human branding in an AI market

How to Build a Brand That Feels Human in an AI-Heavy Marketing World

There’s a beverage company you’d recognize by name. Last holiday season, their marketing team decided to rebuild their iconic TV ad using generative AI. New technology. Massive efficiency gains. Fraction of the production cost.

The internet tore it apart.

Viewers called it soulless. They weren’t wrong. The ad looked technically perfect in every sense, and it felt like absolutely nothing. The company had optimized their way out of the one thing their audience actually wanted from them: proof that a real person still cared enough to show up.

That story is playing out across industries right now, just at smaller scales and with less press coverage. And if you run a business in New Hampshire, southern Maine, or metro Boston, it directly applies to you.

Here’s what’s happening and what you can actually do about it.


The Numbers Tell a Clear Story

HubSpot’s 2026 State of Marketing Report landed with a finding that should make every business owner pause: 61% of marketing professionals consider the current AI environment the most significant disruption they’ve seen in twenty years.

That’s not hype. In fact, the mechanics of marketing have genuinely changed. Today, 80% of marketing teams use AI for content creation. Three-quarters use it for media production. In total, over 86% of marketers are using AI tools somewhere in their workflow.

More content than ever before is the result. Less engagement than ever before is the consequence.

Social media engagement rates across major platforms have dropped to between 1.4% and 2.8%. To put that in perspective: brands are producing more content, spending more on distribution, and connecting less with actual people. Meanwhile, consumer preference for AI-generated content has collapsed from 60% three years ago to just 26% today.

People aren’t anti-technology. They’re anti-generic. And right now, a lot of AI-produced content is very, very generic.

The reason is baked into how these systems work. Generative models are trained on existing content, which means they optimize for what already exists, not for what makes your business distinct. As a result, marketers have started calling the output “competent beige.” Technically correct, emotionally absent.

For brands willing to lean into what makes them human, that gap isn’t a problem. It’s an opening.


The First Move: Build a Point of View You Actually Believe

Before you can fix your content, your video, your merchandise, or your physical presence, you have to fix something more foundational. Most brands don’t have a clear Point of View. Instead, they have a logo, a color palette, and a vague sense of what they do.

That’s no longer enough.

A Point of View (POV) isn’t a tagline. It’s the belief system that drives every decision your brand makes. When you have one, it’s obvious. When you don’t, AI-generated content exposes the gap immediately, because it has nothing real to amplify.

Building a strong POV requires four inputs, often called the 4C Model:

  • Company: What do you actually believe? What are you genuinely good at? What would you never compromise on?
  • Category: How does your industry typically behave, and where do you disagree with it?
  • Consumer: What are your customers anxious about, and what do they actually want (which is often different from what they say they want)?
  • Culture: What’s shifting in the broader world that’s relevant to your business and audience?
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4c model

Work through those four questions honestly and you’ll have the raw material for a POV that holds up over time. Brands that lose their identity usually lose it because they react to every algorithm update and trend without any fixed point to return to.

Beyond the framework itself, once you’ve developed your POV, you need someone who owns it. Someone with the authority to say “that’s off-brand” and make it stick. Without that accountability, even well-intentioned teams drift.


The Content Shift: From Volume to Authority

The old SEO game was built on volume. More posts, more keywords, more pages. That model is breaking down.

Why? Because AI search interfaces — think Google’s AI Overviews, ChatGPT search, Perplexity — synthesize information and deliver answers directly to users, often without a website visit at all. The technical term for adapting to this is Generative Engine Optimization, or GEO. The practical reality, though, is simpler: the brands that show up in AI-generated answers are the ones that have established genuine authority on their topics.

You can’t fake authority at scale. You can perform it once, but the systems get smarter and audiences get better at noticing.

So what actually builds authority in this environment?

  • Email newsletters that function as real editorial products, not promotional blasts. Curated, opinionated, worth reading because they contain something you can’t find anywhere else.
  • Long-form content like podcast episodes and in-depth guides that demonstrate you understand your topic at a level your competitors don’t. A single well-produced 30-minute conversation can be atomized into weeks of downstream content.
  • Consistency of perspective. Authoritative brands say things. They take positions. They don’t publish content designed to offend no one and therefore matter to no one.
branding as a human in a ai market

For small and mid-sized businesses in New Hampshire and the region, this is actually good news. You don’t need the content volume of a national brand. Instead, depth and specificity are what set you apart — and those are things a national brand can’t manufacture. Your market, your customer relationships, your community context: that’s the advantage. Lean into it.


The Video Shift: Imperfection as Strategy

For years, the goal of brand video was polish. Professional lighting. Perfect edits. Wardrobe approved. Background staged.

That instinct is now actively working against you.

Audiences have developed a finely tuned ability to detect synthetic perfection. They’ve seen enough AI-generated video to recognize its aesthetic fingerprints. So when content looks too clean, too scripted, or too perfect, they assume something is being hidden.

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The brands winning with video right now are doing something that feels counterintuitive: they’re showing the mess.

Founders document real days. Behind-the-scenes footage includes mistakes. Executives talk about what isn’t working, not just what is. Unscripted answers to customer questions replace polished scripts. Collectively, this approach has a name: action-driven storytelling. The goal isn’t to look good. Rather, it’s to make your audience feel something, then give them a reason to act on it. Vulnerability, when it’s genuine, builds trust faster than any polished production ever could.

For video right now, the practical guidance is:

  • Founder-led content outperforms brand-produced content. A shaky iPhone video from the owner of a business will consistently outperform a slick agency video that doesn’t include a real person.
  • Documentary style ages better than commercial style. “We’re in the process of building something” is more interesting than “Here’s our finished, perfect product.”
  • Authentic imperfection isn’t an accident. Plan for it. Give people permission to not be perfect on camera. Audiences can tell when messiness is real, and when it’s performed.
authentic content made by a human

The Physical Shift: What AI Can’t Touch

Here’s a reality that the digital-first marketing world keeps underestimating: physical experiences encode memory differently than digital ones.

You remember the weight of something that surprised you — the texture of packaging that felt more expensive than you expected, the smell of a well-designed retail space, the heft of a branded item you actually use every day.

No screen can replicate any of that.

Consider the data: 81% of Gen Z adults report wishing they could disconnect from their devices, and 65% of consumers say they want physical places to offer experiences they can’t replicate digitally. This isn’t nostalgia. It’s a natural human response to overstimulation.

The brands taking this seriously are rethinking three things.

Promotional Products

Cheap branded merchandise communicates that your brand is cheap. Premium, thoughtful, high-utility items communicate the opposite. The psychology here is direct: the physical weight and quality of something you touch tells you something about the brand that gave it to you. If you’re still sending plastic pens, you’re sending a message you probably don’t intend.

Physical Retail and Event Spaces

The strategy is no longer “move people through efficiently.” Instead, it’s “slow people down intentionally.” Immersive environments, communal seating, sensory details, analog design elements — spaces designed to feel like a relief from the digital world make people stay longer, remember more, and talk about the experience afterward.

Environmental Graphic Design

This is where your brand identity lives in the physical world. Beyond logos on lobby walls, it’s about how a space makes someone feel from the moment they walk in. Tactile materials, acoustic design, spatial flow — these answer the question that good design always asks: how does this brand feel? That question matters more now than it ever has.

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Brands that treat physical touchpoints as strategic, not decorative, create experiences that digital marketing can amplify but never replicate.


Pulling It Together: Integrated Beats Isolated

Here’s where most businesses get stuck. They know content matters. They believe video has changed. They understand that physical presence builds trust. Yet they’re managing each of these in a separate silo, with separate vendors, separate strategies, and no shared thread connecting any of it.

The result is a fragmented brand experience. And in a world where AI can surface inconsistencies instantly, that fragmentation is increasingly obvious to your audience.

By contrast, the brands building durable equity right now are treating all of these things as parts of a single system. The same POV that informs your newsletter drives the aesthetic of your founder’s video. That same thread shows up in the materials you choose for your branded merchandise. And ultimately, it lives in the physical environment your customers walk into.

Think of it this way: the goal isn’t to do all of these things. The goal is to do them in a way that clearly came from the same place.

That kind of integration is hard to build. It’s also very hard to copy.


So Where Do You Start?

If this feels like a lot, that’s fair. Pick the thread that matters most to your business right now and pull it.

If your brand identity has drifted, start with your Point of View. Get it written down. Get everyone aligned on it. Then look at your content and video through that lens.

For brands producing a lot but seeing little engagement, the answer is usually to cut the volume and invest in one format you can own with real depth and real perspective.

And if your physical touchpoints are an afterthought, start treating them as a priority. The materials you put in customers’ hands, the spaces you invite them into, the events you host — all of these are doing marketing work whether you’re paying attention to them or not.

AI is a genuine tool. Use it. Just don’t let it be your voice.

Your business has a perspective, a history, and a set of people behind it that no model can generate. That’s your advantage. The only question is whether you’re using it.


Want to talk through what this looks like for your business? Brandit helps New Hampshire companies build brands that work across content, video, merchandise, and physical environments. Reach out at branditms.com or call 603.645.2500.

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