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- đĄThe Next Chapter of AI is Here
đĄThe Next Chapter of AI is Here
Embrace the next wave, master the balancing act, and reinforce what works
Whatâs up team!?!?!
Itâs officially Q4, we just had a full moon, and itâs 80 degrees in NY in October. Keep your tinfoil hats on everyoneâŚwho knows whatâs coming! For the SourceCode team, itâs been a mad dash to bed in some new clients, hit homeruns for existing accounts, and show our prospective partners how a real comms team operates. Itâs been amazing to see the grace and determination of both the US and UK teams as we quietly put together the BEST YEAR IN SOURCECODE history (Really, itâs not a big deal đ).
Shameless plug. PRWeek highlighted us talking about how comms leaders can stop playing defense and start owning the marketing budget allocation process. Kevinâs out there shaping the conversation on AI and PRâs âagentic future.â And Giles just dropped a new piece on our Foresight Growth Strategy (heâs a smarty about these things). It's a smart look at where brands should be focusing to actually get ahead. Not bad for one week.
Oh yea, hereâs some MEGA newsâŚwe signed Megaport. Check it in PRovokeâs coverage here.
This weekâs issue dives into how to stay human when the bots take over, how humor can make empathy hit harder, and why the best brands never forget who they are.
Letâs get into it, friends.
Greg & Becky
TL;DR: OpenAI recently posted a job listing for a Growth Paid Marketing Engineer for ChatGPT. The new hire will develop internal tools for ad platform integration, campaign management, and real-time attribution, and will be part of the companyâs new growth team.
Takeaway: OpenAI has previously expressed interest in developing advertising capabilities within ChatGPT, and this new job listing clearly signals plans for an in-house marketing platform. It also points to the companyâs broader plans for growth. The new engineer is expected to build the companyâs ad-buying system (something that few companies do), giving OpenAI the ability to run marketing at scale without relying on external agencies.
Consider:
While we donât yet know how the platform will support advertising, we do know that the chatbotâs tone is very conversational. Audit your ad copy and rewrite it as if itâs a ChatGPT prompt response.
Prep your ad strategy so you can be ready the minute the marketing platform goes live. Getting your name out there early (before the platform becomes too saturated) will give you the best chance of high impression and conversion rates.
Or, take the opposite approach; building an internal infrastructure can have a major payoff, but can also be a major risk. See how some of the early players fare, and make room in the budget after OpenAI makes a few iterations and improvements.
âĄď¸ Fueling Growth Through Integrated Marketing âĄď¸
Maxwell Houseâs cultural wink to âMaxwell Apartmentâ is more than a stunt; itâs a smart narrative pivot that leans into a modern reality while simultaneously reinforcing brand value.
To replicate that kind of move in your own marketing, hereâs how to think about it in an integrated way:
1. Start with a brand âsemantic lever.â
Maxwell used its own name as the pivot point, turning âhouseâ into a playful commentary on housing access. Examine your brand name, tagline, product language, or existing metaphors and see which word or idea you can flex or flip. That becomes your âleverâ for the campaign narrative.
2. Use pricing and mechanics to reinforce the narrative.
In addition to renaming, Maxwell offered a yearâs worth of coffee for under $40 to reinforce value. For your own campaign, embed offers or mechanics that echo the thematic twist.
3. Monitor sentiment and be ready to lean in or pivot.
A campaign with cultural commentary can provoke feedback, whether itâs positive or negative. Youâll need real-time social listening, sentiment dashboards, and a fast feedback loop. If reactions skew unexpectedly, you should be ready to adjust the tone, double down on clarifying messaging, or even pause elements.
4. Plan follow-through to avoid it being a one-off gag.
To make sure the momentum continues (and doesnât become a âcool stuntâ that fades), youâll want your next phases built in. Sketch campaign legs in advance (e.g., seasonal twists, earned media stories about brand values, UGC challenges) so the âjokeâ becomes part of your evolving identity, not just a momentary pivot.
Did you like this tip? |
TL;DR: Maxwell Houseâs newest campaign is cynically rebranding the 133-year-old coffee label to âMaxwell Apartment,â an acknowledgment of the current tough economic climate. Customers can buy a yearâs worth of the coffee on Amazon (which the brand is calling a âlease-long supplyâ) for less than $40.
Takeaway: Kraft Heinzâs latest campaign proves that brands donât have to be restricted to only highlighting positive cultural moments. Sometimes, a sensitive hot-button issue is the perfect way to make your audience feel heard, while also giving them a brief moment of respite. Maxwell House acknowledged a concern of many with a joke, and rather than leaving it at that, also offered the coffee at a discount and emphasized the productâs value.
Consider:
Honing in on a growing concern that youâre passionate about and aligning it with your brand. Whether itâs economic, environmental, or social concerns, what are three things your brand can do to help contribute to the worldâs uncertainties?
Mixing empathy with humor in your messaging. Itâs certainly a balancing act (make sure the humor doesnât go too far), but sometimes the best way to address a problem is by laughing about it.
Keeping a pulse on whatâs worrying your audience. Each generation faces issues that the previous ones didnât, and knowing what they are will help you effectively develop campaigns such as this one.
TL;DR: Now that AI is well established after its explosive growth, major startups like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Perplexity are ramping up their marketing efforts to build their brands and win over audience loyalty. In whatâs now an extremely competitive market, now is the best time for AI-based companies to build distinct brands that resonate and emotionally connect with consumers.
Takeaway: This push of major AI companies putting serious dollars towards their marketing efforts proves that a product can only speak for itself for so long. Their campaigns are now less about âlook at what this tech can do,â and more about âlook how this tech touches everyday lives,â to give the product a more emotional edge. At some point, even the most revolutionary idea will need a brand identity if it wants to surviveâand when your product is no longer differentiated, you have to figure out creative ways to make it unique and competitive.
Consider:
How âpersonalâ is your brand? These companies are leaning heavily into relatability and human context for their creative strategies. Can your audience relate to what youâre putting out there?
What are some ways to build trust with your audience? With AI comes a lot of skepticism, and marketers need to confront product fears head-on. Think about aspects of your product that your audience is wary of, and how you can address those concerns.
Is your brandâs mission clear? A strong mission, clear identity, and unique storytelling anchor are essential for standing out, especially in a saturated market.
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