The other day, I came across a video that stopped me in my tracks.
There was Elon Musk in the Oval Office, dressed casually, with his four-year-old son sitting on his shoulders. Standing beside them was Donald Trump himself.
My first thought: "This has to be fake." And when Musk's son turned to Trump and said, "You're not president. Go away," I was convinced it was AI-generated.
What fascinated me wasn't just the content but my immediate dismissal of it as artificial. Why did I assume it was fake? Because it didn't align with my expectations of reality.
This raises deeper questions: How is technology reshaping our perception of truth? And what does this mean for our shared reality?
Here's a clip of Donald Trump. Your reaction to it will be telling. If it confirms your views, you'll likely share it. If it contradicts them, you might question its authenticity or wonder what AI tool created it.
We've long understood how confirmation bias works - we naturally seek information that reinforces our existing beliefs.
What's changed is how efficiently technology amplifies this tendency. Social media didn't just identify this bias; it monetized it. Engagement equals revenue, and nothing keeps us engaged like content that validates our worldview.
Now AI has elevated this dynamic to new heights. Within seconds, it generates limitless content that:
Remember when social platforms were about following people? Today, they're about following content.
When scrolling through TikTok, how many creators do you actually recognize? Have you wondered if some might not be real people at all?
If AI can predict what will engage you with uncanny accuracy, what's stopping it from creating that content directly? This isn't hypothetical - it's happening now. Our feeds are increasingly populated with AI-generated content designed to blend seamlessly into our digital experience. Social networks no longer require human creators to keep us scrolling.
If AI excels at reinforcing existing beliefs, perhaps the real opportunity lies in thoughtfully challenging them. But that requires more than just clever content.
Changing minds isn't just about what's said but who says it and how it's framed.
People rarely shift their viewpoints based on facts alone. They change because they trust the messenger delivering those facts.
This is why content alone falls short. Context matters tremendously:
While AI can optimize content distribution with remarkable efficiency, genuine persuasion still demands human elements:
In an AI-saturated world, authenticity becomes the ultimate differentiator.
And yes, I recognize the irony in saying this as someone whose company develops customer experience technology...
Recent research shows children now spend over eight hours daily on screens. We're approaching the biological limits of attention. The next frontier won't just capture our attention - it may bypass conscious awareness entirely.
The implications are profound with Neuralink and similar brain-computer interfaces becoming a reality.
In this landscape, what truly matters?
Authenticity - increasingly rare and increasingly valuable. People hunger for genuine connections in a world of algorithmic curation.
For marketing and sales leaders, this means:
AI will continue its remarkable advancement - creating faster, more accurate, and more persuasive content. However, meaningful decisions will increasingly depend not on what people see or hear but on who they trust. This isn't about choosing between technology and human connection.
It's about thoughtfully integrating both. The winners in this new landscape will be those who leverage AI to amplify their message while building relationships that transcend algorithm-driven interactions.
The future isn't post-AI. It's AI-enhanced, but still fundamentally built on human trust.