Marketing in the AI era is undergoing a fundamental transformation, shifting from traditional brand-building to driving growth through hyper-personalization, data-driven storytelling, and meaningful connections.
In a recent discussion organized by APAC Media and CXO Media, eminent marketing leaders from AWS, Grant Thornton, Randstad, GMMCO shared their perspectives on how AI is redefining customer engagement and reshaping the role of marketing leaders.
From the rise of the “techno-marketer” to the integration of culture, creativity, and intelligence, the conversation underscored a clear takeaway: the future of marketing belongs to those who can seamlessly blend human insight with technological innovation.
The Evolution of Marketing: From Brand Builders to Growth Architects
Marketing has undergone a profound transformation in the last decade, moving from traditional campaign-led functions to a central growth driver for businesses. With the rise of artificial intelligence (AI), data-driven decision-making, and evolving consumer expectations, the role of marketing leaders has expanded beyond brand-building to encompass customer engagement, profitability, and cultural alignment.
Insights from senior marketing leaders across industries highlight how organizations are reimagining strategies to thrive in the digital-first economy.
Culture at the Core of Marketing
Abhishek Anand, Director at GT Bharat, emphasized that the foundation of any successful marketing or business strategy lies in people and culture. “The core of any marketing or any business is that if you have the right people and the right culture, you would be able to do what you want to do,” he noted.
Anand highlighted a significant shift in recent times, the transformation of cultural mindset. “The biggest change which has happened is the change in the culture, the shift in the people’s mindset,” he said, stressing the need for organizations to focus on creating strong people and culture strategies that align teams toward a digitally driven approach.
This shift underscores the broader narrative that while tools and technologies are changing rapidly, human alignment remains the cornerstone of success. Over the last 10 to 15 years, digitization has redefined marketing tactics, but objectives such as gaining mind share, wallet share, and market share remain consistent.
Marketing as a Profit Center
Traditionally seen as a cost-heavy function, marketing is now repositioned as a profit center. Pallavi Pandey, Chief Marketing Officer at GMMCO., underscored this evolution: “We move away from just owning the ROAS… to more having a share in incremental profitability, how we can actually help the organization grow from a profitability standpoint.”
AI and analytics enable marketers to move beyond Return on Advertising Spend (ROAS) as a sole metric, shifting focus toward direct contributions to business growth. Pandey explained that AI has made marketing far more predictive, equipping leaders with insights to forecast trends, personalize campaigns, and align closely with revenue objectives.
The Expanding Role of the CMO
The redefinition of marketing leadership is also reshaping organizational structures. Cauvery Uthappa, Chief Marketing Officer at Randstad India, described this shift: “The unspoken transformation of my role or the Chief Marketing Officer is into a Chief Growth Officer.” She explained that CMOs are no longer confined to brand-building or demand generation but are increasingly responsible for the full customer journey and revenue ownership.
For Randstad, a people-centric yet tech-forward organization, this means integrating AI and data while staying true to its mission of being a talent partner. Uthappa’s perspective reflects a larger industry trend where marketing and growth are becoming inseparable, underscoring the importance of collaboration with sales and business units.
What Remains Unchanged
Even as technology and roles evolve, certain principles of marketing have stood the test of time. Apurv Bhatnagar, Head of Enterprise Marketing at Amazon Web Services (AWS), explained: “Unless the customer trusts your brand, they will not buy, irrespective of how many MLs, MQLs, or SQLs you are having.”
He outlined three enduring pillars: mindshare (brand trust), wallet share (customer spend), and market share (business presence). These fundamentals, he argued, remain as relevant as ever, forming the basis of any successful marketing strategy.
Technology as an Enabler
Across all discussions, technology emerged as a critical enabler. From hyper-personalization to predictive analytics, AI tools are transforming how marketers engage with customers. Agentic AI, for instance, allows autonomous systems to manage tasks like keyword optimization, personalized campaigns, and sentiment analysis.
Anand stressed that technology must be integrated into organizational culture to succeed. Pandey added that its greatest value lies in making marketing measurable and accountable to profitability. Uthappa highlighted its role in expanding the CMO’s remit, while Bhatnagar positioned technology as a tool to reinforce, not replace, the trust equation with customers.
The Rise of the “Techno-Marketer”
The convergence of technology and marketing has created a new hybrid role: the “techno-marketer.” Today’s professionals must combine creativity with technical expertise, mastering data analytics, AI platforms, and even programming languages like Python.
Pandey pointed out that marketers must leverage insights-driven tools to remain relevant. Anand emphasized adaptability and continuous learning, while Uthappa stressed cross-functional collaboration. Bhatnagar, meanwhile, warned against over-reliance on tools, reminding leaders to balance data with trust and human connection.
Sales and Marketing: The Hummingbird Model
The historical tension between sales and marketing is giving way to tighter collaboration. Bhatnagar described this alignment through the “hummingbird model,” where sales and marketing represent the two wings working in harmony to extract value from customer accounts.
With advanced AI-driven tools, companies like AWS expect significant returns, sometimes as much as 30x or even 100x pipeline generation per dollar invested in marketing. This performance-driven mindset cements marketing’s role as a revenue enabler rather than a cost center.
Storytelling and Customer Satisfaction
While technology reshapes execution, storytelling remains at the heart of brand building. As Anand emphasized, organizational culture plays a pivotal role in making stories authentic. Pandey added that profitability-oriented storytelling now needs to resonate with both logic and emotion. Uthappa connected storytelling with customer growth journeys, while Bhatnagar cautioned that trust must anchor every narrative.
Customer satisfaction, particularly post-sale, is increasingly important. Continuous engagement, upselling, and cross-selling, powered by AI and sentiment analysis extend the marketer’s role beyond acquisition. Retention strategies are becoming as critical as new customer acquisition, reinforcing that marketing is an ongoing journey rather than a one-time campaign.
Future Trends
Looking ahead, the panelists pointed to several priorities for the coming quarters. Hyper-personalization, cultural nuances in campaigns, and vernacular storytelling will differentiate brands in a crowded marketplace. Ethical AI adoption, ensuring data privacy and avoiding algorithmic biases, will be vital to maintaining customer trust.
As Anand concluded, the real transformation begins with culture. Pandey highlighted profitability alignment, Uthappa emphasized the expansion of the CMO role, and Bhatnagar reinforced the timeless principles of mindshare, wallet share, and market share.
Together, their insights reflect a shared vision: marketing is no longer a peripheral function but a central driver of growth, requiring cultural alignment, technological fluency, and authentic storytelling. The marketers of the future must be agile learners, techno-savvy leaders, and custodians of trust – anchoring strategy, growth, and customer satisfaction in equal measure.