Using AI in Marketing: Hand-holding or Empowerment?
Using AI in marketing can generate a thousand strategies in a second, but it can’t make the one choice that matters.
Strategic Brief for the C-Suite:
AI in marketing strategy has created a “Volume Trap.” By automating the “act” of creation, we have commoditized attention and eroded trust. To lead effectively, CMOs must shift from Managing Output to Curating Intent. The new competitive advantage is not “Speed to Market,” but “Depth of Thought.” Use AI to audit data and handle operations, but maintain absolute sovereignty over the “choices” and “morality” of the brand. In an era of infinite noise, the only thing that stands out is a human voice that actually means what it says.
We have finally built the Infinity Machine.
It’s sitting on your desktop right now. It can write ten thousand blog posts by lunch. It can generate a hundred “market entry strategies” before you’ve finished your first espresso. It can A/B test a million variables while the rest of your team is still arguing about the hex code for a “Submit” button.
For the first time in history, the bottleneck is no longer “the act.” The “doing” is becoming a commodity-a race to the bottom where the cost of production is approaching zero.
But here is the nightmare: as the cost of “doing” drops, the value of “thinking” is becoming dangerously obscured.
We are flooding the zone with noise. We are using AI to generate “human-like” content that feels about as authentic as a cardboard steak. We are mistaking volume for velocity and attention for engagement.
And in this hall of mirrors, the B2B leader is facing a crisis of identity. If the machine can “do” and even “simulate” thinking, what exactly is the leader’s job?
The answer isn’t in the technology. It’s in the gap that the technology can’t cross.
Are we using AI wrong? Why More Content Equals Less Attention
We’ve talked about the “en-shittification” of the internet. It’s a harsh term, but it’s the only one that fits. When everyone has a machine that can produce “good enough” content, “good enough” becomes the new zero.
The math of marketing has fundamentally shifted. In the old world, the barrier to entry was effort. You had to hire writers, designers, and strategists. The sheer friction of creation acted as a filter.
AI has removed that filter.
Now, your prospect’s inbox isn’t just crowded; it’s a graveyard of automated empathy. Every “personalized” reach-out follows the same probabilistic pattern. Every LinkedIn “thought leadership” post sounds like it was distilled through the same lossy compression of a dozen other articles.
This is the Volume Paradox: the more “content” we create, the less “connection” we achieve.
As a leader, if you are measuring your AI strategy by the volume of output, you are participating in your own obsolescence. You are building a “leaky bucket” business. You might be winning the game of “impressions,” but you are losing the battle for trust.
And as we’ve established in our deep dives into CAC and outbound sales, once trust is gone, your Customer Acquisition Cost becomes infinite.
The Automation of Doing vs. The “Sanctity” of Thinking
Strategy is not a list of activities. Strategy is a set of choices. It is the art of deciding what not to do.
AI is terrible at choices.
An LLM is a prediction engine. It tells you what word is most likely to come next based on everything it has already seen. It is, by definition, a tool for conventional thinking. It cannot take a “creative leap” because a leap requires leaving the safety of the data pool.
When you ask AI for a marketing strategy, it gives you the average of all strategies. It gives you the “safe” play. But in a crowded market, the “safe” play is the most dangerous one you can make.
The “act” of thinking is being automated, but the “intent” behind the thinking cannot be.
The Strategy vs. Execution Divide:
- AI (The Doer): Optimizes for what is probable. It manages the “digital supply chain” of activity.
- The Leader (The Thinker): Optimizes for what is possible. They manage the “digital supply chain of intent.”
A leader who tries to compete with AI on “doing” will lose. A leader who uses AI to outsource their “thinking” will fail. The only path forward is to treat AI as a creative enhancer, a machine that handles the entropy so you can focus on the soul of the message.
The Strategic Leader’s New Mandate: Taste, Morality, and Choice
If “doing” is automated, then the leader’s role shifts from “Manager of Operations” to “Curator of Taste.”
We see this in the evolution of AI-powered marketing. The winners won’t be the ones with the best prompts; they will be the ones with the best “taste.”
Taste is the ability to recognize what is unremarkable and dare to kill it. It is the “moral backbone” of a campaign. It is the understanding that just because you can target a prospect 100 times a day doesn’t mean you should.
The New Leadership Checklist:
- Morality over Metrics: Does this automated campaign align with the “principles of the leaders guiding the message”?
- Anxiety Quelling: Does our strategy help a buyer solve their “nightmare,” or does it just add to the noise?
- Experimental Sovereignty: Are we using AI to audit our assumptions, or are we letting it dictate our direction?
In our analysis of telecommunications lead generation, we noted that buyers aren’t looking for “bandwidth”; they are looking for “insurance against disaster”. A machine can list bandwidth specs. Only a human thinker can understand the visceral fear of a three-minute outage and weave a strategy that quells that specific anxiety.
The Digital Supply Chain of Intent: Where Strategy Meets Execution
Think of your marketing strategy as a circuit. The strategy is the blueprint; the execution is the current.
Most organizations have a “broken circuit” because they have handed the execution over to AI without maintaining the “intent” throughout the chain.
When you use AI to “scale” your strategy, you are essentially asking a thousand different actors to play the same role without a script. The result is a fractured brand voice. The “data lake” of your customer insights becomes a “swamp” because you are injecting it with unverified, AI-generated noise.
To act as a leader in this environment, you must oversee the Recursion of Trust.
You must ask: “If we automate this touchpoint, does it strengthen or weaken the circuit of trust between us and the buyer?”
If you are using AI to “hack” your way into Answer Engine Optimization (AEO) by flooding the web with mentions, you are gambling with your long-term reputation for a short-term ranking boost. The machine might get you the “mention,” but it won’t get you the “sale” if the work behind the mention is subpar.
AI as a “Creative Enhancer” Not a “Creative Replacer”
The most powerful use case for AI in strategy isn’t “authoring.” It is “auditing”.
Leaders should use AI in marketing to:
- Audit Systems: How does our website really stack up against competitors when viewed through the lens of probabilistic buyer behavior?
- Identify Blind Spots: Use RAG (Retrieval-Augmented Generation) to find the “nightmares” your customers are talking about on Reddit or in support tickets that your internal team has ignored.
- Break Conventional Thinking: Ask the AI for the “standard” approach, then explicitly choose the opposite. Use the machine to define the “box” so you can step outside of it.
This is the “Human-in-the-Loop” model, but it’s not about checking for typos. It’s about Taste-in-the-Loop.
It’s about recognizing that while the AI can give you “past answers,” it can never tell you what can be “created”. Creation is a human monopoly.
The Cost of Outsourcing Your Mind
There is a subtle danger in the AI era: “Cognitive Atrophy.”
When we rely on machines to summarize every report, write every email, and draft every strategy, we lose the “lived experience and experimentation” that true knowledge requires.
We become “LLM clones,” producing a derivative of a derivative until the message has no “soul” left.
In the pieces on AI and Security, we discussed how “perception is breaking folks”. In marketing, perception is everything. If your prospects perceive that no one is “thinking” on the other side of your brand, they will stop thinking about you entirely.
The “quick wins” of automation are ruining the economy of attention. The long-term players-the ones playing the “long game” like Nvidia or OpenAI-understand that technology is just a tool to amplify a core human vision.
Conclusion: Reclaiming the Captain’s Chair
How does a leader act when the act of doing is automated?
They act with Precision. They act with Morality. They act as the Guardian of the Brand’s Soul.
Stop trying to be a better “doer” than the machine. You aren’t. You can’t outrun entropy, but you can make it work for you.
The future of marketing strategy isn’t about “integrating AI.” It’s about “insulating Thought.” It’s about creating a “trust-based and experiment-based” environment where your team is encouraged to take the risks that the machine is too “safe” to suggest.
Don’t let your organizational structure become a “relic of a bygone era”. The machines are getting smarter, but they will never be “human.” They will never feel the weight of a missed target or the joy of a “promise kept.”
Lead with your “thinking.” Let the machine handle the “doing.”
Because at the end of the day, revenue waits for no one, but trust-the kind that only a thinking human can build-is what keeps the lights on.