VIDEO: Don't sell what you do, sell how you think
If you have 20 minutes to spare today, I highly recommend you watch this talk by Rory Sutherland.
I was completely engrossed for the full 20 minutes because he delivers so many interesting insights.
Rory Sutherland offers a pessimistic outlook on business trends for 2026, predicting a continued, fanatical obsession with cost reduction and regulatory paranoia over genuine innovation.
Key Takeaways:
The 'Doorman Fallacy' and AI: Sutherland warns that AI is currently being sold primarily as a cost-cutting tool to reduce headcount, rather than a value-creation tool (0:48). He compares this to replacing hotel doormen with automatic doors; it saves money on wages but destroys immense value in security, customer recognition, and service quality (1:05-2:13).
Quantification Bias: Businesses are destroying long-term value because finance departments can easily measure cost savings, but struggle to quantify intangible value like trust or the human element in service (9:16-10:00).
Marketing vs. Efficiency: Sutherland argues that marketing and innovation are the only true value drivers (4:10). He advises marketers to sell "how they think"—offering a different perspective to break engineers or finance teams out of irrational efficiency traps—rather than just selling "what they do" (18:05-19:16).
Proactive Marketing: He predicts that with the low cost of AI content generation, agencies will shift from reactive briefs to working backwards: producing proactive content and finding a buyer for it later (16:32-17:15).


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