The Digital Edge by Incubeta
In this episode of The Digital Edge, host Mark Reed-Edwards talks with brand strategist and copywriter Ben Afia to explore why AI is fundamentally a brand problem rather than just a productivity or automation tool. Drawing on decades of experience in brand tone of voice and his book, "The Human Business," Ben breaks down the dangers of relying on generic training data, which risks flattening unique brand personalities into a bland "regression to the mean." The conversation dives into a practical skills framework - Brief, Build, Back - designed to help marketers use AI as a collaborative thinking partner while retaining human judgment, taste, and empathy. From baking cultural standards directly into AI outputs to finding the hidden human angles in creative storytelling, this episode delivers an essential perspective for leadership on how bold creative work becomes infinitely more valuable in an automated marketplace. FAQs Q: Why can it be argued that AI is fundamentally a brand problem rather than just a productivity or tech tool? A: When companies treat AI strictly as a tool for automation and efficiency to write faster or produce more, they risk outsourcing human judgment, taste, and experience. Because AI models are trained on publicly available, generic content across the web, relying on them too heavily causes marketing outputs to converge and look identical, which completely destroys brand differentiation and reduces customer trust. Q: What is the "Brief, Build, Back" skills framework? A: It is a sequential workflow framework designed to train teams on how to work with AI as a collaborative thinking partner. The "Brief" phase involves the critical human thinking, goal setting, and context gathering required before even touching the tool; the "Build" phase focuses on purple-driven, iterative prompting and treating the AI like a creative collaborator; and the "Back" phase places the marketer in an editor role to apply final judgment, check facts, and explicitly own the output before putting their name on it. Q: How can marketing leaders prevent AI from flattening their brand into something completely generic? A: Instead of defining a brand voice using a basic list of adjectives, organizations need to bake their unique brand and cultural standards directly into the AI. By training models on their strongest, highly specific material - such as founder stories, successful sales calls, responses to complaints, and real examples of values in action - marketers can ensure the automated outputs naturally amplify the nuance, emotion, and distinct color of their specific brand personality. Q: Where can I get more insights into making my marketing as impactful as possible? A: Download Incubeta’s new research whitepaper “The Marketer’s Confidence Paradox” here: https://hubs.la/Q04fpyp20 [https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=QUFFLUhqbU9maHdLRTJnT0lLWDlFckwxQ19fdTV5ekFPd3xBQ3Jtc0tubUsySE1wbmdBWWdUbWJCM3VseC1KOF9uZ25lNHNGZXQ3Y2NjWDVmRWRlRS1Tb2VXUzhrQUo2M29wSGFfVUt1TGs5dmRsSEFIb0otbGtTaUN0b3pFTHcxdWx6c2lNRVFxaGkycWw2NzdEMXJxTVNrTQ&q=https%3A%2F%2Fhubs.la%2FQ04fpyp20&v=go-gW22dUss]
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