Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2025-07-24 22:30:00| Fast Company

Savvy marketing leaders recognize that AI is a powerful tool that can be used to reshape how teams operate. But even as AI tools rapidly improve, there are still limitations in todays technology that demand titration in how its used. The best marketers are those who understand how far to push the AI envelope within their business and market context. And now is the time for marketing leaders to expand their existing skill set and develop their AI intuitionwhen to use it, when to lose itto make the most of AIs transformative power and deliver the best marketing work possible. By combining broad AI fluency through adoption with a willingness to remain agile as the technology matures, teams can thrive and make the best use of AI for the biggest impact. With that in mind, here are AI-related dos and donts every marketing leader should know. AI as a research assistant, not a business strategist If teams dont understand the context in which their business is operating, they wont be effective marketers. The best marketing leaders are absolute experts on their own companies, with knowledge of the details of their offerings, customers, competitors, and broad industry trends. When marketers understand their business this deeply, they can build programs that align with company priorities, connect with customers, and fuel their companys growth, making it easier to secure budget and executive buy-in. Do use AI as a cheat sheet to stay on top of the market and competitors, and to improve business intelligence across departments, like finance and product. AI can analyze mountains of internal and external data and content it would otherwise be impossible to comb through, like companies annual reports, customer and competitor earnings, press releases, and newsletters. At Guild, my teams turn to AI for tasks such as market sizing, benchmarking against other marketing organizations for budgeting, and business planning and competitive analysis. AI can also be helpful with pricing research and gauging customer insights. Dont expect AI to replace the nuanced understanding of a business’s priorities or its context. Ultimately, teams should create their own strategies, but using AI with business context will make those strategies better and more complete. AI cant read betweenthe lines or predict the futureonly meaningful conversations, deep curiosity, and astute understanding of one’s business can do that. Use AI as a production designer, so creatives can shine Campaign work in marketing can quickly become rote, tying designers and writers up with tasks that are far from strategic or highly creative. All variants of ad design or ad copy can be generated by AI. It can take a first pass at any blog content, social media graphics, or resizing assets for different platforms. Let AI bring ideas to life faster and more efficiently to free up creatives to focus on developing breakthrough campaign concepts and compelling brand stories. Do use AI to rapidly prototype visuals, generate multiple design variations, and handle time-consuming production tasks. AI excels at replicating creative direction so take advantage and use in moments where multiple iterations are needed. Dont rely on AI for creative inception or novel campaign ideas. This is where creatives shine. Use AI to handle the heavy lifting and transform the creative work into end product downstream so creative strategy and brand decisions are owned by creatives themselves. Use AI to accelerate pointed insights With AI, leaders can access an abundance of real-time data, turning marketing into a velocity engine for optimization and peak performance. The speed to insights around whats working and what isnt, along with the ability to move with agility, is where the real power of AI lies for marketing leaders. Whether thats analyzing customer data to spot engagement patterns, detailed segmentation in email open rates, or digging into a competitors recent launch, AI helps leaders get to the root of why this matters faster than ever before. Do use AI to quickly analyze performance data, competitor portfolios, or deep segmentation analysis. Be specific and give AI the full context in your prompts. Instead of asking How did this campaign perform? try What is variance by audience segment in each of these ad headline click-through rates? This is a case where AI can be a game-changer when giving pointed insights. Dont treat AI-generated insights as final answers. AI may be able to determine if certain creative elements performed well, but it cant determine if that approach aligns with your strategy and broader business objective. Just because AI quickly spots a pattern doesn’t mean it requires changing the work itself. Successful marketers will need to develop the skills to quickly decipher what insights matter and why. The marketing leaders who will truly shine in the AI era will be those who master the art of balancing technology with their human instincts. In order to be successful, theyll need to leverage AIs power as it exists today, and be agile enough to adapt as the rate of improvement around that technology shifts. Today, that means letting AI handle much of the heavy liftingresearch, data analysis, creative production workto improve expertise and create leverage across the marketing organization. As AI technologies rapidly evolve and mature, the best leaders will dynamically change with it so that their organizations can deliver better, faster, and more novel results for the business. Rebecca Biestman is chief marketing officer at Guild.


Category: E-Commerce

 

LATEST NEWS

2025-07-24 20:49:12| Fast Company

A new survey from neurodiversity advocacy and support nonprofit Understood suggests that the true percentage of neurodivergent adults may be higher than expected. So why is work still so rigid?


Category: E-Commerce

 

2025-07-24 20:39:25| Fast Company

Good news: Vine might be coming back. Bad news: in AI form, courtesy of Elon Musk. “We’re bringing back Vine, but in AI form,” Musk announced on X on Thursday. He did not elaborate further on his plans. Were bringing back Vine, but in AI form— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) July 24, 2025 Reactions to the news were mixed. One X user commented: “Worst combination of words Ive ever seen.” Another added: No one wants this. Worst combination of words Ive ever seen https://t.co/dwclaLM1dE— j aubrey (@jaubreyYT) July 24, 2025 Others, however, were more open to the idea. Could be interesting to see what AI comes up with and evolves into, one X user wrote. Could be interesting to see what AI comes up with and evolves into.— Seth Pascale (@sethpascale) July 24, 2025 Before TikTok, there was Vine. At its peak, the app boasted 200 million active users and introduced the culture to classics like and they were roommates” and hurricane tortilla.” Vine allowed users to upload only 6-second clips, laying the groundwork for TikToks current short-form dominance. It launched the careers of many of todays biggest influencers and originated several of TikToks most viral trends, including LeBron James and the ALS ice bucket challenge. X acquired Vine from its founders in 2012 for $30 million, but shut it down just five years later, citing commercial viability. The Vine archive remained available for another two years until it was officially discontinued in 2019. Musk, who bought Twitter in 2022 and renamed it X, has long been vocal about potentially reviving the platform. In 2022, he posted a poll: Bring back Vine? with almost 70% voting in favor. Even MrBeast replied: If you did that and actually competed with tik tok thatd be hilarious. Bring back Vine?— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) October 31, 2022 Musk posted the same poll again last year, once more receiving an overwhelmingly positive response. YouTuber-turned-professional boxer Jake Paul, who got his first six seconds of fame on Vine, commented: Do it Elon Ill help however I can and round up all the og viners. Do it Elon Ill help however I can and round up all the og viners— Jake Paul (@jakepaul) April 17, 2024 In January, Musk confirmed that his team was “looking into it” at the same time TikTok was facing a potential ban in the United States. But now that fans have heard his plans, they might be reconsidering. What “Vine, but in AI form” actually means is still unclear. Best case scenario: perhaps an AI-powered algorithm. Worst case: an endless scroll of AI-generated slop. For now, Ill stick with classic Vine compilations on YouTube.


Category: E-Commerce

 

Latest from this category

25.07The weirdest Venmo request yet: The U.S. government
25.07Trumps budget cuts may hand Spain a scientific prize worth billions
25.07Think your ChatGPT therapy sessions are private? Think again.
25.07Everything to know about Tea, the viral and controversial app that lets women mark men as red flags
25.07This Florida companys imaging tool helps speed up natural disaster recovery efforts
25.07Largest U.S. homebuilder: Housing market shift still pointing towards bigger incentives
25.07Pura Scents recalls more than 850,000 diffuser covers over ingestion hazard to children
25.07Trump says he likes a strong dollar, but a weaker one is good for inflation
E-Commerce »

All news

26.07Millennial Homeowners at Last: How Trumps New Policy Could Lead to Trading Bitcoin and Gold for Your Dream House
25.07Stocks Rising into Afternoon on US-Global Trade Deal Optimism, Earnings Outlook Boosts, Lower Long-Term Rates, Electrification/Gambling Sector Strength
25.07The weirdest Venmo request yet: The U.S. government
25.07Trumps budget cuts may hand Spain a scientific prize worth billions
25.07Think your ChatGPT therapy sessions are private? Think again.
25.07Monday's Earnings/Economic Releases of Note; Market Movers
25.07Everything to know about Tea, the viral and controversial app that lets women mark men as red flags
25.07LIDR: When a Great Setup Still Doesnt Feel Right
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .