While AI video tools can generate visually interesting ads cheaply and capture views, they currently lack the authentic creative spark needed for true brand building. Their value lies in quick, low-cost content, making them a performance marketing tool rather than an asset for creating a lasting, memorable brand identity.
The proliferation of AI-generated content has eroded consumer trust to a new low. People increasingly assume that what they see is not real, creating a significant hurdle for authentic brands that must now work harder than ever to prove their genuineness and cut through the skepticism.
As CGI becomes photorealistic, spotting fake hardware demos is harder. An unexpected giveaway has emerged: the use of generic, AI-generated captions and descriptions. This stilted language, intended to sound professional, can ironically serve as a watermark of inauthenticity, undermining the credibility of the visuals it accompanies.
AI video tools like Sora optimize for high production value, but popular internet content often succeeds due to its message and authenticity, not its polish. The assumption that better visuals create better engagement is a risky product bet, as it iterates on an axis that users may not value.
AI in creative doesn't have to dilute a brand. Coca-Cola's successful holiday ad used AI, but its high brand recall (83%) was driven by focusing on iconic assets like Santa. The AI execution was effective because it was largely invisible, proving the creative idea still drives the ad, not the tech.
AI is primarily a cost-saving tool, not a substitute for nuanced creative direction. Furthermore, a cultural backlash is emerging among younger consumers on social media who perceive AI content as inauthentic, actively criticizing brands like MrBeast and Liquid Death for using it.
Generative AI allows any marketer to quickly produce mediocre content. This saturation makes buyers more discerning and creates a significant opportunity for brands that invest in genuinely excellent, insightful content to stand out and build trust. Quality, not quantity, becomes the key differentiator.
As AI makes creating complex visuals trivial, audiences will become skeptical of content like surrealist photos or polished B-roll. They will increasingly assume it is AI-generated rather than the result of human skill, leading to lower trust and engagement.
As AI floods the internet with generic content, consumers are growing skeptical of corporate voices. This is accelerating a shift in trust from faceless brands to authentic individuals and creators. B2B marketing must adapt by building strategies around these human-led channels, which now often outperform traditional brand-led marketing.
As AI tools become commoditized, the exponential differentiator for marketing success will be subjective taste. Teams must double down on unscalable, creative elements that AI cannot replicate, as this is what will truly stand out and build a memorable brand.
While AI is a powerful tool for generating tactical marketing assets like ad copy, it should not replace human collaboration for foundational strategic work. Core brand positioning requires the emotional nuance, debate, and judgment that can only come from a human team.