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Here's a question a lot of us are asking ourselves today. How do marketers build genuine, durable trust when the cost of generating massive volumes of AI content is basically zero? How can you argue for making humanly-crafted content in small quantities When it's so easy to have AI pump it out in big quantities?
The hard truth is that humans are wired to notice what other humans do. Meaningful communication with buyers contains elements that just don't scale - this takes more than a trivial amount of work. But that is precisely why you need to do them.
A new book came out in 2025, called Human Centered Marketing: How to Connect with Audiences in the Age of AI. Even though Gen AI that's all around looks set to marginalize content marketing, this book predicts that AI's knock-on effects will bring old retro practices back into vogue. If Wired Magazine were to meme it using their Wired/Tired/Expired phrasing, it might say that
Humans Interacting with no machines = Expired
Machines Monopolizing Interactions = Tired
Human-Human interaction via Machine = Wired
The book also argues that marketing & communications folks have to make different types of content for segments of the buyer journey, all held to different goals and different time horizons. Don't dump random content on social channels. Like instruments in a score, your pieces need to work together—not add noise.
It also said being Human-Centered extends to where and how we use our messages. Our leaders have to go to trade shows, make podcasts, meet people, and have real conversations. Trust grows when customers feel seen and heard.
The author of the book is by day, a speaker and is currently Head of Lifecycle Marketing at Canva. By night, she's a Singer, actor, and fitness fiend. Let's go to Northern California to talk with Ashley Faus.
Links to everything mentioned in the show are on the Funnel Reboot site's page for this episode.
By Glenn SchmelzleHere's a question a lot of us are asking ourselves today. How do marketers build genuine, durable trust when the cost of generating massive volumes of AI content is basically zero? How can you argue for making humanly-crafted content in small quantities When it's so easy to have AI pump it out in big quantities?
The hard truth is that humans are wired to notice what other humans do. Meaningful communication with buyers contains elements that just don't scale - this takes more than a trivial amount of work. But that is precisely why you need to do them.
A new book came out in 2025, called Human Centered Marketing: How to Connect with Audiences in the Age of AI. Even though Gen AI that's all around looks set to marginalize content marketing, this book predicts that AI's knock-on effects will bring old retro practices back into vogue. If Wired Magazine were to meme it using their Wired/Tired/Expired phrasing, it might say that
Humans Interacting with no machines = Expired
Machines Monopolizing Interactions = Tired
Human-Human interaction via Machine = Wired
The book also argues that marketing & communications folks have to make different types of content for segments of the buyer journey, all held to different goals and different time horizons. Don't dump random content on social channels. Like instruments in a score, your pieces need to work together—not add noise.
It also said being Human-Centered extends to where and how we use our messages. Our leaders have to go to trade shows, make podcasts, meet people, and have real conversations. Trust grows when customers feel seen and heard.
The author of the book is by day, a speaker and is currently Head of Lifecycle Marketing at Canva. By night, she's a Singer, actor, and fitness fiend. Let's go to Northern California to talk with Ashley Faus.
Links to everything mentioned in the show are on the Funnel Reboot site's page for this episode.