03/04/2026
"I just fired my agency. AI does everything now."
I keep seeing this post. Different business leaders, same energy.
And look, I get it. AI can write ads, spin up landing pages, suggest keywords, draft email campaigns, and do it all before your morning coffee gets cold. The excitement is real.
But here's the part nobody wants to say out loud.
Just because a tool can execute a task doesn't mean you understand marketing.
Running ads is not marketing. Posting content is not marketing. SEO is not "add keywords and pray."
Marketing is a system. At Kuware, we actually trademarked "The Science of Marketing" because we believe this down to our bones. There are inputs. Variables. Controlled tests. Metrics that matter and a whole pile that don't. Customer psychology, offer positioning, funnel math, attribution models. That stuff takes years to internalize, not a weekend with ChatGPT.
So when a business leader says "I fired my agency and I'll just use AI," what they're really saying is: "I'm going to learn marketing."
Which they could have done five years ago. AI just makes certain tasks faster. It doesn't transfer mastery into your brain.
Here's what bothers me most. If you're a business leader, your highest leverage move is building your product, serving customers, tightening operations. Not becoming a part-time CMO because software told you it's easy. There was a reason you hired outside help in the first place. Expertise compounds. Focus compounds. Distraction does not.
AI won't tell you which segment to target first. It won't pivot when algorithms change overnight. It won't catch brand-voice cracks that take months to fix. That's marketing science, not prompt engineering.
Now, to the agencies feeling nervous about those viral "I replaced my team" posts:
Relax.
The client who bails for a $49 tool was never going to be a great client. They don't value the discipline. They value shortcuts. And shortcuts have a shelf life.
Should agencies adopt AI? Absolutely. We use it daily. Better workflows. Smarter reporting. Faster iteration. We take that savings and pump it back into performance, not pocket it. AI makes good marketers better.
But it does not replace marketing thinking.
AI is leverage. It's not judgment. It's not experience. And it's definitely not strategy.
If you're a business leader reading this thinking AI will "solve marketing," I'll save you time. It won't. It can amplify good strategy, accelerate ex*****on, and cut waste. But if you spend your energy trying to replace experts instead of focusing on your core strength, you might save money this quarter and lose growth for the next four.
Use AI. Embrace it. Learn it.
Just don't confuse automation with understanding.
That's a very expensive mistake.