Let’s make marketing feel less robotic and more real.
Find resources that bring your message—and your business—to life.
By Vicky Sidler | Published 26 September 2025 at 12:00 GMT+2
If you’ve ever wondered whether AI can take over your marketing, here’s a helpful clue: even Google says no.
According to BusinessLIVE’s recent feature on AI in marketing, brands like Santam, Sanlam, and yes, Google, are using AI tools to work smarter—but not to think for them. Because when it comes to marketing that actually works, data isn’t the whole story. Creative thinking still pays the bills.
So while AI might write a headline or suggest the perfect time to post, the big wins come when you mix that with real human creativity. Especially the kind that doesn’t sound like it was written by a toaster.
AI gives you scale, speed, and insights
Creative thinking is still the best ROI multiplier
Use AI to lift data and free up your brain
Don’t let AI do the storytelling for you
Humor, relevance, and emotion still win
👉 Need help getting your message right? Download the 5-Minute Marketing Fix
AI Marketing Works Best With a Human Brain
What the Big Brands Are Actually Doing:
What Google Wants You to Know (So You Don’t Embarrass Yourself):
How Small Businesses Can Copy the Smart Kids:
3. Build your message before you automate:
Turn AI Into a Tool, Not a Crutch:
1. AI Marketing Trust Gap Widens as Consumers Push Back
2. Why 95% of AI Pilots Fail and What to Do Instead
3. AI Automates 80 Percent of Marketing—What Now?
FAQs on Using AI in Marketing Without Losing Your Mind
What’s the best way for a small business to start using AI in marketing?
Can AI help me write blog posts or social media content?
Will my audience know if I use AI?
Isn’t it faster to just let AI do everything?
Santam is using AI for what it’s good at: making sense of data, predicting where to spend, and scaling outreach. That frees up their human team to do the hard stuff—like coming up with ideas that aren’t dreadful.
Wesley Cloete, Santam’s digital marketing manager, says they’re still testing how AI fits into creative. But they’re already seeing better results by letting tech do the “heavy lifting” behind the scenes.
Meanwhile, over at Sanlam, they’ve taken a slightly louder route. Kelly Driscoll and her team turned boring financial talk into something people actually want to engage with—by adding humor. Their “F-word” campaign (yes, it means what you think it means... finances) uses comedy to spark attention and cut through the usual blah-blah insurance speak. AI didn’t come up with that idea—but it’s helping the campaign perform better.
Their results? A 72% drop in cost per lead. That’s not a typo.
Google is investing billions into AI tools like Performance Max and Demand Gen. But even they’re telling marketers to calm down. Artwell Nwaila, their Africa head of creative, warns that bad AI use creates “bland and derivative” content. Or, as I like to call it, content that makes people scroll faster.
His advice: let AI handle the data, but don’t let it touch your personality. Use it to find insights, test messaging, and refine performance. Then hand the mic back to your creative brain.
Because your audience still wants connection. Not robot soup.
You don’t need a huge team or budget to do what the big players are doing. You just need a system:
Start with tools that help you identify what works: email subject lines, ad placement, posting times, or performance reports.
The reason Sanlam’s humour works is because it’s human. It connects emotionally. The best AI can do is remix what already exists.
Automation only works if the message is right. Otherwise, you’re just getting bad results faster. That’s why starting with clarity is key.
If you want your marketing to be smarter, faster, and still feel like you, you need a clear message to anchor all that tech.
That’s exactly what my 5-Minute Marketing Fix helps you create. It’s a free tool that shows you how to write a one-liner that builds trust, attracts the right customers, and makes your AI tools way more effective.
You’ve seen how AI can help—but this piece shows what happens when your audience stops trusting the tech behind your message.
Before you roll out your next AI tool, read this. It breaks down why most brands fail at AI—and how to avoid becoming a statistic.
This article shows how one B2B brand automates with AI without losing their voice—perfect if you want to keep your edge while scaling.
Start with the boring stuff. Use AI tools to handle repetitive tasks like scheduling posts, analysing ad data, or writing basic headlines. Keep your brain focused on the parts that need actual thinking—like your message and creative ideas.
Yes, but treat it like a rough draft assistant, not a ghostwriter. AI can help you brainstorm, outline, or even spit out a first version. But your tone, voice, and point of view still need to come from you.
Probably not—and they won’t care, as long as the content feels human and relevant. What they do notice is when your message feels off or robotic. That’s when trust drops.
Sure. But faster doesn’t always mean better. If the message is unclear or the tone is off, you’re just publishing more content that doesn’t work. Start with a clear message, then scale with AI.
Look into tools like Google Performance Max, Meta Advantage+, and ChatGPT for writing help. But again—don’t use these to replace strategy. Use them to support it.
Start with your one-liner. If you don’t know what your brand stands for or who it’s talking to, AI will only make that confusion louder. My5-Minute Marketing Fix helps you get this sorted in one sentence.
Created with clarity (and coffee)