The Evolution of Brand Marketing: From TV to AI Agents (2025 Update)

The Evolution of Brand Marketing: From TV to AI Agents (2025 Update)

Way back in 2018, I wrote the original piece to this which I have linked to in the comments. Over the past year or so, I was thinking that the piece needed to be updated with a vision towards where things are headed in marketing and commerce when augmented by AI. This has been inspired by a series of conversations with friends, colleagues, and founders that I’ve spent some time with over the last year.

P&G and Unilever powered the early days of television. With their ad spend (and sponsored content), media companies underwrote and helped produce shows for mass audiences. Both pricing and measurement were straightforward in those early days. Because TV and radio spots were finite, prices for them rose as TV viewership grew. Meanwhile, measurement could be reduced to two factors: frequency (the number of people who tuned in) and reach (the number of times you reached each person).

The story traces how advertising evolved from this TV era to the internet age that enabled targeted advertising. When GoTo/Overture emerged in the late '90s, it initially concentrated power in traditional Madison Avenue agencies. But as these agencies started writing big checks to ad platforms, VCs got excited and poured money into ad/martech companies. This created a ripple effect where these tech providers had to expand beyond agencies to sell directly to brands, democratizing access to advertising tools.

This democratization, combined with the rise of accessible e-commerce platforms and easier product sourcing, led to the DTC (Direct-to-Consumer) evolution. However, as these algorithmically-driven companies hit growth ceilings, it became clear that business success requires more than just data science. The winners became those who could balance algorithmic optimization with creativity, focus on complete customer experience rather than just digital metrics, and build modern infrastructure to leverage data in novel ways – all while maintaining the human, emotional element that drives lasting customer connections.

The AI Revolution: 2025-2035

The next evolution of this story isn't just about brands reaching consumers – it's about AI assistants negotiating and coordinating with each other on behalf of both sides. Just as the internet democratized advertising and DTC commerce, AI is democratizing decision-making and coordination. Imagine a family's AI assistant (a "household agent") that doesn't just manage calendars and shopping lists, but actively negotiates with other AI systems to optimize the family's daily life.

By 2035, we'll likely see household agents that understand family preferences, dietary restrictions, budget constraints, and scheduling needs at a deep level. These agents will interact with restaurant AI systems to not just place orders, but negotiate delivery times based on family schedules, customize meals based on real-time nutritional needs, and even coordinate group dining experiences with other families' agents. Supply-side AI systems, meanwhile, will optimize inventory, pricing, and service delivery across thousands of simultaneous agent-to-agent interactions.

Preparing Your Brand for 2035

The path forward requires brands to develop "dual-layer storytelling" - narratives that resonate deeply with humans while simultaneously building machine-comprehensible brand attributes that AI agents can parse and evaluate.

The traditional emotional storytelling isn't going away, but it needs to be augmented with structured, semantic layers that AI assistants can understand and act upon.

Think of it like a song that's both beautiful music to human ears and carries machine-readable metadata about its composition, mood, and cultural context.

Here's what brands should focus on now to prepare:

First, start building rich, structured data about your brand values, product attributes, and customer commitments. This isn't just about product specifications – it's about codifying your brand promises, sustainability practices, ethical commitments, and customer service standards in ways that future AI agents can verify and validate. If your brand stands for "family-first convenience" or "sustainable luxury," you need to break down what that means in measurable, verifiable attributes that AI systems can evaluate and match against household preferences.

The most successful brands of 2035 will be those that master "attribute-rich storytelling." This means every brand story, every campaign, every customer interaction needs to carry both emotional resonance and machine-readable significance. Your Super Bowl ad shouldn't just make people laugh or cry – it should contribute to a structured narrative that AI agents can parse and factor into their decision-making. Think of it as SEO evolved into "AEO" (AI Engine Optimization) – but instead of optimizing for search algorithms, you're optimizing for household agents that deeply understand their families' values, preferences, and needs.

The brands that start building these foundations now – rich, verifiable brand attributes combined with compelling human narratives – will have a massive advantage when agent-mediated commerce becomes the norm. The future of brand marketing isn't just about reaching consumers anymore; it's about creating meaningful connections that resonate with both human emotions and artificial intelligence.

Do You Agree?

I've learned that sharing a vision like this is always dangerous as it's rare that we can predict the future. With that said, a lot of the above is probably wrong but I bet it's directionally right. At a minimum, it's fun to think about and write this. I'd love to meet those building this future and hear any ways that brands are readying themselves for it.

Would also love to hear where you think we're headed...

Darren Herman this is the culmination of your mind racing with excitement about what’s ahead and how to articulate it meaningfully at this moment. But what will your narrative look like a year or two from now? One thing is certain—technology and the world around us are evolving at warp speed. Brands and consumers alike will need to learn how to navigate with the momentum of these changes, not against them. Those who adapt and align with the shifting landscape will be the ones who thrive. I look forward to your next chapter on this!!

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Anthony Hamelle

Chief Innovation Officer @ TBWA |?Start-Up Mentor & Investor |?First Responder | Blended Family Man

1 天前

We marketers are going to have to learn to "talk to" Consumer AI Agents, that's spot on - thanks for the insightful article Darren Herman! However I am not entirely sure that this endeavor will closely resemble what SEO has been. The deterministic nature of search or social algorithms make them amenable to "strict signals" (semantic matching, popularity, velocity...). The probabilistic nature of LLMs make them much more amenable to a host of "soft signals" as it were, unstructured, nuanced and qualitative, coming from 360 sources such as social chatter and NPS, consumer reviews, customer satisfaction, company share price, detailed product features, customer support availability and quality, loyalty program value... I wonder if Consumer AI Agents are going to be as easy to steer as search and social algorithms. If not this might be a - pro domo - case for sound, AI-augmented, 360 marketing and branding.

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Frederik Klaarenbeek

Global Marketing Executive | Igniting Customer-led Growth | Expert in Demand Generation & GTM Strategies | Elevating Commercial Effectiveness | Advanced Industrial and Life Science - DHR, GE, Novanta, Evident Scientific

2 天前

Thanks Darren, a lot to absorb - what could AEO become? Totally get how we need to codify our brand promises, sustainability practices, and more, in order for AI to tailor to individual, family, or business needs. As choices will still be overwhelming, creating those unique personal experiences, that influence, create advocacy, builds communities, etc will be paramount.

gretchen sword

Fractional CMO & Early Stage Enthusiast

2 天前

spot on and i remember your original post in 2018! yes, ai- engine optimization will have to be a focus for all businesses - we were just talking about that today, Kate! but it does remind me a bit of app store optimization and retail media optimization - lots of other priorities which result in confusion about which platform or player to choose from in the race to be optimized!

Fabiana Farias Jenkins

Marketing Executive I Driving Growth & Revenue in Luxury Hospitality I Brand & Performance Marketing I Integrated Commercial Strategies & Global Leadership

2 天前

Excellent perspective Darren Herman, I believe that your assessment is spot on! It makes perfect sense that the most successful brands will be those that master “AEO” AI Engine Optimization. Thank you for sharing!

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