The 8th Edition of the Marketing Leaders Connect Series brought together visionary marketing leaders for an exclusive discussion on “Digitally-Driven Growth: Redefining B2B Marketing in the AI Era.” Bhavya Bagga, Business Reporter (Corporate & Leadership), CXO Media & APAC Media & Rajneesh De, Group Editor, CXO Media & APAC Media report that the dialogue underscored a vital truth – data fuels insights, but human creativity and judgment transform them into true marketing impact.
The session explored how organizations are leveraging Generative AI, data intelligence, and team upskilling to drive measurable business impact in an increasingly digital-first world. The discussion was enlightened with insights from Kunal Aman (Regional Marketing Director, SAS), Shivani Sharma (SMB Business Head, SoftwareOne) and Varun Saxena (Head of Marketing, ATOSS Software SE).
Marketing’s Transformation: The New Mandate for CMOs
The modern Chief Marketing Officer (CMO) wears multiple hats, strategist, storyteller, data interpreter, and growth architect. Shivani Sharma, SMB Business Head at SoftwareOne, highlighted this transformation succinctly:
“Today, marketing is all about speed, clarity, and impact. AI provides instant insights into audience behavior and content performance, but the real power still lies in human storytelling – the emotional connection that builds trust.”
Shivani described the modern marketer as “half artist and half scientist”, balancing empathy with analytics and creativity with conversion. Her perspective reflected a new paradigm in marketing leadership, one where AI augments the human touch, rather than replaces it. AI-driven insights have accelerated decision-making, enabling marketers to respond in real-time to shifting audience preferences. Yet, as Shivani emphasized, the enduring value of emotional intelligence, the ability to connect, inspire, and resonate – continues to define successful brands.
Adding depth to the discussion, Varun Saxena, Head of Marketing at ATOSS Software, examined AI through a collaborative lens. For him, AI is not an autonomous force but a tool that amplifies human thinking.
“The artificial bit is the science,” he noted. “But intelligence is still human-driven. The impact of AI depends on how effective the human behind the prompt is, and how well they interpret the output.”
Varun argued that CMOs must not only champion AI adoption but also evangelize its responsible and intelligent use. He emphasized the importance of training teams to critically interpret AI-driven insights, ensuring that technology enhances creativity rather than dictating it.
His view reinforced a key leadership principle — AI’s effectiveness is determined by human discernment. The human intellect, context, and curiosity remain at the heart of intelligent marketing.
The Learning Organization: Adapting to New Buyer Behaviour
As the digital discovery landscape shifts, Kunal Aman, Regional Marketing Director at SAS, shed light on how AI is transforming buyer behavior. He cited a striking statistic:
“A recent Bain & Company study shows that 80% of consumers now rely on AI summaries for nearly 40% of their searches. That means traditional SEO-focused campaigns are losing relevance — marketers now need to optimize for answers, not content.”
Kunal identified three key imperatives for CMOs in the AI era:
- Changing Buyer Behavior: AI-driven discovery has shortened buying journeys and reduced website visits, demanding Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) strategies over conventional SEO.
- Operational Efficiency: With flat budgets and rising expectations, marketers must deploy agentic AI workforces to automate repetitive tasks and enhance productivity.
- Culture of Agility: True innovation, Kunal said, comes from “creating environments where marketing teams continuously learn, test, and evolve.”
He described agility not merely as a process but as a cultural ethos — one that empowers teams to experiment fearlessly with AI tools and adapt to rapid market shifts.
Unifying Marketing, Sales, and Product: The Loyalty Loop
A recurring theme across the discussion was cross-functional collaboration — the alignment between marketing, sales, and product teams as the foundation for sustainable growth. Shivani Sharma introduced the concept of “loyalty loops,” emphasizing the need to move beyond transactional relationships:
“When you align market share, wallet share, and mind share, you stop competing on price and start competing on experience.”
She outlined three essential dimensions for marketing organizations:
- Market Share – driven by acquisition and sales excellence.
- Wallet Share – achieved through upselling and cross-selling.
- Mind Share – built through trust, credibility, and storytelling.
Varun Saxena expanded this with a vivid analogy:
“Alignment between marketing, sales, and customer success isn’t a one-time project – it’s a continual process. The best organizations constantly learn from both internal and external feedback, adapting in real time.”
Their shared insights highlighted that AI may fuel data and automation, but it is collaboration, feedback, and shared learning that convert insights into business impact.
The Era of Data-Driven Marketing: From Data to Decisions
The discussion also explored the growing complexity of data-driven marketing. As organizations collect massive volumes of data, the challenge has shifted from scarcity to interpretation.
Shivani Sharma observed,
“We’re data-rich but insight-poor. The real transformation happens when we use analytics and AI-powered platforms to extract predictive, actionable insights.”
She emphasized the importance of integrating platforms such as Google Analytics, Adobe Analytics, and Power BI to achieve a unified customer view, connecting behavioral, transactional, and engagement data.
Shivani illustrated this with an example: her team used an AI tool to generate personalized thank-you videos on their landing page, greeting users by name and acknowledging their specific query.
“It was a small touch,” she said, “but engagement shot up immediately.”
Her example underscored how AI-driven personalization can humanize digital interactions, turning ordinary experiences into memorable brand moments.
Varun added that while data is essential, intuition remains irreplaceable:
“Data gives us direction, but instinct gives us purpose.”
Meanwhile, Kunal Aman cautioned against overreliance on analytics, noting:
“We’re drowning in dashboards but starving for insights.”
He urged marketers to focus on relevance, speed, and authenticity, particularly as younger, digitally native consumers demand more personalized, meaningful engagement.
The panel agreed that marketing is no longer a cost center, but an impact center — a driver of growth, loyalty, and long-term trust.
“Marketing must now prove its contribution to revenue and growth,” Shivani stated, while Varun described it as “an impact function rather than an expense line.”
Kunal concluded, “Short-term ROI obsession should not eclipse long-term brand trust.”
The 8th “Marketing Leaders Connect” webinar offered a powerful reflection on how AI is reshaping not just marketing strategy, but marketing leadership itself.
The insights from Shivani Sharma, Varun Saxena, and Kunal Aman collectively painted a vision for the modern CMO, one who blends creativity with code, empathy with analytics, and intuition with intelligence.
In an era defined by automation and data, the true differentiator lies in the human capacity to interpret, inspire, and innovate. AI may power marketing engines, but it is human imagination that fuels brand trust, storytelling, and emotional resonance.
As the discussion revealed, the future of marketing leadership is not about choosing between man or machine, it is about mastering the art of harmony between the two.