While voice interfaces will grow, the next truly seismic platform shift will be the adoption of AR glasses. This change will be as profound as the transition from television to the smartphone, fundamentally altering how we consume content and interact with the digital world.
To build a lasting brand, creators must define their value independently of any single platform. The core mission and value delivered to the audience should be clear enough to be translated from YouTube to TikTok to the next immersive medium, ensuring longevity beyond temporary trends.
As AI bots inflate engagement metrics like views and likes, these numbers will become meaningless. The only way to measure marketing success will be to track direct business outcomes, such as sales or leads. If the desired results happen, the inflated metrics don't matter.
We incorrectly equate authenticity with low-production values or avoiding technology. True authenticity comes from the creator's intent and vision. An AI-generated film can be as authentic as a raw vlog if it genuinely reflects the creator's purpose. The tools, from a canvas to AI, are irrelevant.
AI agents will control vast amounts of consumer purchasing intent, similar to Google Search. This gives platforms like Google and OpenAI the opportunity to move beyond advertising and vertically integrate, offering services like tax preparation or insurance directly, thereby competing with their current top customers.
Many people's negative opinions on AI-generated content stem from a deep-seated fear of their jobs becoming obsolete. This emotional reaction will fade as AI content becomes indistinguishable from human-created content, making the current debate a temporary, fear-based phenomenon.
To survive platform shifts, creators need a dual strategy. First, aggressively grow their brand on today's dominant platforms to build leverage. Second, actively experiment with and learn emerging technologies to be ready for the transition, avoiding the fate of MySpace stars who missed Facebook.
The most effective way to identify emerging trends is not to predict them but to act like a music A&R scout. Go where early adopters gather and observe their genuine reactions to new products or ideas. The audience's authentic energy signals what's about to become big.
Social media thrives on the psychological reward of posting for human validation. As AI bots become indistinguishable from real users, this feedback loop breaks, undermining the fundamental incentive to post and threatening the entire social media model which is predicated on authentic human receipt.
AI agents will automate most routine purchases based on pre-set user preferences. The new marketing battleground won't be the store shelf but becoming the default choice in a user's AI settings. Advertising's role will shift to persuading users to change these defaults, making its impact instantly trackable.
The first content on any new platform is usually a direct port of the old one, like radio-style reads on early television. True, native innovation only happens after a period of experimentation and understanding the new medium's unique capabilities. Expect early AR content to look like 2D videos in glasses.
