Johannesburg, 15 July 2026 – Digital marketing has never been better at measuring performance. Brands can now track every click, scroll, conversion and customer interaction in real time, while artificial intelligence helps optimise campaigns faster than ever before. Yet as marketing becomes increasingly data-driven, a growing debate is emerging across the industry: has the relentless pursuit of optimisation come at the expense of creativity?
According to Penquin, a South African integrated marketing agency specialising in brand strategy, creative communications and digital marketing, the industry’s focus on performance metrics may be contributing to a growing “homogeneity crisis” in advertising—one in which brands increasingly look, sound and behave alike.
Nicole Glover, Executive Creative Director – Digital at Penquin, believes the problem began long before generative AI entered mainstream marketing.
“The homogeneity crisis didn’t start with AI,” says Glover. “It started the moment we decided a metric was more trustworthy than a creative’s instinct. We called it ‘accountability,’ but what we were actually doing was training a generation of creatives to make work that performs in the short term, instead of work that stays in the consumer’s memory.”
The issue is becoming increasingly relevant across Africa, where businesses are investing heavily in digital channels to compete for consumer attention. From retail and financial services to telecommunications and e-commerce, brands are embracing AI, automation and performance marketing to improve efficiency and measurable returns. While these technologies have transformed campaign optimisation, they have also intensified pressure to prioritise short-term metrics over long-term brand building.
Glover argues that this shift has encouraged marketers to rely on proven formulas rather than creative originality, resulting in campaigns that often struggle to differentiate themselves in crowded digital environments.
Her concerns are supported by broader industry research. Kantar’s Meaningful Different Salient framework consistently shows that brands perceived as both meaningful and different are more likely to achieve sustainable growth, stronger pricing power and long-term commercial performance. Likewise, the IPA’s landmark effectiveness research by Les Binet and Peter Field found that emotionally led campaigns significantly outperform purely rational campaigns in building long-term business results, reinforcing the value of creativity alongside measurable performance.
For Glover, these findings simply reinforce what many creative professionals have experienced for years.
“The numbers don’t tell us anything the industry doesn’t already know deep down. Every creative has felt that moment in a meeting when the dashboard takes over the conversation and suddenly the safest option wins. Somewhere along the line, we stopped asking whether work would move people and only asked whether it would convert.”
As artificial intelligence becomes embedded throughout the creative process, many observers have blamed AI for making digital marketing feel increasingly uniform. Glover disagrees, arguing that AI is amplifying an existing industry trend rather than creating it.
“AI didn’t corrupt the well. It inherited one we’d already poisoned. If every campaign is built from the same best-performing references, optimised against the same metrics and approved through the same risk filters, then of course everything starts to feel identical.”
Rather than rejecting AI or data-driven marketing, Glover believes brands should restore a healthier balance between analytics and creative judgement. Performance metrics remain essential for measuring effectiveness, she says, but they should inform creative decisions rather than dictate them.
Increasingly, consumers appear to respond to content that feels authentic, distinctive and emotionally engaging rather than perfectly polished.
“The irony is that the most effective digital work right now often looks like it wasn’t made by an agency at all. People are craving texture, imperfection, personality and emotional honesty again. Brands that understand this are the ones creating work people actually remember.”
For businesses operating in increasingly competitive markets, the challenge is no longer simply producing more content or improving campaign efficiency. It is creating communications that consumers genuinely remember and associate with a particular brand.
As AI continues reshaping marketing, Glover believes the agencies and brands that succeed will be those that combine technology with distinctly human creativity.
“Technology should enhance creativity, not flatten it. The brands that will win in the next era of digital won’t necessarily be the most optimised. They’ll be the ones brave enough to feel human again.”
In an era where optimisation has become standard practice, distinctiveness may prove to be the industry’s most valuable competitive advantage.
Source: Penquin.
Photo credit: Penquin.
