AI Wasn't a fad. We just weren't ready for it.
Let me set the scene for you. It’s 2023. Everyone is throwing around “AI” like it’s a new protein powder that promises to fix everything. Your LinkedIn feed is flooded with hot takes, your inbox is full of vendors selling AI-powered this and AI-automated that, and somewhere in the back of your mind you are thinking one of two things: This is the future, or this is a gimmick.
I get it. I was in those same conversations. And here is what I saw: most businesses treated AI like a trend to try, not a tool to master. They dabbled. They downloaded it. They got distracted. And when it didn’t produce a miracle overnight, they moved on.
But here is the thing about real waves. They don’t disappear when you turn your back on them.
The Buzz Without the Blueprint
What made AI feel like a fad in 2023 was not the technology. The technology was always incredible. What was missing was strategy. Businesses were handing AI a microphone without giving it a script. You cannot hand a sophisticated tool to a team that hasn’t been trained to use it and expect transformation. That’s like handing someone the keys to a fighter jet and asking them to commute to work.
I watched marketing teams generate mountains of content with zero brand voice. I saw automation workflows that created more confusion than clarity. Not because AI failed, but because the STRATEGY failed. The human layer was missing entirely.
And so the verdict came in from a lot of business owners: AI is not ready for us.
The real verdict? They were not ready for AI.
What Changed Between Then and Now
Here is what is different today. The learning curve has caught up. The early adopters who treated AI seriously, who invested in understanding it and integrating it into a real marketing strategy, are now seeing compounding results. They are producing more content with more consistency. Their customer data is giving them insights that used to take months to surface. Their campaigns are smarter, faster, and more personalized than anything they could have built manually.
And the businesses that sat it out? They are starting to feel the gap.
AI didn’t become a strong component of business and marketing because the technology got better overnight. It became essential because the people leading businesses finally got serious about learning it. That is the shift. That is what we are inside of right now.
What This Means for You
If you wrote off AI last year because it didn’t produce instant results, I want to challenge that thinking. No strong marketing strategy produces instant results. SEO doesn’t. Brand building doesn’t. Great client relationships don’t. AI is no different. It is a long game played with smart, consistent moves.
I think the businesses that thrive in the next five years are going to be the ones who stopped asking “Should we use AI?” and started asking “How do we use AI in a way that is true to who we are and what our clients need?” That is a completely different question and it leads to a completely different outcome.
The fad conversation is over. The strategy conversation is just getting started. And I am here for it.
Ready to stop dabbling and start building?
