Thursday, March 5, 2026

AI … What Happens After the Hype?

 

AI's next phase

I keep seeing the same AI demos, just remixed. A model writes a poem, draws a picture, argues with confidence it hasn’t earned. It’s impressive in the way a street performer is impressive: crowd gathers, phones come out, everyone claps, then we all move on and forget the name.

That phase is fading.

The next phase of AI is less about imagination and more about infrastructure. Less “look what it can do” and more “can it run all day without breaking.” Power, memory, deployment … those unsexy words are starting to matter more than clever prompts and viral demos. The future isn’t being decided by who can make a chatbot sound the most human. It’s being decided by who can keep the lights on and the latency down.

You can feel the shift inside companies. The AI that actually survives doesn’t feel magical. It feels like software. It’s embedded into workflows, half-invisible, mildly annoying, and useful enough that no one wants to turn it off. Enterprises aren’t adopting AI because it’s inspiring. They’re adopting it because it saves time, reduces errors, and doesn’t call in sick.

This is where the romance drains out of the room. At scale, AI stops being a muse and starts being an appliance. And appliances live or die on reliability. Nobody brags about their dishwasher’s personality. They just want it to work every night without flooding the kitchen.

At the same time, AI is slipping out of the screen and into the physical world. Warehouses, factories, logistics … places where nobody cares about clever language but everyone cares about reliability. It’s less “humanoid robot walking like a toddler” and more “this machine never drops a box and never asks for a raise.” Quiet automation doing one task forever without complaining. Boring. Profitable. Real.

Who benefits? It won’t always the loudest AI brands or the ones with the best demos. Often it’s the companies doing the dull, foundational work: chips, power, data centers, deployment tools, integration layers. The ones who know where the breaker box is. When things flicker, suddenly they’re the most important people in the room.

And now the sorting begins. Winners and losers. Which is just another way of saying gravity is back. Not every model survives. Not every startup becomes a platform. Revenue, reliability, and maintenance matter again. The market has stopped being impressed by potential and started asking annoying adult questions.

This phase is less hype, more consequences. AI isn’t replacing imagination. It’s replacing chaos. Fewer fireworks. More wiring. That’s usually how technology actually changes the world: quietly, inconveniently, and all at once.

_________________________ 

NOTE: I’m still curious. I still think AI will reshape how we work, build, and automate the boring parts of life. But I’m no longer impressed by cleverness alone. Cleverness without infrastructure is a beautiful thought with no spine, collapsing the second it has to stand on its own.

Suggested Reading:

QUICK BRIEFING: Generative AI vs Agentic AI

Why Every Copywriter & Content Writer Needs an AI Usage Policy 

The Adolescence of Technology

Generative AI: TO BE (a tool) OR NOT TO BE (a tool)?

Don't Let AI Kill Your Analog Intelligence



Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Beverage Bucket

 

Dunkin' Beverage Bucket

Dunkin' just launched a 48-ounce coffee bucket.

The Beverage Bucket (with a handle) is priced so you can hydrate like a suburban livestock animal on your morning commute and still pocket change from a 10-dollar bill.

"Beverage Bucket." The name grabbed my attention: “bucket.” Not “carafe.” Not “jug.” The word “bucket” used to imply utility. You got water from a well with it. Now it’s a lifestyle accessory.

We’ve skipped past “cup,” blown through “large,” laughed in the face of “extra large,” and landed squarely in hardware-store chic. What’s next? A kiddie pool of cold brew?

Oddly, however, calling it a bucket feels honest in a way that marketing rarely is. No artisanal backstory. No whisper about origin farms. Just aggressively honest. Like, yes, this is excessive. Here’s the handle. Commit.

I sort of get it. In an economy where everything feels smaller and more expensive, a bucket reads like a win. Look at all that abundance. It’s less a drink and more a declaration: “I will not be rationed.” It’s Costco energy in liquid form.

And in our social media driven world, a bucket fits the feed. It’s absurd enough to grab attention ... subtlety never goes viral. A sensible 12-ounce cup doesn’t stand a chance against a beverage container you could use to bail water out of a canoe.

Anyway, I’ll probably try one.

Not because I need 48 ounces of coffee. But because I want to see what it feels like to carry my morning around like construction equipment.

Sometimes you have to hold the absurdity in your own hand.

Preferably with a handle.


Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Prospect Participation

 

When writing, leave a little air in the room.

Because the moment your reader starts painting their own picture, the message stops being yours and becomes theirs.

And that’s when it sticks.

Your job is to sow the seeds. And then step back and let their brain do what it’s built to do.





Monday, March 2, 2026

Will my job exist in the future?


 

A fellow copywriter said something to me recently that stuck.

“We’re in a job that won’t exist in the future.”

Se wasn’t being dramatic. She was being practical. Her reasoning boiled down to a simple question: who will care about great copy in the future?

At first, that sounds like heresy coming from inside the church. Copywriting is persuasion. Persuasion is timeless. Humans don’t suddenly stop responding to words.

But the longer I sat with it, the more I realized she wasn’t really talking about words. She was talking about where power will be coming from in the near future.

For most of advertising history, copy mattered because access mattered. If you controlled the message inside a limited set of media channels (TV, radio, print) you could shape perception. Great copy amplified that advantage.

But today, access is on its way to becoming infinite. We don’t have a media shortage problem. And that trend will continue. There are more outlets than anyone could possibly pay attention to. More brands publishing. More creators posting. More “content” than time. Audiences are becoming increasingly decentralized, fracturing into micro-communities, niches, group chats, and algorithmically-curated feeds.

And in that environment, traditional copy loses leverage.

Not because words don’t work, but because ownership of attention has shifted.

Influencers will continue to grow in power, carrying more trust than institutions. Already, word of mouth travels faster than campaigns: a single TikTok can out-deliver a million-dollar launch. And increasingly, AI summarizes, remixes, and reframes whatever you say.

Which brings us to the uncomfortable truth: great copy in traditional media can’t reposition/save a mediocre product anymore. In fact, it might not even get a chance to try.

Because what really moves the needle now is product quality experienced and shared. Increasingly, people aren’t discovering brands through ads as much as they are discovering them through other people. Through recommendations. Through screenshots. Through stories told without the brand’s permission. That’s where the real persuasion is settling in for the future.

And AI is accelerating this shift. It’s not just generating copy, it’s flattening it. When everyone can produce “good enough” words instantly, the value of words alone drops. The differentiator moves upstream. To the product. To the experience. To the story customers tell for you.

The Long Term View

So, does copywriting disappear?

No. But the role changes.

Copy stops being the hero and becomes the translator. The clarifier. The connective tissue between what a product actually does and how people actually talk about it.

The future copywriter isn’t a clever wordsmith hired to grab attention and ignite desire. They’re a strategist shaping narratives that already exist in the market … and making them easier to spread.

Great copy in the future won’t be about clever lines or viral hooks. It’ll be about:

    • Understanding the customer better than the customer understands themselves
    • Articulating truth so clearly it spreads
    • Creating language people want to borrow, not avoid

So, the job doesn’t vanish. The illusion does. The illusion that persuasion starts at the headline. The illusion that marketing can out-run reality.

In the future, the best copy won’t convince people a product is good. It'll simply make it easier for people to notice that it already is.


The Short Term View

AI doesn’t kill this job. It exposes who never really had it.

AI can generate words. It can remix patterns. It can mimic tone.

What it can’t do -- at least not yet -- is decide what deserves to be said.

That decision still comes from judgment. From empathy. From strategy. From taste. And these have always been a scarce resources. Resources that strong, experienced copywriters know how to access.

So, for the time being … No, copywriting isn’t going away.



AI … What Happens After the Hype?

  I keep seeing the same AI demos, just remixed. A model writes a poem, draws a picture, argues with confidence it hasn’t earned. It’s impre...