The skills required for effective AI prompting—providing clear roles, context, and constraints—are directly transferable to human interaction. By learning to communicate with machines, marketers inadvertently train themselves in the fundamentals of clear delegation and management.
A significant portion of marketers (36%) think AI will eliminate jobs, yet only 20% fear for their own role. This disconnect highlights a widespread belief that they will personally adapt and benefit from AI, seeing it as an opportunity (70%) rather than a personal threat.
While video is a top priority for marketers, AI video tool adoption is low at 22%. However, with 69% expressing a desire to learn more, there's a significant readiness gap. This indicates the market is waiting for the technology to mature from a "toy" into a reliable professional "tool."
The primary obstacle for marketers adopting AI is a perceived lack of time to learn it. This creates a paradox, as 90% of current AI users report that its biggest benefit is saving time. This highlights the need to frame AI education as a time-investment with massive returns.
The percentage of marketers using AI daily has surged from 37% to 60% in just one year, indicating a massive behavioral shift. With 82% planning to increase their usage further, non-adopters are quickly becoming a small minority and risk being left behind.
Google Gemini has quietly become the second most-used AI platform for marketers, with usage surging from 33% to 51% in a year. This rapid adoption is heavily influenced by Google's strategic decision to bundle it into its ubiquitous Workspace ecosystem, creating a powerful distribution advantage.
