According to Higgsfield AI, a new market is emerging where Fortune 500 brands are bypassing large ad agencies and hiring small (10-30 person) AI-native firms to create social media commercials. This demonstrates a strategic shift towards agile, specialized partners for AI-driven creative production.

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With AI workflows generating thousands of creative variations in minutes, the primary job is no longer the manual act of creation. The critical skill becomes curation: building the right automated systems upfront and then strategically selecting winning assets from a massive pool of options.

AI video creative is no longer theoretical. E-commerce company Ridge reports that it is running full-blown AI-generated videos that are "winners in the ad account." These assets now command up to a third of the company's total ad spend, proving their real-world performance.

The largest advertisers on platforms like Meta launch over 10,000 new creatives a year, equating to more than 40 per workday. This massive scale of experimentation is manually impossible for most companies, creating a clear market need for AI platforms that automate and scale video production.

Upcoming tools like Sora automate the script-to-video workflow, commoditizing the technical production process. This forces creative agencies to evolve. Their value will no longer be in execution but in their ability to generate a high volume of brilliant, brand-aligned ideas and manage creative strategy.

For new brands, directly allocating advertising budgets to platforms like Meta can yield a better return than hiring traditional ad agencies. These platforms' powerful algorithms and reach can develop more effective campaigns than human-led creative teams, democratizing access to high-quality advertising.

Higgsfield's CEO notes a key trend: the best-performing AI-generated ads don't try to pass as real. They lean into a distinct AI aesthetic, suggesting that audiences are not only accepting but are also engaged by this new visual style, prioritizing creativity over photorealism.

Agencies are optimized for efficiency, stifling the creative experimentation needed for platforms like Meta. Top-performing brands employ an in-house strategist whose sole job is generating a high volume of diverse, "wacky" ad concepts—a function that can't be effectively outsourced.

While large enterprises remain cautious about ceding creative control to AI, small and mid-sized businesses see a breakthrough. AI overcomes the economic barriers to content production, enabling them to execute personalization and campaigns at a scale that was previously out of reach.

The real economic value of generative video lies in advertising, not filmmaking. Unlike movies with finite consumption, there is unlimited demand for personalized, diverse ad content. This makes advertising a perfect fit for the technology's scalable content creation capabilities.

AI enables smaller, more efficient teams, shifting the ideal CMO profile. Founders now prefer marketing leaders who are hands-on brand builders and storytellers over those who are primarily large-scale people managers. The "CMO with a team of 5-15 plus AI and agencies" is the new model.