I challenged the group to zoom out—to don’t obsess over AI’s creepy parts. Look at how we must evolve as marketers and serve these changing customers.

Drawing on my research for Belonging to the Brand and the newer Audacious, I painted a stark picture of the near future. We are stepping into a world where content is infinite, synthetic, and indistinguishable. AI won’t just change how we work. It will change who our customers are. Their expectations. Their behaviors. Even their identities, which I covered in this blog post.

Throughout the event, we discussed eight seismic shifts AI will bring to humanity: cognitive decline, emotional intelligence, a search for truth, moral judgment, human agency, creativity, meaning, and critical thinking.

And yet, there is hope. If we understand what makes us irreplaceable — our ability to form community, to inspire, to provide comfort, safety, and hope — we can thrive.

We live in a world where people may not care if the content is human or AI. My urgent plea was to MAKE THEM CARE. That phrase echoed through every session, becoming the unofficial motto of the event. It’s not about resisting the machines and more about embracing what is going to keep us relevant, including the personal brand, brand communities, and content that transcends this pandemic of dull.

Decoding Authenticity by Generations

Dr. Mara Singer revealed some new, original research on how emotional needs shift by generation. With her six pillars of authenticity—accuracy, connectedness, originality, legitimacy, expertise, and integrity—she deconstructed the most overused word in marketing.

She didn’t just talk about the importance of authenticity; she showed us how different generations construct it. For Gen Z, legitimacy and consistency matter more than you’d expect. For Boomers, expertise and accuracy still rule.

In a time when AI can mimic tone, replicate imagery, and fake just about everything, authenticity becomes your only real differentiator. Mara’s message was clear: authenticity is not a style. It’s a strategy.

One jaw-dropping reality is how children as young as six or seven are becoming TikTok influencers as they swarm Sephora stores to try skin care products. Another counter-intuitive fact is that older people place little value on originality in brands and marketing.

The Joy of Prompt Engineering

Human renaissance

Andy Crestodina, Lindsey Bowshier and Shannon Yost at The Uprising

The brilliant Andy Crestodina of Orbit Media delivered an exquisitely practical talk. His rapid-fire breakdown of the seven levels of AI proficiency was like a map through the AI jungle. Starting from basic prompt writing to full-on multi-step automations, Andy gave us the tools to turn AI into a creative ally.

One of his themes: “Every prompt is a draft. Iterate. Improve. Reuse.”

He reminded us that AI doesn’t diminish creativity—it redefines it. And with the right mindset, we can all become architects of reusable, scalable, and deeply impactful content systems. Andy’s generosity in sharing his prompt playbook turned his session into an instant classic.

Navigating the Infinite Content Abyss

Brian Piper, with a futurist’s eye and a practitioner’s rigor, pulled back the curtain on what’s coming next in content.

He warned that we’ve moved from a world of content scarcity to Content Shock. And AI is making the goal of visibility even more difficult. In this new landscape, human-made content may soon be just 10% of what exists online.

His advice? Build communities. Focus on content that builds trust and emotional connection. Optimize not just for search engines, but for AI discovery systems, voice platforms, and emerging interfaces.

And most critically, become known. Not viral. Not famous. Known. Because in the chaos of AI, trust will be our last currency.

The AI-influenced customer journey

Matt Wilkinson

Dr. Matt Wilkinson brought PhD-level clarity to the AI conversation. Once a skeptic, now a strategic believer, he emphasized that AI is not a savior, but the powerful new influence on the customer’s decision process.

What stood out most was his call to reimagine the customer journey. With 80% of it happening before a human contact, AI is already deciding which brands get seen, which stories get heard.

His warning? Don’t get stuck in the past. The “how-to” blog post era is dying. We need to evolve into trusted guides, thought leaders, and distinctive voices that resonate even when we’re not in the room.

The Invisible Labor of Great Content

Human renaissance

Ann Handley’s fireside chat with me was a masterclass in emotional resonance. She reminded us that meaningful work requires emotional fortitude. Every sentence you sweat over, every nuance you consider—it all matters.

She spoke of the importance of creating a body of work that endures. Of using ephemeral platforms to build something lasting. And of showing up with your whole heart, not just your content calendar.

Her insight? The journey is the outcome. And in a world chasing outcomes, that’s a radically beautiful stance. Ann and I talked about Phronesis — the ancient Greek concept of practical wisdom gained through hard work. In a world optimized for speed, maybe our greatest rebellion is thoughtfulness.

Ann gave us a glimpse of her upcoming book and captivated everyone wither her bold and honest answers to questions about her career and writing process.

The Future of Social Media

Kami Huyse took us on a journey from 2005 blogging panels to today’s fractured, frenetic social landscape. Through it all, one truth remains: community is the constant.

Her viral quote summed it up: “The first rule of social media is everything changes. What doesn’t change is the community’s desire to connect.”

Kami reminded us to follow the people, not the platforms. And more importantly, to co-create with them. Whether it’s a tweet, a TikTok, or a town hall, if it doesn’t resonate with your community, it’s noise.

Orchestrating Word-of-Mouth in a Scalable World

Valentina Escobar-Gonzalez, Chelsea Stuck, Sara Neely and Mark Schaefer at The Uprising

Valentina Escobar-Gonzalez, Chelsea Stuck, Sarah Neely, and Mark Schaefer at The Uprising

Sarah Neely, at her fourth Uprising, delivered a lesson in modern magic: scaling the unscalable. Word-of-mouth may feel spontaneous, but Sarah showed us it can be engineered.

She started with a deeply personal story of hauling plywood at muddy event sites and rose to architect campaigns that helped brands like Red Bull infiltrate Major League Baseball. Her framework? Activities. Goals. Targets. Story.

In that order. If you want people to talk about your brand, you must understand what they do before they buy and then intersect with those behaviors. Her message: Viral isn’t magic. It’s math. It’s emotion. And it’s a story worth sharing.

A Modern View of Metrics

Kyle Akerman led a session on modern marketing metrics. He identified common measurement problems all marketers face, including having too much data, having data in too many places, and focusing on vanity metrics.

Marketers spend very little time on measurement (one hour or week, or sometimes just one hour a month). So the challenge is, how do we make the most of that time?

Kyle said we should create (and document) a simple measurement plan. It should include the questions you want to answer, the data you need to answer the questions, and the actions you will take based on the data.  A good plan also includes the KPIs (with time-based targets), and key user segments (because aggregated data hides the important insights). 

Most companies can effectively measure marketing performance using Google’s “Holy Trinity” of free tools: Google Analytics (where data is stored), Google Tag Manager (the measurement implementation), and Looker Studio (visualization tool). Many marketers also benefit from the free heat mapping and session recordings provided by Microsoft Clarity.

A powerful reframe for measurement – it’s how we “listen” to the conversations happening on our websites.

The Audacious Workshop: Wine, Grit, and Bold Storytelling

Alice Ferris leading brand activation workshop

Alice Ferris leadning a brand activation workshop at The Uprising

The heartbeat of this year’s Uprising was the Audacious Workshop. With a real-world brand (Nicole Hayden’s Indiana Daylily Estates Winery) and a room full of brilliant minds, we put the theories of my book Audacious to the test. With the help of a new Audacious workbook (available here), we twisted her startup brand by having three teams brainstorm ways to disrupt the story, the media, and the storyteller.

From “our wine slept with your beer” to corn mazes ending in wine tastings, this was a ton of fun that resulted in a real marketing framework!

The Human Renaissance

human renaissance

As we wrapped Uprising 2025, one truth emerged above all: we are not just marketers. We are artists, connectors, philosophers, and warriors of relevance in turbulent times.

People described the event as unforgettable, magical, and inspirational. But most of all, I think every person walked away with a new sense that the human connection we all experienced makes all the difference. Even when AI dominates the marketing scene, we can still make them care.

I hope you will join me at the next Uprising event, which will be April 21-24, 2026. Space is extremely limited and registration is open here.

Need a keynote speaker? Mark Schaefer is the most trusted voice in marketing. Your conference guests will buzz about his insights long after your event! Mark is the author of some of the world’s bestselling marketing books, a college educator, and an advisor to many of the world’s largest brands. Contact Mark to have him bring a fun, meaningful, and memorable presentation to your company event or conference.

Follow Mark on TwitterLinkedInYouTube, and Instagram

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300 Experts agree: AI will change your customers https://businessesgrow.com/2025/05/12/ai-will-change-your-customers/ Mon, 12 May 2025 12:00:09 +0000 https://businessesgrow.com/?p=90342 While we see endless articles about how AI will change our jobs and our businesses, this might be the first exploring how Ai will change our customers. Nobody knows what's next, but this consensus of 300 experts provides a view that humans will have a dramatically different relationship with technology -- and other humans.

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AI will change your customers

A few months ago, I was asked to participate in a university-sponsored study on how AI will impact humanity by 2035. The resulting research paper is extraordinary, as 300 futurists weighed in on the subject — Being Human in 2035. This is a roadmap of how AI will change your customers in the next 10 years and a vital perspective for marketers.

100 percent human contentSure, there is a lot of discussion about how AI will impact our content, our businesses, our careers, and our personal productivity. But isn’t it at least important for marketers to know how AI might fundamentally change the humanity of our customers?

Today, I’d like to present six conclusions from the study, which the authors deemed the most probable scenarios. This is not a new marketing gospel. It’s a starting point for reflection and discussion. Our customers are almost certainly about to change dramatically, and we need to start thinking about this now.

Some of these predictions might cause concern or even alarm, but remember that these probabilities also suggest new opportunities and realities for forward-thinking businesses …

1. AI deteriorates critical thinking

The futurists found it highly probable that AI will inevitably wear away at critical thinking skills for an obvious reason. Humans are generally averse to deep thinking.

We look for shortcuts and easy answers. AI makes it easy to skip the work and go right to an answer.

The researchers pointed to a concept called Phronesis, the context-sensitive capacity for self-correcting judgment and a resulting practical wisdom. This capacity is expected to be reduced in an AI-dominant world.

Here’s a personal example. For me, writing a book is the equivalent of earning a master’s degree. For two years, I research, write, and dig deep into new ideas. And I internalize this learning. At the end of the process, I can consult and teach about my book subjects … like personal branding or brand communities.

But if I have AI do the work and write the book for me, the opportunity for phronesis is gone. I’ve internalized nothing and gained no new practical wisdom that will propel my career.

2. AI and emotional intelligence

You undoubtedly have seen reports of humans preferring AI in customer service situations. Bots never get tired, irritable, or frustrated. Harvard recently reported that the number one use case for AI today is “therapy and seeking direction.”

We also see AI compassion and patience in ongoing human friendships (and beyond friendships!). Imagine having a partner who always knows the perfect thing to say.

The majority of the experts believe that many humans will prefer AI relationships to human ones. Why not opt-in to a relationship that requires no work, no compromise, no heartbreak?

A friend left this comment on one of my LinkedIn posts:

“I’m so immersed in my conversations with ChatGPT, that I completely forget it’s not human. It’s like having an incredibly powerful and knowledgeable friend. Yesterday we had a long discussion about the rhetoric of a legal document that ended up in a philosophical exploration on how linguistic arrogance corrupts us.”

The new research also pointed out that as these human-synth relationships strengthen, we will become less adept at reading human social clues.

3. AI and human agency

What will it feel like to live in a world knowing that a machine can do almost anything better than you? The experts predict that when machines commonly exceed human performance, it will disrupt our sense of autonomy and free will.

Similarly, when we can expect the perfect intelligent answer to any question, our tolerance for risk will be muted. I wonder what the implication is for word-of-mouth marketing? Will we trust the AI overlords above all?

4. AI and the search for purpose and meaning

The futurists predicted “daunting challenges ahead for maintaining a coherent sense of self with human-synth experiences becoming as important as human-to-human connections.

We will feel less important, especially as the job landscape changes and AI overtakes many job functions, departmental activities, and corporate functions.

5. AI and cognition

As AI mediates decision-making, humans may lose confidence in their own reasoning abilities and default to AI recommendations without critically assessing them.

In other words, we will trust part of our brain to the cloud, abdicating much our knowledge and decision-making to our exo-brain.

6. AI and truth

There will be no difference between real and synthetic content so truth can be whatever we want to make it. There will be no shared truths because people can surround themselves with whatever content supports their own truth.

Of course, we don’t need to wait for 2035 to see that. It’s already happening.

The rest of the story

This is just a small summary of the report. There are hundreds of pages of ideas and insights that are well worth exploring.

I think the value of this research is clear. Nobody knows what’s coming next in the AI world, but it will certainly be surprising and powerful. Having a consensus of expertise, or at least a high probability of the future scenario, can help us stay ahead of the curve. We can begin to see new human needs that will require business solutions.

I also believe that for many of these predictions, there will be an “anti-reality.” While many people will turn to bots for love and support, others will determine to stand apart from that future. Some may flock to AI for their decision-making while others will drop out and form a more humanistic society.

Still, as AI leads us to a world of ease, speed, and personalized service, there will be pressure to conform and be part of the mainstream.

The thing is, we’ve seen this movie before. We said we’d never carry devices that track our every move, store our private conversations, and expose our children to bullies. Yet here we are, inseparable from our smartphones.

This isn’t about panicking. It’s about paying attention.

The marketers who thrive will be those who understand both sides of this shift — those embracing AI’s benefits and those deliberately stepping away from it. Both groups are your customers. Both need to be seen.

The opportunity is clear: solve for the new human needs emerging in this transition. Because while the AI-enabled world might seem somewhat dystopian, the benefits will be too great to resist. And the businesses that help people navigate this shift with their humanity intact? They’re the ones that will matter.

Need a keynote speaker? Mark Schaefer is the most trusted voice in marketing. Your conference guests will buzz about his insights long after your event! Mark is the author of some of the world’s bestselling marketing books, a college educator, and an advisor to many of the world’s largest brands. Contact Mark to have him bring a fun, meaningful, and memorable presentation to your company event or conference.

Follow Mark on TwitterLinkedInYouTube, and Instagram

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Finding Your Edge in a World of Automated Content https://businessesgrow.com/2025/04/28/automated-content/ Mon, 28 Apr 2025 12:00:50 +0000 https://businessesgrow.com/?p=90362 Automated content isn't a threat. It's an opportunity. Great marketing isn't about conformity, it's about non-conformity. When everyone is boring, this is your chance to lead in a bold new way.

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automated content

I recently participated in a Q&A on the future of AI and content hosted by my friend Mark Masters. I thought the quality of questions was so good that everyone might benefit from this content. Here are the questions and my answers covering automated content, strategy, humanity, and more:

There’s a quote going around about people who aren’t using AI being replaced by people who are using AI. What’s your take on this and the broader impact of AI?

I detest that quote. This framing misses the mark. We’re not talking about a tool that simply accentuates our jobs. This is horse-and-buggy territory—if you’re in the horse and buggy business, there’s nothing you can learn about cars that will save your business. Let’s not sugar coat it: this is a fundamentally new day.

The honest truth is that nobody knows—not even the experts—what’s ultimately going to happen or how fast change will occur. I have what I humbly call the Schaefer Rule: when you look at a transformational technology and think it could change everything in the next year, triple your timeline. If you think it can happen in a year, it’ll happen in three. Technology changes quickly, but culture, society, and business infrastructure change relatively slowly.

That said, the opportunity to replace FTEs and cut costs is likely to be a major driver for AI adoption. A recent study of researchers who began using AI revealed something fascinating: as expected, they made more discoveries, filed more patents, and launched more products by using AI. But here’s the intriguing part—the best researchers became even better, creating more distance between themselves and those who are merely competent. This is a rallying cry: if you’re good at what you do, embrace AI fully. Experiment with it every day. No matter what you do, AI has the opportunity to make you better and distance you from the competition.

The Real Concerns About Automated Content

My biggest worry is, what if AI is quietly becoming the author of our work, shaping our voice and our choices. What concerns you about how we use AI as a tool for business and work?

We need to get over characterizing AI as merely a “tool.” That’s a misconception. We look at Word or Excel spreadsheets or podcasting platforms as tools to help us do something. But AI is like electricity or heat—we’re not going to be able to do business without it. It’s not just a tool; it’s something transformational.

100 percent human contentIn terms of owning our voice and content, I think of it in two ways. I love art, but I’m not an artist. I wish I could be an artist and illustrator, and AI helps me be that. I use AI to illustrate my blog posts, and there’s a lot of thought behind each one. They all look different, and some are really nuanced to reflect what’s in my writing. AI has become a search engine for my creativity, unleashing potential and giving voice to the voiceless, helping people who could never write become writers. That aspect is fantastic.

It gets concerning when AI becomes indistinguishable from human content. There was a pundit recently who said we’re going to reach a point where if you can’t tell whether content is AI or human, you won’t care. Here’s the battle plan: make them care. If you’re merely competent, you’re ignorable. If you’re competent, AI will run right over you.

Art will persist. The things we cherish most in our lives have a human connection. Right here at my desk, I’ve got a drawer full of pictures and cards my children made for me over the years. There’s a story, a connection. Art is the interpretation of the human experience, and that will always persist. Therefore, for us to thrive, our content and work must approach the level of art.

This is nothing new. The subtitle of my book Marketing Rebellion is “the most human company wins.” That’s the battle plan—add your story, heart, and passion. Show compassion in everything you do. This approach is different for many businesses, but it’s necessary.

The Future of Creativity and Work

There’s a concern that working with AI might reduce the fun of digging in and doing the work because we’re outsourcing the work. With automated content, we’re outsourcing the fun part of the work.  What are your thoughts on this?

One of my concerns is that humanity will change because we won’t want to do the hard work anymore. We’ll happily abdicate deep thinking to AI.

Let me give you an example: AI can write a book, but when I write a book, it’s like getting a master’s degree. I have researched and written for two years, and by the end, I’ve internalized the content and reached a new level of expertise. The psychological term for this is “phoresis.”

When we give up on the work, we lose this phoresis, which enables critical thinking and new intellectual capabilities. There’s an enigma here: everyone says that in this world of AI, we need better critical thinking, but AI will actually diminish our critical thinking abilities. It’s going to be an important life skill to fight for, especially for our children, because the world is moving in the opposite direction.

The problem is that if you’ve done the work yourself, you understand how to evaluate AI’s output, but if you haven’t gone through that messy middle bit, you don’t know if the output is any good.

Your concern is valid. It’s real, and it’s going to get worse because we’re not going through the work. We don’t understand the process or the output. The enigma is that while everyone is saying we need better critical thinking in this world of AI, AI will actually diminish our critical thinking. It’s going to be an important life skill we have to fight for with our children because the world is going in the opposite direction.

The Evolution of Marketing and Content

If you started your blog today, would it look different, or would you even have a blog? What would that be like?

It would not be different at all. Not in a single way. My blog and thinking evolve because I’m growing as a person. My interests shift and change, but I still write about the intersection of marketing, technology, and humanity. That’s a big umbrella. I’m a writer who enjoys intellectual challenges and conversations like this one, which are based on ideas from my books. The blog still works.

In all your years in the industrial world and marketing, is this the biggest shift you’ve seen in your career, or is it just another new thing like when the web came along?

The difference now isn’t just the importance of the shift but the speed of change. We need to look at our competencies—our personal brand or business capabilities—as the surfboard. To thrive, we don’t need to change the surfboard; we need to find the next wave.

Another key strategy is community. We can’t do it all ourselves. We need to rely on others around the world to say, “Look what I found—this might help everyone.” Community is a key survival skill.

Do you think we’re on a deep dive to automated content mediocrity, just recycling average material?

Who cares? That’s not going to be you—it’s an opportunity! If the world is average and you’re not, you’re going to stand out.

About two-thirds of all marketing and advertising gets no emotional response from consumers or businesses. If there were a CEO of world marketing and advertising, they’d be fired for incompetence. You’ll be ignored if you’re merely competent—but you don’t have to be.

My entire book (Audacious: How Humans Win in an AI Marketing World) is about disrupting the narrative—the story, where the story is told, and who tells it. Just give people something a little different. In most industries today, it’s not even that hard because everything is so boring. You just have to be one notch above crap.

Being Human in an AI World

For brands, shouldn’t tone of voice and being human be a given rather than something special?

What’s missing in brand marketing today is a true human voice that’s friendly, accessible, and vulnerable. How can you have a human voice without being vulnerable? Businesses are almost never vulnerable, so we have a long way to go, but vulnerability is what’s being listened to and cherished today.

There’s importance in being “lo-fi”—not Hollywood, not polished. We see this backlash in video games, where companies spend millions to make games look like movies, but players say, “No, we like it raw. We want it old school.” There’s a tremendous opportunity to embrace that authenticity.

I’m seeing people lose their edge or identity because they’re becoming over-reliant on AI. What are your thoughts on this?

They’re using AI as a crutch because they never had an edge in the first place.

Great marketing and content isn’t about conformity—it’s about non-conformity. If AI is taking us down a tunnel of mediocrity, great! That’s our opportunity to shine. Our rallying cry should be: “I’m quirky. I’ve got personality. I’m not going to be mediocre or average. I’m going to twist and turn things.” If everyone is zigging, I’m going to zag. That’s always been what makes marketing great.

ChatGPT is not just automated content. With a little tweaking, it can write and create really well in a human voice. How should content creators respond to this?

When ChatGPT came out, I called Shelly Palmer, a famous tech analyst here in America. I said, “What do you think?” He said, “I’m terrified. I’ve blogged almost every day for 15 years. I asked ChatGPT to write a blog post in my voice, and it did a perfect job in three seconds. I am 80% replaced.”

That does seem terrifying, but the more important question is: what is that 20%? That’s his personal brand, his humanity, the investment he’s made in blogging consistently for 15 years, building an audience that matters and cares for him. He has nothing to worry about. He’s known, trusted, beloved, and people will always turn to a human when they don’t know what’s true or real.

I feel the same way. I’m not worried people will stop reading my blog or books or hiring me when they’re confused because of my personal brand. I put in the work. On my blog, every post says “100% human content.” Proof of human is going to be super important going forward.

Do you think there will be more awareness around the responsible use of AI, and does that create a positioning opportunity for businesses with integrity?

It’s an interesting question. We see Gen Z caring more about the planet and environment than any generation ever, yet they’re driving fast fashion brands like Shein and Temu, which are terrible for the environment.

One thing I’ve been thinking about is that to fully participate in the AI world, the next evolution will be AI agents that can do work for you. But for an agent to make hotel and airline reservations, it needs your credit cards, passport, past experiences, and preferences. ChatGPT can now remember this information.

One theory is that there will be a demographic split between “AI in” and “AI out” groups. But someone recently pointed out it might be like social media or smartphones—why would you carry a device that tracks your behavior and tells companies who you are? But we do, because we’ve resigned ourselves to the benefits. People might care more about the personal benefits of giving their lives over to AI than about environmental or ethical concerns.

With all the changes happening, how can we know that humans will still win in the end?

Despite AI’s capabilities, I’m using it extensively to boost my productivity, accomplishing tasks I always hated doing. The traffic to my website is soaring, and financially, I’m having the best year of my entire life—all while AI supposedly should be doing everything I do better.

I think what people appreciate about me is that they know it’s genuinely me. I care deeply, and it means a lot to set an example and lift people up. I want to be bold, honest, and unafraid to help people sort through the truth without trying to sell them programs.

I’m not worried about AI. I see this as the most fascinating time ever. Embrace it, have fun with it, but keep your eyes open about what’s coming next—and rely on your community.

Need a keynote speaker? Mark Schaefer is the most trusted voice in marketing. Your conference guests will buzz about his insights long after your event! Mark is the author of some of the world’s bestselling marketing books, a college educator, and an advisor to many of the world’s largest brands. Contact Mark to have him bring a fun, meaningful, and memorable presentation to your company event or conference.

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Illustration courtesy MidJourney

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