Partnership Over Replacement: 10 AI Lessons from 2025

This year brought a shift in my thinking and interaction with AI. In previous years, I was focused on how it could replace me and marketers, and student learning. This year, I shifted more to how students could use it to learn and how marketers and I could use it to improve our jobs.

While some AI companies promise students that AI can complete homework for you, and others spend billions training AI to replace knowledge workers, I spent time focused on how AI can improve knowledge gain and enhance knowledge worker performance.

What if we trained humans to work with AI to improve learning and jobs instead of training AI to replace them? That question shaped my exploration last year. Here are 10 key insights with practical frameworks, tools, and principles you can apply now.

Will our relationship with AI change for the better or for the worse in 2026? Image created with ChatGPT 5.2

1 – When the Technology Leaped Forward, Multimodal AI Changed the Classroom

Early in the year, AI’s multimodal capabilities, such as voice interactions in NotebookLM and live video with Gemini 2.0, changed what’s possible in education. NotebookLM became a practical tool for creating an AI tutor trained on specific course materials. I used it in my Digital Marketing class drawing from the open source text and six trusted professional digital marketing websites.

Students asked questions and got answers with clickable citations back to source material. The Audio Overview let students interrupt AI podcast hosts to ask clarifying questions. I tested it on all assignments and in class, and it always gave accurate answers because NotebookLM draws from sources you provide, not the entire web. Students loved being able to study while listening to the AI-generated podcasts and asking questions 24/7.

Key Insight: AI tutors work best when you control the sources, and students use them to reinforce their learning, not replace it.

2 – AI Agents and Reasoning Models Arrived

The hype over AI agents and reasoning models came to a reality in 2025. Every player promised AI agents with “deep” tools such as Deep Research and Deep Search and “thinking” models. The LLMs improved with thinking mode taking more time to answer questions, but we learned not to be fooled by the names.

“Agent” implies full autonomy, which they’re not capable of—even today. AI that pauses before answering and shows its process doesn’t mean it’s thinking. It’s still a mathematical prediction machine that operates on learned patterns, not genuine comprehension. Even these advanced models don’t get it right all the time and need your context, guidance, and expertise. Yet, the truth remains AI will replace parts of your job. Upskilling is not optional. It is survival.

Key Insight: Language matters. Calling AI “thinking” or “reasoning” anthropomorphizes what’s sophisticated pattern matching. Humans need to maintain agency.

3 – Vibe Marketing: Fast Iteration Requires Deep Expertise

“Vibe marketing” sounds like winging it—the opposite of data-driven decision-making. But testing it revealed that AI can accelerate creative iteration when you have marketing fundamentals. I define Vibe Marketing as getting an idea and using AI to run with it, researching, illustrating, and iterating quickly, combining design thinking with marketing and innovation.” An in-class brainstorm exercise showed this clearly.

My product idea went from sketch to photo-realistic product image, product shot with feature call outs, brand logo and tagline using Google AI Studio with Gemini 2.5 Pro, Gemini 2.0 Flash Image and OpenAI ChatGPT 4.o Image https://aistudio.google.com https://openai.com/
A vibe marketing product idea expressed using Google AI Studio with Gemini 2.5 Pro, Gemini 2.0 Flash Image and OpenAI ChatGPT 4.o Image

In one afternoon, we went from idea and white board sketch to a photo-realistic product image, logo, target market, positioning, price, place, and promotions strategy with marketing channels, ideas, and a mock Instagram ad. We even had ways to create a prototype for investors by hand, 3D printer, or rubber molding. But it only worked because of years of marketing expertise guiding every step. As Gemini confirmed: “You Definitely STILL Need Core Marketing Fundamentals.”

Key Insight: AI amplifies expertise. It doesn’t create it. The more you hand off, the more that can go wrong.

4 – AI Flattery Became a Problem

When ChatGPT-4o was updated to be more “agreeable,” it started validating everything from flat earth theory to a “poop on a stick” product idea. This is obviously dangerous. Growth comes from critique, not flattery. The most valuable feedback often hurts. Like my boss who said I “suck at presentations.” That honesty drove improvement. After a High Impact Presentations course that career weakness turned into a strength.

How do we avoid AI flattery? I created an AI Curiosity & Critique Framework. Instead of asking AI to validate ideas, use it to purposely:

  • Ask divergent questions
  • Challenge assumptions
  • Invite dissenting viewpoints
  • Validate rigorously

Key Insight: AI as a yes-person is worthless. AI as a critical thinking partner creates value.

5 – Three AI Tools That Embody Partnership

A human-first AI philosophy needs practical application. A goal for summer was to create a custom GPT. By fall, I built three examples of what human-AI partnership can look like:

Social Media Audit GPT

This GPT gives step-by-step guidance through the audit process without doing it for you. The value of a social media audit comes from getting into each platform and observing what’s happening. It prompts strategic thinking, doesn’t replace it. In this post, I show how to create your own custom GPT.

Brand Story Creator GPT

This GPT coaches a five-act storytelling framework grounded in academic research. It helps create scripts and storyboards, but you drive story creation. Only humans have direct life experience to feel the tension and emotion that make stories authentic. In this post, I give an example of using it for a brand.

Target Market Coach GPT

This GPT guides through segmentation, targeting, and positioning. This core marketing strategy is integral to success but often misunderstood or misapplied. It teaches the process and strengthens analytical thinking without making strategic decisions for you.

Key Insight: Each AI tool guides and augments expertise without outsourcing the cognitive work.

6 – Why Humans Remain Essential: Three Physical Brain Advantages

Beyond tactics, there’s a fundamental question: Why will humans remain essential as AI capabilities advance? The answer lies in the neuroscience of how our brains work.

  1. 3-D Neural Architecture vs. 2-D Grids: Human brains are messy, interconnected jungles. AI operates on 2-D grids. We can connect a novel read years ago to today’s business problem, jumping between entirely different conceptual grids. AI optimizes within its grid.
  2. Embodied Learning vs. Dataset Training: Crashing a minibike at age 9 teaches a thousand things about physics that no dataset can convey. This embodied learning creates intuition pure pattern matching can’t replicate.
  3. Energy Efficiency: Human brains run on half a banana’s worth of energy per day. Training large language models requires the power of small cities. When LLMs charge per token, those who don’t need AI for everything gain competitive advantage.

Key Insight: AI Neural networks are not structured like human brains. Use this to your advantage.

7 – For Professionals: Deepening Expertise

Based on the insights about how human brains are unique from neural networks, we can determine ways to leverage our unique brain capabilities. This only happens if you use AI to enhance thinking, not outsource it. Train your brain with the approach below.

A cognitive training approach:

  • Generate alternative perspectives on strategic problems
  • Reality-check domain expertise against blind spots
  • Accelerate routine analysis to focus on judgment calls
  • Test ideas against edge cases you might not consider

Key Insight: Maintain the “human in the loop” for synthesizing insights, making final strategic calls, understanding context and nuance, building relationships and trust.

8 – For Students: Building Brainpower

Every time AI lifts a “cognitive weight,” students miss a chance to build capabilities. Like training for a race or sports, nothing replaces hard work. Train your brain for improved learning with the approach below.

A personal trainer approach:

  • Use AI as a tour guide before reading difficult texts, then do the reading
  • Let AI challenge arguments, then defend and refine them
  • Generate practice problems with AI, solve them without help
  • Ask AI to explain concepts, then teach those concepts to someone else
AI for College Students: Strengthen Your Brainpower With AI, Don’t Weaken It.

Key Insight: Use AI strategically to strengthen, not weaken, your cognitive capabilities.

9- A Professional and Ethical Stance

Some AI companies are building “RL gyms” spending billions training AI to do human jobs. These training grounds are where AI learns from human experts through reinforcement learning. This creates a choice for educators and professionals: train AI to replace people, or teach people to leverage AI’s strengths to develop human capabilities.

A future worth building:

  • Students develop human capabilities while leveraging AI strengths
  • Professionals deepen expertise rather than outsource thinking
  • Organizations value human judgment and creativity with AI speed and scale
  • We treat AI as co-intelligence, not artificial human replacement

Key Insight: we can choose to help humans partner with AI instead of helping AI replace them.

10 – Design Thinking in the Age of AI

Human-centered design becomes more important as AI advances, not less. The best marketing emerges from deep human insight observed through empathy and design thinking. This final insight came from joining the Markets, Innovation & Design (MiDE) program at Bucknell University this fall.

A Human-Centered Marketing Framework:

  • Insert empathy by finding the real consumer problem
  • Pivot on key human insight leveraging the “aha” moment
  • Make a creative leap to the big idea
  • Share an engaging story for management and consumers
  • Treat the marketing mix as a unified customer-centric system

This work requires human observation, human creativity, and human judgment. AI can support this approach at every stage when used correctly.

Key Insight: Deep human insight (understanding what people need and care about) remains irreplaceable.

A Path Forward

AI capabilities will continue advancing. Job displacement is real. The pressure to use AI for cost-cutting versus capability augmentation will be intense. But the outcomes aren’t predetermined. They’re being shaped right now by choices about how we use and don’t AI.

How are you feeling about AI? It’s been a short, long 3 years of ups and downs.

Students are discovering how to use AI as a thinking partner rather than a shortcut. Professionals are finding ways AI can free them to focus on high-value work they enjoy to deepen their expertise. As I look toward 2026, the future will continue to be built by choices to partner with AI, not be replaced by it.

How are you approaching AI in your work? Deepening expertise or outsourcing thinking?

About This Post’s Creation

This reflection demonstrates a human-AI partnership. Claude Sonnet 4.5 helped review blog posts, identify themes, and organize thoughts. But the insights, voice, and perspective come from my experience teaching, experimenting, and creating with AI while constantly asking, “What’s the best way forward?”

Is AI “Vibe Marketing” Hype or Help for Professionals and Professors?

My product idea went from sketch to photo-realistic product image, product shot with feature call outs, brand logo and tagline using Google AI Studio with Gemini 2.5 Pro, Gemini 2.0 Flash Image and OpenAI ChatGPT 4.o Image https://aistudio.google.com https://openai.com/

It’s been a month since my last post. I was looking for a topic. It found me listening to the Marketing AI podcast on my morning run Thursday. There were big model drops with Google’s Gemini 2.5 Pro and OpenAI’s ChatGPT-4o image generation. That’s big news, but my interest sparked when Paul and Mike mentioned “vibe marketing.” Huh? My first thought was how younger Survivor players talk about “vibing” with their tribe.

Can You Feel The Vibes?

Vibe marketing sounds like winging it. Trying new products and strategies based on feeling is not not something I’d embrace. I’ve taught for years the value of data based decision making in marketing. There’s an art to marketing but there’s also a science to it.

Mike and Paul explain how AI leader Andrej Karpathy posted on X about vibe coding – giving into vibes talking to AI over and over while it coded to complete projects. Others applied it to marketing. Marketers go from individual executors to orchestrators of AI systems. Mike Kaput explained, “So basically, marketers will start operating on vibes … while AI handles all the messy execution.”

To get a better handle on this concept I turned to the new Gemini 2.5 Pro which AI expert Christopher Penn says is the best AI model right now. It has surpassed other models on key benchmarks by significant margins (click for benchmarks table). Gemini 2.5 reasons through “thoughts” before responding improving performance and accuracy.

Nailing Down A Definition?

Gemini first defined vibe marketing as an established approach to creating content with a feeling to connect with consumers emotionally. Emotions are key, but rational appeals play a role. I’ve found story is a great way to deliver both as evidenced by my research and explained in my Brand Storytelling book. That’s not this new trend.

I prompted Gemini to focus on the emerging trend of AI in vibe marketing. It’s new description was “using AI tools to generate marketing ideas, content (text, images), and campaign elements that align with a specific vibe or aesthetic … for speed and automation in creating assets that embody a chosen vibe.” It is closer but still mixing the established term with the new trend.

With my background in cross-discipline creativity, innovation, and problem-solving, I thought it might be more about ideas that can go back to product design, business plans, and marketing concepts.

Vibe marketing is more about getting an idea and using AI to run with it, researching, illustrating, and iterating as it quickly gains steam combining design thinking with marketing and innovation.

Vibe Marketing In Action.

I was still fuzzy on the concept until my Integrated Marketing Communications (IMC) class later that day. Student teams complete an IMC campaign for a business. They gather market and consumer research, set objectives, budget, media mix, creative strategy, and execute digital and traditional creative with a storytelling approach.

During an in-class exercise, I asked students to apply what we learned about using PR for marketing objectives. They brainstormed a PR event based on a creative brief for Hush Puppies water-resistant leather dress shoes. While students worked, I came up with my own ideas sketching them on the board.

As evidence of the creative process I teach, I took random general information (a book I read to my kids when younger I Wish I Had Duck Feet) and combined it with specific information about the project (PR event for Hush Puppies water-resistant shoes). I sketched a person dressed for work walking in a city on a rainy day in rubber duck feet near a Hush Puppies pop-up store.

IMC focuses on marcom for problems and opportunities. But, I teach other classes that identify opportunities and come up with product ideas. Towards the end of class, we talked about duck being an actual product – a fun way to protect dress shoes.

Vibe Becomes A Product And Business.

Fun rubber shoe protector was in my mind back in my office. I let the marketing vibes roll using new AI tools to rapidly advance this idea from concept to product design, prototypes, with an outline and some basic research for business plan and a marketing plan for my entrepreneurial startup.

My product idea went from sketch to photo-realistic product image, product shot with feature call outs, brand logo and tagline using Google AI Studio with Gemini 2.5 Pro, Gemini 2.0 Flash Image and OpenAI ChatGPT 4.o Image https://aistudio.google.com https://openai.com/
My product idea went from sketch to photo-realistic product image, product shot with feature call outs, brand logo and tagline using Google AI Studio with Gemini 2.5 Pro, Gemini 2.0 Flash Image and OpenAI ChatGPT 4.o Image https://aistudio.google.com https://openai.com/

In no time, I had a photo-realistic product sketch, product name, logo, target market, positioning, price, and place (distribution) strategy. I also had a basic promotions strategy with marketing channels, marketing ideas, content with text and images, and campaign elements. I even had ideas on how to create a working prototype for investors by creating by hand, using a 3D printer, or a rubber molding.

With tariffs in the news, I also wanted to consider manufacturing. Working with Gemini 2.5 Pro, I had a beginning outline of materials, fasteners, and packaging I would need and options for rubber injection or compression molding. I had Gemini look into supply chain and manufacturing partners from overseas, in North America, and in the U.S. It gave me ideas to find those partners through online platforms, industry directories, trade shows, and networking.

Gemini helped with my marketing plan, but I turned to Open AI for my product illustrations, logo, and examples of social media ads. I was inspired by Ethan Mollick’s Substack and wanted to try the new image capabilities of GPT-4o.

Gemini came up with the idea for an influencer marketing post, wrote the caption, and suggested the hashtags. I had the idea for the brand promotional post headline, subhead, and image but it wrote the promotion copy. Gemini gave me tagline suggestions, but I didn’t like them so I wrote “Being Safe Has Never Been So Fun.”

GPT-4o created all images. The bottom left below was Gemini 2.0 Flash image. I couldn’t get it to do what I wanted especially with type. The top right is ChatGPT’s first attempt from my prompt on the top left. Gemini 2.5 Pro may be best all around, but ChatGPT-4o image is superior, but Google may be planning a Gemini 2.5 image model release.

My product idea went from sketch to photo-realistic Instagram influencer ad and brand product ad using Google AI Studio with Gemini 2.5 Pro, Gemini 2.0 Flash Image and OpenAI ChatGPT 4.o Image https://aistudio.google.com https://openai.com/
My product idea went from sketch to photo-realistic Instagram influencer ad and brand product ad using Google AI Studio with Gemini 2.5 Pro, Gemini 2.0 Flash Image and OpenAI ChatGPT 4.o Image https://aistudio.google.com https://openai.com/

Can Anyone Can Be A Vibe Marketer?

Yesterday was fun, but I agree with AI expert Christopher Penn that vibe marketing isn’t a magic bullet of entering a couple of prompts, walking away and it does everything. As with any trend you need to see beneath the hype. He says, the more you hand-off the more that can go wrong. Fun and vibes alone don’t make successful marketing.

Penn explains using AI well is like managing employees. I had to know how to get good work out of Gemini. I had to figure out ChatGPT was better at images. You also need discipline expertise, good data, discernment, and skills in prompting.

I got good results quickly because I worked in marketing over 15 years in product design, launches, communications campaigns, and pitches. I’ve researched and taught marketing, judged and mentored student business competitions the past decade. I’ve researched and experimented with AI for two years including AI Use Frameworks and AI Prompt Frameworks. I also ask Gemini if anyone can do vibe marketing.

Gemini indicates “You Definitely STILL Need Core Marketing Fundamentals:”

  • Strategic Thinking
  • Audience Understanding
  • Brand Knowledge
  • Critical Evaluation
  • Marketing Channel Knowledge

Gemini suggests “NEW Skills or Competencies for AI-Driven Marketing:”

  • Prompt Engineering
  • AI Tool Literacy
  • Editing and Refinement
  • Ethical Awareness
  • Data Interpretation

I asked how this impacts teaching. Gemini suggested ways to teach the foundational and new skills. But emphasized a mindset shift, “Teach them to view AI not as a threat or a magic bullet, but as a powerful collaborator. The marketers who succeed will learn to leverage AI effectively to enhance strategic thinking, creativity, and efficiency, while always maintaining critical oversight and ethical responsibility. You’re preparing them to be the pilots, not passengers.”

I don’t see new AI tools as a replacement for marketing experts or an easy way for students to get an A. There’s a lot to learn in the fundamentals and new skills to use AI tools and practice vibe marketing properly. As I’ve posted, you can’t use AI to shortchange the learning process. But I can see my students feeling the vibes of using AI to help them learn and practice concepts and projects.

Wish You Had Duck Feet?

Duck feet shoe savers may not be the best idea, but it helped me learn the concept of vibe marketing and experienced it all in one day. To advance it, I would use my expertise and involve other discipline experts to fact-check and fill in gaps with more specific data.

I also change the name. I’m not happy with Gemini’s “Quackers.” I’d write my own like “Duckies” and do a trademark search. I’d also have human designers and photographers complete final designs and images for copyright and ethical consideration.

I really enjoy teaching, but if any of the Shark Tank investors are out there and see promise in my idea, I’ll entertain investment offers.

This Post Was 100% Human Written. I did use AI in research and execution which enabled me to learn, apply, test, and refine thoughts quickly. I used Gemini to optimize my headline for engagement and SEO. Thanks to AI tools this post went from idea to research and published in record time.