Every few years, marketing gets a new existential crisis. Remember when marketing automation was definitely, absolutely the end of agencies as we knew them?
Now it’s AI.
Depending on who you ask, AI is either about to replace every marketer on Earth or usher in a golden age where no one ever has to write a subject line again. Both takes are delivered with complete certainty. Both are exhausting.
Let’s try something different instead: talking about what’s actually happening.
If AI were truly ending marketing, it would be doing a much better job of it by now.
What it’s actually doing is helping people write faster drafts, analyze data more quickly, and get unstuck at the beginning of projects. Useful? Absolutely. Apocalyptic? Not quite.
Most of the panic comes from the idea that tools getting better means jobs disappearing. Marketing has always been a mix of thinking and execution. AI is very good at execution-adjacent tasks. It’s still pretty bad at weighing what matters, what’s risky, and what’s a bad idea dressed up as a good one.
That distinction turns out to be important.
Most marketing agencies aren’t letting AI run the show. At least, the good ones aren’t.
They’re using it to clean up the parts of the job no one loves to begin with.
Things like:
Let’s just say AI is doing the “warm-up laps” so we can focus on the part of marketing that still requires judgment. It’s not replacing strategy. It’s replacing friction.
And honestly, that’s fine with us.
“Can AI replace your marketing agency?”
This question gets asked a lot, usually with a tone that suggests someone just discovered fire. Here’s a more useful version of that question: “Can AI replace the parts of marketing that were already tedious and generic?”
Yes. Easily. And it probably should. If an agency’s value comes from producing content without context and reporting numbers without insight, then sure, AI is going to make that work very uncomfortable, very quickly.
But luckily, that’s not what marketing agencies are paid to do.
We’re paid to make decisions. To prioritize. To connect dots. To say, “Yeah, this looks good, but it’s the wrong move.”
AI doesn’t do that. It doesn’t care if an idea backfires. It doesn’t own outcomes. It doesn’t get pulled into a sales meeting to explain why something didn’t convert.
Agencies do.
AI didn’t just introduce new tools. It introduced speed.
Work that used to take days now takes minutes. Research happens faster, and drafts appear instantly. Testing and iteration move at a pace most teams aren’t used to. When everything accelerates, it becomes much easier to see which ideas are solid and which ones were just filling time.
That’s why the conversation feels so loud. AI isn’t breaking marketing. It’s removing the time and effort that once acted as a buffer. When that buffer disappears, the work has to hold up on its own.
Some agencies are comfortable with that shift. Others are uneasy. Both reactions are understandable.
Agencies aren’t going to survive by calling themselves “AI agencies.” That label doesn’t mean much when everyone is using the same tools.
They’ll get through this by being clearer about what they do well and more selective about what they take on. That means making decisions earlier and tying marketing work directly to business outcomes, rather than chasing trends or tactics.
AI makes it easier to do more, faster. But speed alone doesn’t create value. Agencies that relied on long timelines or complexity to justify their work are going to feel pressure. Agencies that help clients make clearer decisions will matter more, not less.
The difference isn’t who uses AI. Everyone does. The difference is who uses it with intention.
Maybe the biggest misconception about using AI is that it improves quantity at the expense of quality. Good planning doesn’t mean you can “just spit something out” whenever you want. It means the work that does get produced is intentional, consistent, and higher quality.
When planning is clear, execution improves. Messaging is tighter. Campaigns build on each other, and creative work plays a clear role instead of merely existing. AI supports that process by accelerating the groundwork, not by skipping it.
The result isn’t less work — it’s better work. Fewer rushed decisions. Fewer rewrites. Less guesswork. More time spent refining ideas instead of scrambling to invent them.
That’s how quality actually increases.
Most clients already have access to AI tools. What they don’t always have is clarity. They want decisiveness when there are too many options. They want calm when everyone else is reacting. They want guidance when the data isn’t pointing in a single, obvious direction.
They’re looking for someone who can review a list of ideas and say, “These are fine. These aren’t worth your time. This one is worth exploring.”
That’s not automation. That’s experience.
AI isn’t going to replace marketing agencies overnight. What it’s doing is shifting where value comes from.
Execution-heavy work will continue to get cheaper. Agencies without a clear point of view will feel pressure. Teams that understand their role — helping businesses make better marketing decisions — will feel more confident in the work they’re doing.
This doesn’t require panic or grand predictions. It just requires clarity. AI changes how marketing gets done. It doesn’t change the fact that good marketing works. And for most teams, that’s less scary than the internet makes it sound.
While AI tools are powerful, their real merit lies in strategically integrating them into your marketing mix. That’s where an agency like Palo Creative (hi, that’s us) can make the difference, helping businesses identify which AI tools can tackle their pain points and how to implement them into existing workflows. HubSpot’s AI CRM connects data, teams, and tools into one central source of customer intelligence, helping teams work more efficiently without losing clarity. With the right guidance, AI doesn’t just make marketing easier; it makes it more effective.
As a HubSpot Gold Solutions Partner, we can show you what marketing looks like when your systems work for you—not against you. No starting from scratch, no data lost in migrations, no hours wasted on manual entry. Just a CRM that truly understands your data instead of just storing it. If you’re curious how that could look for your team, we’re happy to help you explore what's possible with HubSpot’s AI-powered CRM.