AI has moved into everyday marketing faster than many of us expected. It’s in our dashboards, our audience tools, even the way we measure intent. And while it brings incredible precision, it also forces a pause. How much should we automate, and how much should we leave to instinct? Most marketers I speak with are navigating this exact balance, trying to use AI smartly, without letting it dilute the judgment, empathy, and creativity that actually build a brand.
AI Is Changing the Rules of Engagement
Not long ago, AI sat in the background — crunching numbers, recommending spends. Today, it sits at the table, influencing what stories brands tell and to whom. In categories like consumer electronics, where buying behaviour shifts between aspiration and need, AI is helping us understand intent in motion. Instead of static segments, we now see living patterns: the person comparing a 43-inch smart TV today could be looking for an air purifier tomorrow. These predictive systems don’t just process data; they learn from the silences between clicks.
From Third-Party Comfort to First-Party Depth
Marketers are discovering that the end of third-party cookies isn’t a loss, it’s an awakening. The new race is for depth rather than reach. First-party data gathered through genuine relationships, registrations, service interactions, and connected devices is becoming the true competitive edge. For tech-driven products, every after-sales call, every usage insight can feed into a smarter, more relevant experience, provided the customer’s consent and comfort come first. In the long run, this depth of data creates loyalty no algorithm can fake.
Privacy as a Promise, Not Paperwork
India’s Digital Personal Data Protection Act has made privacy a national conversation, and that’s a good thing. People are finally asking how their data travels, who uses it, and why. The brands that win this decade will be those that make privacy a design feature, not fine print. Clear opt-ins, transparent dashboards, and visible value exchange will soon matter as much as creative storytelling. Trust, after all, is the first metric any brand should measure.
Attention Is Fragmented and That’s Fine
To be fair, attention has always been fragmented; the difference is that today it’s measurable in milliseconds. Between OTT screens, connected TVs, and short-form video, a brand message now lives in hundreds of tiny windows. The opportunity lies in stitching those fragments into a seamless experience. A consumer might watch a product demo on a connected TV, check specifications on mobile, and read reviews on a marketplace, all within ten minutes. Our job is to make those ten minutes feel like one conversation.
Context and Culture Trump Demographics
Context is the new cookie. An ad for an energy-efficient gadget shown during a sustainability-themed regional show feels natural, not forced. That’s the level of cultural tuning marketers must aim for. As digital adoption explodes in Tier 2 and 3 India, nuance matters — language, tone, even humour change meaning across states. AI can help decode these subtleties, but empathy has to lead the way.
Data and Creativity: A Truce at Last
There was a time when data was seen as the enemy of imagination. That era is ending fast. The smartest campaigns today are those where analytics sharpen, not suffocate, the idea. In our industry, we’ve seen that blending predictive insights with emotional storytelling works best — whether it’s explaining a new technology or building trust in a first-time buyer market.
From Impressions to Impact
The Indian ad ecosystem is quietly moving into its precision-with-purpose phase. We can’t afford to count only clicks anymore; we have to count connections, habits changed, and communities built. Marketers will need to think like data scientists but act like storytellers — curious, ethical, and creatively restless.
What’s interesting is that amid all this automation, the heart of marketing hasn’t changed. It still starts with listening, empathy, and the desire to make someone’s day a little better. AI can predict behaviour, but meaning still comes from people. That, perhaps, is the one constant in this age of intelligent disruption.
(Views are personal)














