Some interesting observations on AI and Marketing from Colleen Scollans.
Consultant, Advisor & CMO Coach | Public Speaker | Marketing, Customer Experience & MarTech | Chief Marketing Officer & Digital Strategist
This is an interesting chart from BCG (link to the full report in the comments). Some of my thoughts on article and how we see it playing out in our sector. ➡️ Content generation offers significant opportunities. But it requires upfront work (e.g., positioning, message libraries, segmentation) to take full advantage of the time efficiencies generative AI can bring. We built our Capsule Messaging Collection™ for this very purpose (link in comments). ➡️ Generative AI will not eliminate the need for creativity and human touch. From BCG, "Over 70% [of CMOs] are concerned about GenAI's impact on creativity and brand voice, two domains in which humans continue to outperform algorithms." For our clients, the importance of building their brands as trusted sources of content, purpose-led, and as essential communities has never been greater. As a result, organizations are thinking much more about how they tell their story in new creative and emotive ways. ➡️ Social is being flipped on its head. From BCG, "Many of the operational aspects of social media will become automated and commoditized, but the increased volume of content might make it harder for a brand to stand out. That, in turn, will put more pressure on marketers to generate fresh creative ideas and increase the quality of the experiences that AI tools generate. In other words, efficiency will put more pressure on effectiveness." A large percentage of scholarly publisher's social media content is posting new articles. We have partnered with organizations to automate production, freeing up marketing and editorial time for high-value social content. ➡️Personalization requires a step change. Grom BCG, "Marketers also need to rethink how to conduct testing, because their dominant operating approach—running campaigns and periodic promotions—doesn't generate the data needed to inform a personalization engine." When our clients start to think seriously about personalization, it is not just about adding the right new tools (although that is important!). It is also a radically different approach to planning, team construction, ways of working, and more. Recognizing this is about transformation and not just a technology project helps organizations balance agile experiments with real meaningful change. ➡️ Data suggests marketing satisfaction in Scholarly Publishing is bleak. Does AI bring hope? From BCG, "Over the past decade, many marketing organizations have become increasingly chopped up into specialists. This forces more handoffs, makes coordination tougher, and limits career advancement options. AI has the power to change this structure by essentially providing every worker with a virtual assistant that can take out the toil and increase the joy of the work while also unlocking more opportunities for a worker to use available data. Armed with these expanded capabilities, marketing team members can broaden their skills, expand the scope of their work, and accomplish more in closer-knit teams."