Kansikuva näyttelystä Inspiring Futures - Lessons from the Worlds of Marketing and Advertising

Inspiring Futures - Lessons from the Worlds of Marketing and Advertising

Podcast by Ed Cotton

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Lisää Inspiring Futures - Lessons from the Worlds of Marketing and Advertising

Inspiring Futures pulls back the curtain on the minds reshaping advertising and marketing today. Host Ed Cotton, former Chief Strategy Officer at Butler Shine and Stern & Partners, engages industry visionaries in raw, unfiltered conversations about their career pivots, creative breakthroughs, and strategic innovations. No canned responses. No PR filters. Just honest insights about navigating the complex world of brands, creativity, and agency life. Each episode delivers actionable wisdom from those who've mastered the craft and aren't afraid to share their failures alongside their successes.

Kaikki jaksot

181 jaksot

jakson Neil Barrie- Global CEO and Co-Founder- 21st Century Brand kansikuva

Neil Barrie- Global CEO and Co-Founder- 21st Century Brand

Neil Barrie didn't take the conventional route into brand strategy. After studying modern history at Oxford, he spent six years trying to make it as a musician, a detour, it turns out, was a training ground for what came next. As the co-founder of 21st Century Brand, Neil has worked with some of the most interesting companies of the last decade, including an early, formative stint helping build the Airbnb brand alongside Brian Chesky and Jonathan Mildenhall. That experience changed the way he thought about brand: not a storytelling wrapper, but the entire company as a creative canvas. In this conversation, Neil talks about the craft of brand-building in an era of platform companies, AI disruption, and a marketing discipline under serious pressure. Why strategists need to hear this 1. The clearest explanation of what separates brand consulting from advertising you'll find anywhere. Neil lays it out simply: great ad agencies want to get the client out of the way so they can make great work. Great brand consultancies put the client in the way because that's where the real brand lives.  2. A genuinely honest take on the existential moment for brand strategy. Neil admits he spent part of last year in crisis mode, asking whether brand strategy even has a future. What he found when he went and talked to a dozen CMOs is both reassuring and clarifying: intelligence is everywhere, but conviction and wisdom are in short supply. The role isn't disappearing, it's shifting, and he's specific about where the value is migrating. 3. Machine-readable brands This is where the conversation gets genuinely forward-looking. As LLMs increasingly mediate how people discover and choose between companies, Neil argues that brands need to be built for two audiences simultaneously: humans and machines.  4. Why the "durable and dynamic" tension is the central challenge of modern brand building. Platform brands like Uber and Amazon have made the old CPG playbook look quaint. Neil talks through how you hold a brand together when the business is expanding in every direction at once, and why archetypes and distinctive brand assets matter more, not less, when a company's remit expands. 5.  What being a strategist means today. Crunching data into neat answers is increasingly commoditized. What's genuinely scarce and valuable is the ability to move a group of people toward conviction. Neil is refreshingly direct about what that means for the kind of strategist who thrives going forward.

18. touko 2026 - 53 min
jakson Kaye Symington- Head of Marketing- Newspaper Club kansikuva

Kaye Symington- Head of Marketing- Newspaper Club

Kaye Symington has spent 20 years in marketing, and right now she's working to keep one of the oldest media formats alive — the printed newspaper. As head of marketing at Newspaper Club, she's on the front lines of a quiet cultural shift: people are choosing ink and paper not out of nostalgia, but because something about it just hits differently.  In this conversation, we dig into what's really driving that, and what it says about how we want to connect right now. Kaye shares the story of a photographer who sent a physical seasonal newsletter to creative directors instead of another email and landed a $50,000 campaign from it. The math on cutting through digital noise is more interesting than you'd think. Newspaper Club has been growing since 2009, and Kaye's colleagues laugh every time the trend cycle rediscovers print. She explains why newsprint keeps finding new audiences. People and organizations making newspapers include Ariana Grande. A Scottish anarchist gardening club. A symphony orchestra. A dating site for 30-somethings running classifieds. The range of people printing newspapers reveals something genuinely interesting about what people are hungry for right now.

11. touko 2026 - 56 min
jakson James Nord- Founder Fohr kansikuva

James Nord- Founder Fohr

James Nord didn’t just build an influencer marketing company.  He lived through the birth of internet culture from the inside. In this episode of Inspiring Futures, the founder and CEO of Fohr [https://www.fohr.co/?utm_source=chatgpt.com] It traces the path from early Tumblr obsession to building one of the most influential creator marketing companies in the world.  What makes this conversation compelling is that it’s really about much more than influencer marketing. It’s about the transformation of culture itself. James explains what it felt like to be one of the first people to understand that “following” would become a new kind of currency, long before brands, agencies, or investors took the idea seriously.  He talks candidly about the brutal early years of educating clients, surviving on almost no money, paying employees with photography income, and slowly realizing that the internet was no longer a sideshow. It had become the main stage.  The discussion moves from Tumblr and Instagram’s early days into the modern creator economy, unpacking why brands still misunderstand creators, why legacy marketers struggle with internet-native culture, and why companies like Nike can lose relevance while brands like Skims instinctively understand the new rules of influence.  Along the way, James shares sharp insights on: *  Why internet culture fractured the monoculture  *  How algorithms changed influence forever  *  Why “momentum” matters more than total reach  *  The hidden tension between marketers and creators  *  Why great creators often outperform traditional advertising  *  How influencer marketing evolved from experimentation into one of the most powerful forces in business and politics  There’s also a fascinating thread running through the entire conversation about “internet natives” versus traditional institutions. James argues that people who grew up deeply embedded online developed an instinctive understanding of digital communities that many large organizations still lack today.  If you care about culture, marketing, creators, the internet, or how influence actually works in 2026, this is a rich and revealing listen. It’s part founder story, part history of the social internet, and part field guide to how modern attention really moves.

7. touko 2026 - 56 min
jakson Ammunition- Kelly Heilpern Chief Strategy Officer and Chris Shadrick Director of Strategy kansikuva

Ammunition- Kelly Heilpern Chief Strategy Officer and Chris Shadrick Director of Strategy

This episode is really about how agencies evolve under pressure. Ammunition began with deep expertise in home and building, a category defined by complicated purchase journeys, multiple decision-makers, long sales cycles, and considered decisions. That gave the agency an early advantage. But the more interesting part is how it learned from that advantage. The lesson was not simply “we know this category.” The lesson was: “we know how to solve complex growth problems.” That shift matters. Because agencies are operating in a difficult market. Clients are under pressure. CMOs are being asked to do more with less. AI is changing the production layer. Channels keep multiplying. And there is more marketing activity than ever, but not always more progress. In that context, Ammunition’s proposition, Growth, no matter what, becomes more than a line. It becomes a way of thinking about agency value. Kelly and Chris describe an agency trying to stay useful by learning continuously: from clients, from research, from AI, from category complexity, from international expansion, and from the changing pressures facing CMOs. It is a story about an agency growing not because times are easy, but because hard times force it to get clearer about what it is really good at.

5. touko 2026 - 53 min
jakson AI and the Marketing Department- Mixtape Partners kansikuva

AI and the Marketing Department- Mixtape Partners

AI and The Marketing Department  For a recent Inspiring Futures podcast, I had the opportunity to spend time with Mixtape Partners' Nirm Shanbhag [https://www.linkedin.com/feed/#], Andy Bateman [https://www.linkedin.com/feed/#], and Sarah Lent [https://www.linkedin.com/feed/#]/ Mixtape is a management consultancy designed specifically for marketers navigating the AI era.  Between them, they've spent careers inside the big agency networks (Omnicom, WPP, IPG, Interbrand, R/GA), led innovation and customer strategy at Deloitte, and sat on the client side as senior marketers and CMOs.  They've been the consultants, they've been the clients, and they've run the agencies.  They started Mixtape because they kept noticing the same thing: most strategy work gets shelved, and the work that actually matters is the work that gets adopted. In the past year, they spent some time researching what was happening with AI and marketing departments. They spent an hour each with thirty CMOs working across twelve industries. Their main conclusion is the one nobody wants to say out loud: nobody has figured this out yet. Not the consultancies. Not the holdcos. Not the platforms. What they did find is a set of moves leading marketers are quietly making while everyone else is still arguing about prompts. Four core findings... The customer you're designing for isn't one person anymore. It's three. Almost no marketer interviewed is ready for what that means. There's a single decision a CMO can make in the next six months that quietly kills their AI transformation before it starts, and most of them are about to make it. As AI takes over execution, the entire value of human work collapses onto one thing. Companies that aren't training for it are about to discover a capability gap that no amount of AI throughput can fix. Your brand is now an iceberg. The part everyone's been optimising for is the part above the water.

30. huhti 2026 - 55 min
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