If you’ve been in marketing for a decade or two you’ve already survived big shifts: desktop to mobile-first, mass media to targeted
advertising, outbound marketing to inbound marketing, etc.
Each shift shook up how you market, but AI is starting
to change who can do the work, how fast it gets done, and what skills actually
matter.
And this shift is dramatically faster. Faster in a way that
makes you question whether your brain is still running the current version of
the operating system. You get comfortable with a tool and, two days later, it
feels like you’re explaining Myspace to a teenager.
This creates the illusion that everyone else is up to speed
and you’re lagging behind.
Execution used to be the edge. If you could actually do the
work -- write, design, build -- you stood out. Now “pretty good” is everywhere.
It’s like decent coffee: once rare, now unavoidable.
And that’s a strange thing to watch if you spent years honing
your craft. There’s no ceremony when a skill loses leverage. Experience still
matters, just less. You’re not automatically ahead … you’re just earlier,
trying to update your skills without discarding the parts that still work (taste,
judgment and deciding what’s worth doing in the first place).
All this logically leads to compression: fewer people doing
more … value clustering around the people who can aim all this capability in
the right direction.
Which leaves us in an odd spot today. Still expected to
perform while the ground shifts under our feet like a treadmill that
occasionally changes speed just to keep things interesting.
Maybe I’m overthinking it. Wouldn’t be the first time.
Or maybe this is just what it feels like to go through a major
shift while still being expected to hit deadlines and sound like you know
what you’re doing.
Probably both.
The only thing I’m reasonably confident about is that the
advantage is moving. Away from grinding, toward choosing. Away from doing,
toward deciding.