Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Google’s still struggling to crack PC gaming

    Xbox unveils first tech details of its next generation console, codenamed Project Helix

    Developer sues publisher after leaving Kickstarter backers waiting over two years for promised physical editions

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Business Technology
    • Cryptocurrency
    • Gadgets
    • Gaming
    • Health
    • Software and Apps
    • Technology
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    Tech AI Verse
    • Home
    • Artificial Intelligence

      What the polls say about how Americans are using AI

      February 27, 2026

      Tensions between the Pentagon and AI giant Anthropic reach a boiling point

      February 21, 2026

      Read the extended transcript: President Donald Trump interviewed by ‘NBC Nightly News’ anchor Tom Llamas

      February 6, 2026

      Stocks and bitcoin sink as investors dump software company shares

      February 4, 2026

      AI, crypto and Trump super PACs stash millions to spend on the midterms

      February 2, 2026
    • Business

      Met Office ‘supercomputing as a service’ one year old

      March 12, 2026

      Tech hiring evolves as candidates ask for AI compute alongside pay and perks

      March 11, 2026

      Oracle is spending billions on AI data centers as cash flow turns negative

      March 11, 2026

      Google: Cloud attacks exploit flaws more than weak credentials

      March 10, 2026

      Could this be the key to eternal storage? Experts claim new DNA HDD can be ‘erased and overwritten repeatedly’

      March 9, 2026
    • Crypto

      Banks Respond to Kraken’s Federal Reserve Access as Trump Sides with Crypto

      March 4, 2026

      Hyperliquid and DEXs Break the Top 10 — Is the CEX Era Ending?

      March 4, 2026

      Consensus Hong Kong 2026: The Institutional Turn 

      March 4, 2026

      New Crypto Mutuum Finance (MUTM) Reports V1 Protocol Progress as Roadmap Enters Phase 3

      March 4, 2026

      Bitcoin Short Sellers Caught Off Guard in New White House Move

      March 4, 2026
    • Technology

      Google’s still struggling to crack PC gaming

      March 12, 2026

      Media Briefing: In the AI era, subscribers are the real prize — and the Telegraph proves it

      March 12, 2026

      Furniture.com was built for SEO. Now it’s trying to crack AI search

      March 12, 2026

      How medical creator Nick Norwitz grew his Substack paid subscribers from 900 to 5,200 within 8 months

      March 12, 2026

      Inside Amazon’s effort to shape the AI narrative on sustainability and ethics

      March 12, 2026
    • Others
      • Gadgets
      • Gaming
      • Health
      • Software and Apps
    Check BMI
    Tech AI Verse
    You are at:Home»Technology»Future of Marketing briefing: The agent era on training wheels
    Technology

    Future of Marketing briefing: The agent era on training wheels

    TechAiVerseBy TechAiVerseNovember 7, 2025No Comments8 Mins Read1 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
    Future of Marketing briefing: The agent era on training wheels
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    Future of Marketing briefing: The agent era on training wheels

    This Future of Marketing Briefing covers the latest in marketing for Digiday+ members and is distributed over email every Friday at 10 a.m. ET. More from the series →

    A clear theme at last week’s Digiday Publishing Summit Europe was skepticism about agents. Executives see the upside but fully autonomous systems still feel distant. For now, many say they’re relying on more human judgement in their organizations, not less.

    It was a useful check on where things actually stand. The industry may be calling this its “agent era” but it’s still on training wheels. 

    Think of the Slack bot that watches a campaign channel and turns discussion into Asana tasks; the Notion agent that assembles a clean recap deck after a client call; the reporting bot that posts daily performance summaries and flags campaigns slipping below benchmark; the lead-routing agent that enriches a form fill and delivers it to sales with context or creative platforms that generate dozens of ad variations and slot them into a preset launch flow. They streamline hand-offs and documentation but they’re still executing instructions not making choices. 

    Kochava has been watching this dynamic closely. The ad measurement company’s new product StationOne isn’t pitched as a leap into autonomous marketing so much as a détente: an app that lets teams plug their data tools, ad platforms and LLMS into one interface. So instead of every employee prompting differently, StationOne standardizes the prompts, connects to systems like Slack, Salesforce or Kochava via MCP, and turns those interactions into repeatable workflows.

    In practice, StationOne becomes a place where teams organize and run the smaller, task-specific agents they already have, said CEO Charles Manning. It doesn’t replace the human judgement around planning, creative direction or negotiation. It just makes the hand-offs smoother and the work faster. 

    This is the real shape of the agent era right now. Not autonomy. Acceleration. The middle chapter where AI handles the work around the work, and the industry slowly decides what it’s willing to hand over next. Which is why the notion of a true agent – software that can reason, choose and act on its own – remains aspiration. Even the definition shifts depend on who’s talking. 

    “Eveyrone is calling things ‘agents’ that aren’t agents,” said David Mainiero, chief AI officer at AI Digital, an AI-native media consultancy that helps brands and agencies running ad campaigns. “Technically, an agent is something that reasons, decides and acts across different systems with limited [or no human intervention ] (as opposed to supervision).”

    And that’s ok. In fact, it’s expected at this stage. Agents scale by adding capability one piece at time. Push too far too soon and, like people, they break. 

    Converge is a case in point. Instead of one omniscient agent making media buying-buying decisions, it uses “tens” of narrow agents in the milliseconds before a bid, said CEO Ian Maxwell. One scores whether the impression is even worth considering. Another evaluates page or video context. Others pull external signals to infer audiences. Those pieces are stitched together and passed back to agency investment teams. 

    Or to put it another way, the agents don’t choose the media. They just give the buyer a clearer picture of what they’re choosing between. 

    “The ultimate aim with anything agentic is that you have agents training agents,” said Maxwell. “You have to teach one to do its job reliably before you can even think about merging them into something bigger.”

    It’s similar philosophy at Immediate Media. Its sales team is already on version two of an agent built on top of its first-party data stack PRISM. It pulls together audience and contextual segments, traffic patterns, performance signals, and a record of past pitches and post-campaign reports. Reps ask questions in plain language to assemble plans, compressing what used to be a 48-hour analyst loop into minutes. It’s live and being used. 

    The next phase is about feeding PRISM more research inputs, including synthetic studies, to improve pre-sales depth. Its limits are clear. It handles the high-volume, repeatable planning work around display and proposal building. Anything that draws on editorial tone, talent, brand identity, client prioritization, negotiation, or strategic judgment stays human – and will for a while. 

    “A huge portion of our revenue is tied to our brands and the content we create with partners,” said Mario Lamaa, the publisher’s managing director of data and revenue operations. “That’s not something an agent can deliver. There’s still a lot of judgment, taste, and collaboration involved.”

    Whether that stance holds is what the industry is now testing. WPP and Publicis are hiring agent developers to automate more of client delivery. News Corp is evaluating whether agents can eventually sell media directly. Brands are experimenting in-house. Platforms and ad tech vendors are racing to automate everything they can. None of these moves reset the market but they are already moving workflows, headcount and money. 

    “You need leadership willing to experiment because some projects won;t deliver the return straight away,” said Lee McCance, chief product officer at data management business Adverity. “But the worst thing you can do is stop. The companies that persist and learn are the ones that will benefit when the next phase arrives.”

    Until then, agents are raising the floor, not the ceiling. The ceiling still belongs to teams that the people who know how to use the tools rather than the tools themselves. That dynamic is especially stark for publishers. As Permutive CEO Joe Root notes, the question  isn’t whether they can build agents, it’s how they can use them consistently to rival the performance of Facebook and Google. If they can, agents claim more of the buy, If they can’t, the spend stays put. 

    No prizes for guessing where his loyalties lie. Half of its publisher clients run their direct-sold campaigns through its agents today. Those agents use supply-side signals plus outcome data to predict which audiences and placements will drive downstream performance. Advertisers can also use these agents on the buy side to assemble curated audience packages across publishers. 

    “Most agencies are still in the data foundations and human-in-the-loop stages,” said Root. “No one has released fully autonomous agents yet, though it’s clearly the roadmap.”

    Bottom line: this phase isn’t about agents taking over. Its about teams learning to work alongside systems that are fast, confident and occasionally wrong. The leverage comes from knowing the difference. — Seb Joseph

    Numbers to know

    10%: Sponsored Shorts accounted for less than 10% of sponsored videos on YouTube in H1 2025, though is expected to rise substantially next year.

    $750 million: annual run rate for Snap’s Snapchat+ subscriptions service, announced during the platform’s Q3 earnings

    20%: Percentage by which Pinterest’s shares dropped, after reporting its Q3 results that missed earnings per share

    $70 billion: The projected revenue amount Anthropic expects to make in 2028

    Snap stock soars on Perplexity partnership, revenue growth

    Snap’s shares rose more than 20% following the company’s earnings report, where leadership confirmed a 10% revenue growth, according to The Information. Other news which appeared to go down well is the announcement of the platform’s partnership with Perplexity, which sees the AI platform pay Snap $400 million over 2025 via cash and equity.

    How OpenAI uses complex and circular deals to fuel its multibillion-dollar rise

    While at the Abilene, Texas, site of a data center OpenAI is building, the platform’s chief Sam Altman recently said that tech revolutions aren’t just driven by tech, they’re also driven by finding new ways to finance them, according to New York Times.

    Microsoft’s agent platform play

    During its GitHub Universe developer conference in San Francisco on Nov. 4, Microsoft announced that GitHub wants to be the central platform for AI coding agents, according to Sources’ Alex Heath.

    What we’ve covered

    Netflix’s ad boss on the next phase, and how Amazon accelerates it

    As the streaming giant marks three years of its ad business, it’s no longer talking like the new kid on the block. These days, platform execs are talking confidently, expecting to be on every major media plan.

    After early, success, the NFL plans more creator-led broadcasts

    Having hired four creators to host alternative broadcasts on YouTube for this season’s opening game, the NFL’s svp of social, influencer and content marketing Ian Trombetta told Digiday that the league is already determining who it’s eyeing up next.

    Pitch deck: How Amazon plans to turn Q3’s $17 billion ad haul into Q4’s next big DSP push

    In order to pull in more ad dollars during the holiday season, the ecommerce giant’s pitch deck leans on a familiar message: its DSP isn’t just for buying its ad inventory. It wants to be the biggest DSP for buying across the open web.

    Brands set to cut open web display spend 30% in response to AI search

    Advertisers may respond to zero-click search adoption by cutting their display investments with publishers on the open web by 30% in favor of CTV and paid social in 2026, per analysis by Forrester.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleThe Trade Desk tries to redraw the competitive map with Amazon
    Next Article Watch: NZXT’s Kraken AIO CPU cooler nails performance for price
    TechAiVerse
    • Website

    Jonathan is a tech enthusiast and the mind behind Tech AI Verse. With a passion for artificial intelligence, consumer tech, and emerging innovations, he deliver clear, insightful content to keep readers informed. From cutting-edge gadgets to AI advancements and cryptocurrency trends, Jonathan breaks down complex topics to make technology accessible to all.

    Related Posts

    Google’s still struggling to crack PC gaming

    March 12, 2026

    Media Briefing: In the AI era, subscribers are the real prize — and the Telegraph proves it

    March 12, 2026

    Furniture.com was built for SEO. Now it’s trying to crack AI search

    March 12, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Ping, You’ve Got Whale: AI detection system alerts ships of whales in their path

    April 22, 2025714 Views

    Lumo vs. Duck AI: Which AI is Better for Your Privacy?

    July 31, 2025299 Views

    Wired Headphones Are Making A Comeback, And We Have Gen Z To Thank

    July 22, 2025210 Views

    6.7 Cummins Lifter Failure: What Years Are Affected (And Possible Fixes)

    April 14, 2025169 Views
    Don't Miss
    Technology March 12, 2026

    Google’s still struggling to crack PC gaming

    Google’s still struggling to crack PC gaming Image: Razer Summary created by Smart Answers AIIn…

    Xbox unveils first tech details of its next generation console, codenamed Project Helix

    Developer sues publisher after leaving Kickstarter backers waiting over two years for promised physical editions

    Valve responds to NY Attorney General lawsuit: “We have serious concerns with the alterations the NYAG claims are necessary to make to our games”

    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    About Us
    About Us

    Welcome to Tech AI Verse, your go-to destination for everything technology! We bring you the latest news, trends, and insights from the ever-evolving world of tech. Our coverage spans across global technology industry updates, artificial intelligence advancements, machine learning ethics, and automation innovations. Stay connected with us as we explore the limitless possibilities of technology!

    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
    Our Picks

    Google’s still struggling to crack PC gaming

    March 12, 20263 Views

    Xbox unveils first tech details of its next generation console, codenamed Project Helix

    March 12, 20262 Views

    Developer sues publisher after leaving Kickstarter backers waiting over two years for promised physical editions

    March 12, 20261 Views
    Most Popular

    The Players Championship 2025: TV Schedule Today, How to Watch, Stream All the PGA Tour Golf From Anywhere

    March 13, 20250 Views

    Over half of American adults have used an AI chatbot, survey finds

    March 14, 20250 Views

    UMass disbands its entering biomed graduate class over Trump funding chaos

    March 14, 20250 Views
    © 2026 TechAiVerse. Designed by Divya Tech.
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.