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Ironically, I’m using AI to help me write this blog about AI. That might sound like cheating to some, but to me it’s simply progress. The truth is, AI isn’t replacing creativity; it’s reshaping how we approach it. And just like every new tool before it, once we get past the resistance, it becomes second nature.
Forty years ago, accountants started using calculators. Later, they moved on to spreadsheets. At the time, both tools were controversial. “That’s cheating,” some said. “You won’t really know the numbers if you let a machine do it for you.” But today, can you imagine an accountant without Excel? The same thing is happening in marketing right now with AI.
Every industry has gone through a version of this story.
Each innovation sparked pushback. “This will put us out of work.” “This isn’t real craft.” And yet, each tool ended up creating more opportunity, not less.
It’s important to be clear: AI is not a magic wand. It doesn’t replace human creativity, empathy, or strategy. When AI started to gain momentum in 2024 I enrolled on a course to accelerate my learning. The big take away for me was to treat AI as you would a new employee. What ever AI platform you use, it takes time to be 'inducted' and start to learn about you. One year later and I'm finding my new employee incredibly knowledgeable and able to produce valuable content.
What AI does brilliantly is accelerate the work. It helps with:
But just like spreadsheets don’t make accountants redundant, AI doesn’t make marketers irrelevant. Instead, it raises the bar. The people who thrive are the ones who can combine the efficiency of AI with the nuance of human judgment.
If you think AI is still in the future, think again. It’s already here in everyday marketing:
The key is knowing where to let AI take the wheel — and where human expertise needs to stay in charge.
Many copywriters I know say using AI is cheating. And I get their point. If someone simply copies and pastes AI’s raw output and calls it finished, that’s not craftsmanship.
But here’s the reality: AI on its own is often bland, generic, and soulless. It can’t fully understand a brand’s story, its tone of voice, or the emotions that drive an audience to act.
The real skill lies in using AI as a partner. Asking the right questions. Feeding it the right prompts. Then, editing, shaping, and polishing the raw material into something that truly resonates.
Think of it this way: AI is like an intern who works at lightning speed but lacks experience. Left alone, it won’t produce great work. Guided well, it can supercharge your output.
The future of marketing isn’t about choosing humans or AI. It’s about combining the strengths of both.
When you put those together, you get the best of both worlds: smarter campaigns, faster execution, and more meaningful connections.
Clients often ask me, “Do you use AI in your work?” And my answer is, “Yes, but responsibly.”
Here’s what I mean by that:
This approach means you get the benefits of AI — speed, scale, cost savings — without losing the human creativity and experience that makes marketing effective.
AI is not the enemy of creativity; it’s the evolution of it. The best marketers won’t be replaced by AI — but they will be replaced by marketers who know how to use AI.
Just as accountants can’t imagine life without spreadsheets, I believe marketers in the near future won’t imagine life without AI. It’s not about replacing humans; it’s about enabling us to do our best work faster, smarter, and with more impact.
So the question isn’t “Should we use AI?” The real question is “How do we use it responsibly, creatively, and strategically?”
And that’s where the future of marketing lies.