Why Strategists Have More to Gain Than To Fear From Generative āAIā
To be clear, I am no āLarge Language Modelā ( āAIā) specialist, although I do intend to pursue a course to correct this fact! I have been talking with a number of you, who āareā āAI experts, embedded as part of planning groups with the remit to:
āOperationalise the use, understanding and application of āAIā to enhance more rapid pathways to strategic clarity and through it customer impact.ā
My topline understanding, if you have several years of strategy experience under your belt, youāve nothing ācurrentlyā to fear from āAI.ā It is your questioning, your interpretation, your editorial oversight, your client reassurance, that is still needed. And what āAIā can provide, can enhance your work. And, even if you are a junior strategist, you will position yourself as best you can if you ensure you learn from and how to optimise āAI,ā as shrinking strategy teams will continue to re-tool.
How āAIā Might Help You
When teams are shrinking it is a valuable analyst and thinking partner – see Ethan Mollick’s two latest Substack posts about the impressive capabilities of the latest models and how that goes beyond the simple “AI assistant” idea. It can help you consider more options with a greater degree of realism – If synthesis of data can be speeded up, there is greater opportunity to focus on the soft skills/the nuances of customer interaction. āAIā could for instance mirror your biases, used in a focused way, it could prevent reinforcement of those biases.
Is āAIā a Career Threat? Itās evolving all the time, but at-the-moment, itās a rapidly evolving aggregating machine, that thrives on using data and logic. Efficiency is not strategy. Any work area that requires more emotionally nuanced interaction will be work that continues to be human-focused.
Which jobs will be the first to go with āAIāā¦. Given āAIā can trawl data from the whole web and synthesise it at hyper speed, any jobs that require aggregation and synthesis of information become vulnerable. Data gathering and analysis make basic research and media buying vulnerable.
Which Jobs Are āRelativelyā Safe Editorial oversight requires understanding of humans: Strategists providing empathy and judgement and creative directors.ā narratives that resonate with humans. While research can be automated, will it reveal outliers in understanding? The quality of up-to-date āin-personā research will continue to have a role; Experiential Strategists bring together many parts of understanding human engagement and interaction, they will become even more important; Work seeking to persuade individuals or groups where logic alone isnāt enough/EQ needed; PR Specialists providing counsel directed specifically to influence human opinion.
Which Jobs Will We Humans āWantā Human Interaction? (even if supported by āAIā) Even if āAIā could do it well, there are areas of our lives we simply demand ādirect human direction.ā Think human reassurance and interaction (versus diagnostics) āis a key partā of wellness treatment; High Value purchases or high stakes such as crisis management will still require a level of human understanding of human reactions/require reassurance.
HOW MIGHT YOU ACT IN RELATION TO āAI?ā
āAIā ā Understand it/Invest in it ā I f your employer hasnāt already provided training, do it yourself or request your employer invest in you completing a prompting course – Learning about LLMās (large language models) and how to get the best out of them. Any great āqualā researcher will probably be a natural, but one can always learn more.
Human Strength to āAIā Weakness ā Bolster your human skills: Emotional understanding/empathy, Relationship building skills/trust, Caring/Nurturing skills, Creative appreciation skills, Leadership/motivational skills. Also make yourself aware of evolving AI tools developed to analyze EQ. Consider reviewing https://www.receptiviti.com/
Adaptability Skills/AQ ā This is just the beginning of āAIā ā If it freaks you out then perhaps what you fear is not āAIā but uncertainty. The greatest bulwark against change, is your ability to adapt. Learn what it takes to become adaptable. Article attached. https://bit.ly/3DjAyCb
Big picture ā āAIā has and will transform lives for good and bad! From a business perspective, without being an expert, invest in understanding how āAIā might help your work. Key, enhance your job security by understanding the chokepoints for creating or sustaining revenue and āAIās impact there! For instance, maintaining ātrustā in client relationships is key to holding on to revenue and very much a human delivered capability, albeit back up by data/great performance, enhanced by āAI.ā
The Beyond Employee
Based on my understanding of career happiness (I’ll leave others to define success) there are some obvious things to get on top of, noteworthy:
Keep learning, (Tech’ yes, but soft skills are more critical than ever, none more so than empathetic ability) learn to be adaptable, focus on relationships, but also key, find time to get perspective, both to understand trends but also to keep in a good mental space!
One other factor to focus on here, personal agency. This is you needing to strategise for you! What are your goals? If you know the answer, you’ll know what your dream working scenario is. Know this and then you’ll know what experience, expertise and connections deficits you have and what you need to work on. Why is this important?
The reality in 2025, we’re all one relationship away from a good or bad year. From making money or not. From working for someone else or not.
If you are currently an employee, what I want to communicate, you should start thinking of youself right now, as self employed. Yes deliver as employee, but also make your employer, ‘work for you.’ Consciously make connections and get experience with a mind to working for yourself. This way, it will be a softer landing when change comes for you.
Agency consolidation is not a new thing neither is job insecuity, but as one accelerates, so does the other. Start to adjust your mindset to it and in so doing you’ll be better prepared to build as a ‘beyond employee.’
All happiness,
Live to Work? Work to Live? (an ode to ‘time well spent.’)
(three minute read)
It’s a choice, many are not prepared to make
Didn’t know they could
Some don’t have a choice of labor
Some like their work, all the time!
Out of work – Feeling daunted feeling scared
In work – Exhilarated but for others, trapped.
The route to sanity, happiness even
The clarity of purpose
Of attainable dreams at and away from work
Yes, knowing what you want
Understand your values, your strengths, your goals
You tell your story better
You live your time with vigor
Thanksgiving provides respite
Temporarily, we are kinder, more prepared to give
and to forgive
Give yourself a gift of reflection and perspective
Think about things..Get in to it
Are you blindly on a hamster wheel to nowhere
It’s time to be the sentient being you were made to be
It’s time to think about what matters
Time to think, what gives and where you don’t
Time to recognise time is precious
There are things you need to do.
Freelance Help – June 2024
There are many conversations I have with candidates that have chosen to freelance perhaps as a temporary step, perhaps interim and for some, they are done with working full time for others.
In all these scenarios, however you postion yourself, you are now ‘in business’ and in this marketplace in particular, you will have your fair share of ‘getting business’ (versus fulfilling it) unless you’re smart, able and lucky, to be able to line up the client work before you leave full time employment.
Based on 24 years working for myself, as a freelance/consultant/business owner, some key realities/thoughts:
The work you get – Despite marketing yourself, the work you do will always act as the best calling card.
Reputation is key – Being kind with all you engage with is part of the key to building the reputation, which gets you referrals.
Core Referral Group – Despite all the thousands of emails, texts you send and calls you make, you will see that it’s a core group of individuals and those allied to them that provide the bulk of your work opportunities.
Fishing Location – Most of your competition and for a time you, will continue to seek opportunities where others seek work. Unless you have stand out content, find less crowded channels or expect low response rates. For instance, who these days sends anything in the post. Try it, most use social media!
Fishing Timing – The best time to have a conversation is ‘not’ when work is advertised. Decide who you wish to work with and engage them now!
Your Most Effective Channel – Working for yourself requires a range of opportunities and this requires raising your profile. Some newtwork well, some present well while others debate well and others prefer to write. Whatever you do you will do alot of it so, chose a path or combination of mediums which play to your strengths.
The Power of in person – Digital media is amazing but what’s more amazing, the connection you make with a person when you make the effort to travel to see them and the energy that’s exchanged from an in-person meeting versus a phone or video connection. I swear by this simple but overlooked reality.
Targeting – Topline, if you want to identify the lowest barrier to resistance to you getting work, follow the money. For instance, if an agency is pitching business even and particularly in cash strapped times, that is where money will be directed and potential great thinking welcomed and, one of ‘your’ best paths to working. I’ll have a seminar soon to really expand on optimal targeting of freelance/new business opportunities, how to identify them and effectively engage them. Please email me if you are interested to take part at: stuart@sparkinsearch.com.
Mindset – Final thing for now, when you aren’t getting work the last thing you want to do is smile as the pressure mounts. That said, smile, it’ll make you feel better and those you interact with are more likely to respond positively.
Personal Agency – Key to the Achieving Your Goals
First, sorry this is a wordy newsletter, but there are things I just wanted to say and couldn’t seem to edit.
The advertising jobs market is a real mixed bag at the moment. And by that I mean, there are as many people losing jobs as gaining them, although the way I see it, there are certainly more losses at the moment.
Many more of you are also out of full-time employment through choice. And for freelancers/consultants, the purpose of this note is key. I should add this is in part because there are so many more of you freelancing now that freelancing has become much more competitive. Everyone it seems, and for different reasons, client, agency and individual, want more flexibility, which post pandemic, most of us have more of.
The point of this newsletter is not to talk about the overall market but more for individuals either in jobs and feeling āstuckā āunder-valuedā and/or āvulnerable and those actively looking for their next full-time role or freelance gig.
I was recently talking with a long-standing connection, whose pretty well known in the business both by reputation and in terms of their expertise. And, for the results heād help achieve.
Like many, heās been looking for a job/the right job, for a while, but well connected, wasnāt sweating it, and had a meeting lined up with a high-level holding company exec.ā Heād been waiting a month for this meeting but was very hopeful.
Last week I caught up with him having had the meeting and I asked him, how the meeting went.
He told me heād had forty minute in-person meeting.
āIt was great. We caught up on the industry, world chaos and the kids.ā
I was encouraged, it sounded positive.
āWhat elseā I asked, waiting for the punchline role/roles he was going to be considered for or introductions that were being made perhaps as we spoke.
āWhat else? He replied?
āWhat did you ask him for?ā I asked perhaps a bit to stern.
āI didnāt ask him for anything.ā His voice dying away as he responded. Immediately realizing, that the person he āisā in front of clients had not shown up for himself, when it mattered.
I shrugged my shoulders, and politely let him know what I think many of us take for granted.
āMy friend, you āHAVEā to let others know what you want; What you want to be considered for! At the very least, let the person in front of you know, how you want them to help you, even if itās not a job that you want.ā
āYou know this!ā OK, I know I showed a bit of exasperation here..
The point, everyone you know is busy. When you are upset that they didnāt āhelp you,ā think about it. Did you assume theyād know exactly what you wanted or how they could help you? If you did, you didnāt āmake it easyā for them to help you.
So many times, when it comes to āus,ā we donāt ask for something, either because we are complacent and assume by our reputation or resume, others know what weāre right for. While others donāt have enough self-belief to understand that there are times when itās critical to āask!ā
However well-known you are/think you are or arenāt, donāt rely on others telling your story for you, unless you specifically āhaveā someone that gets rewarded to tell your story for you.
If you donāt ask, you canāt expect.
If you donāt steer your own ship, youāll either capsize, run aground or drift aimlessly. Any of these scenarios feel familiar for you?
Take personal agency, āthe act or intervention producing a particular effect.ā Ask specifically for what you want, donāt assume others will act otherwise.
Ideally your ask is with something that will address a need/help the person in front of you. Key, make the ask about something you really want, then youāll come across authentically, or as Andy Wilson recently wrote:
āOur livelihoods and (our sanity) more than ever before, are about doing what we love, with the people we love, for the outcomes we love. This is the good stuff, make sure others know about it!ā
All success in the quest to achieve your goals.
Best wishes,
Stuart
Personal Agency – Key to the next career move you dream of!
The advertising jobs market is a real mixed bag at the moment. And by that I mean, there are as many people losing jobs as gaining them, although the way I see it, there are certainly more losses at the moment.
Many more of you either out of your choice or through those quarterly ānumber balancing decisions,ā are now out of full-time employment and freelancing.
There are so many more of you freelancing now that freelancing has become much more competitive. Everyone it seems, and for different reasons, client, agency and individual, want more flexibility, which post pandemic, most of us have more of.
The point of this post is not to talk about the overall market but more for individuals either in jobs and feeling āstuckā āunder-valuedā and/or āvulnerable and those actively looking for their next role. If you fit in to either scenario, read on.
I was recently talking with a long-standing connection, whose pretty well known in the business both by reputation and in terms of their expertise. And, for the results heād help achieve.
Like many, heās been looking for a job/the right job, for a while, but well connected, wasnāt sweating it, and had a meeting lined up with a high-level holding company exec.ā Heād been waiting a month for this meeting but was very hopeful.
Last week I caught up with him having had the meeting and I asked him, how the meeting went.
He told me heād had forty minute in-person meeting. āIt was great. We caught up on the industry, world chaos and the kids.ā
I was encouraged, it sounded positive.
āWhat elseā I asked, waiting for the punchline role/roles he was going to be considered for or introductions that were being made perhaps as we spoke.
āWhat else? He replied?
āWhat did you ask him for?ā I asked perhaps a bit to stern.
āI didnāt ask him for anything.ā His voice dying away as he responded. Immediately realizing, that the person he āisā in front of clients had not shown up for himself, when it mattered.
I shrugged my shoulders, and politely let him know what I think many of us take for granted.
āMy friend, you āHAVEā to let others know what you want; What you want to be considered for! At the very least, let the person in front of you know, how you want them to help you, even if itās not a job that you want.ā
āYou know this!ā OK, I know I showed a bit of exasperation here..
The point, everyone you know is busy. When you are upset that they didnāt āhelp you,ā think about it. Did you assume theyād know exactly what you wanted or how they could help you? If you did, you didnāt āmake it easyā for them to help you.
So many times, when it comes to āus,ā we donāt ask for something, either because we are complacent and assume by our reputation or resume, others know what weāre right for. While others donāt have enough self-belief to understand that there are times when itās critical to āask!ā
Moral of story, however well-known you are or arenāt, donāt default to others telling your story for you, unless you specifically āhaveā someone that gets rewarded to tell your story for you or in addition to your own effort.
If you donāt ask, you canāt expect.
If you donāt steer your own ship, youāll either capsize, run aground or drift aimlessly. Any of these scenarios feel familiar for you?
Take personal agency, āthe act or intervention producing a particular effect.ā Ask specifically for what you want, donāt assume others will act otherwise.
Ideally tie the ask in with something that will address a need/help the person in front of you and make it about something you really want, then youāll come across authentically, or as Andy Wilson recently wrote:
āOur livelihoods and (our sanity) more than ever before, are about doing what we love, with the people we love, for the outcomes we love. This is the good stuff, make sure others know about it!ā