The New Face of Marketing in the AI Era

The New Face of Marketing in the AI Era

The 7th Edition of the Marketing Leaders Connect Series convened select industry leaders for a  dialogue on “Digitally-Driven Growth: Redefining B2B Marketing in the AI Era.” Rajneesh De, Group Editor, CXO Media & APAC Media and Bhavya Bagga, Business Reporter (Corporate & Leadership) explore how CMOs and marketing heads are steering their organizations through an era where AI, GenAI, and data-driven insights are reshaping customer engagement and business outcomes.

Marketing as a Business Enabler

Opening the discussion, panelists underlined marketing’s shift from a support function to a strategic business enabler.

Deepti Sharma (Country Marketing Manager, Suse) emphasized the broadened scope of marketing:

“Marketing is no longer the traditional kind of a role. Our dashboards are no longer just about MQLs or SQLs, they have become actual business dashboards.”

She noted the growing responsibility of marketing leaders to take a 360° view of the business:

“Our role is now to connect with the customer end-to-end working on hyper-personalization, content, and collaborating with sales, solution architects, and customer success teams. What works today might not work tomorrow.”

She also highlighted the critical role of partner ecosystems in scaling impact:

“Along with customer engagement, I also work very closely with our ISVs, CHVs, and channel partners. Technology and data at scale are helping us make this process far more precise.”

Marketing as a Business Integrator

Ashish Shah (Senior Field Marketing Manager, Google Cloud, Google) echoed Sharma’s perspective, framing marketing as a bridge across silos:

“If you look at today’s role of a marketer, it is moving away from being drivers of campaigns to actually being drivers of business growth.”

According to Shah, marketing leaders now have two critical mandates:

  1. Data ownership – ensuring strategies are quantifiable, measurable, and accountable for outcomes.
  2. Breaking silos – integrating sales, product, and service teams to create a seamless customer journey.

“We are now also architects of the end-to-end customer experience. Marketing has to integrate deeply with sales, product, and service, and take the customer’s non-linear journey across all touchpoints.”

Shah concluded by describing marketing as:

“The underlying fabric that binds fragmented organizational functions into a cohesive customer experience.”

From Intuition to Evidence-Based Strategy

Tanmay Batabyal (Head of Marketing, Niral Networks) positioned marketing leaders at the intersection of creativity, technology, and data science.

“There are two important critical areas which I foresee. One is automation and the second is modernization. Behind simple systems, there are complex systems working seamlessly to create value for customers.”

He noted that decision-making has moved decisively from gut instinct to data-driven approaches:

“Our role as campaign managers has really moved to data strategists and technology orchestrators. Decision-making has shifted from intuition-based to evidence-driven strategy.”

He also stressed the role of customer advocacy:

“At Niral Networks, our marketing is built on three principles: building trust, listening to customer emotions, and solving problems before they become complaints. Advocacy-driven marketing has now become the most powerful form of growth.”

360° Campaign Execution and Evolution

Sharma also shared a practitioner’s perspective on integrated campaigns:

“We design 360° outreach – PR, social media, EDMs, content syndication, media meets, and crafted editorials to align partner ecosystems with customer engagement.”

Ashish Shah reflected on how such outreach has evolved:

“Earlier, it was a static, channel-eccentric saturation model. Today, it is dynamic, data-driven, and customer journey-oriented, where integration across touch points matters more than repetition of the same message.”

The consensus was clear: while fundamentals like growth, market share, and brand value remain constant, execution models have shifted to personalization, precision, and orchestration.

The Future of Marketing in the AI Era

The concluding session explored the transformative role of AI.

Tanmay Batabyal highlighted the importance of domain understanding in media partnerships:

“Before partnering with any media agency, we ensure they understand our domain, challenges, and value story. It’s not just about CXO outreach, it’s about creating a compelling narrative around use cases and customer journeys.”

Unnati Gajjar (Marketing Director, Searce) highlighted the changing role of media in cutting through content saturation. “In an era of AI-generated noise, authenticity is everything. We choose media partners who bring credibility and a trusted readership. The right partner helps us present our authentic organizational voice, not just add to the clutter,” she explained.

The webinar underscored a unified theme: marketing has moved beyond campaigns to become a driver of integrated business growth. Today’s marketing leaders are business enablers, customer advocates, and technology orchestrators, responsible for aligning stakeholders, leveraging ecosystems, and embedding AI-powered strategies.

As the panel concluded, the consensus was clear: while AI and automation will power the next phase of marketing, authentic storytelling, trust, and human connection will remain at the heart of long-term growth.