IN a digital ecosystem oversaturated with content, marketers are no longer competing for clicks; they are battling for cognitive bandwidth. Today, the real challenge is not merely to be seen, but to be retained in the human mind. That being so, the future of marketing relies on a strategic fusion of neuroscience, creative thinking and artificial intelligence (AI), a transition that Pakistani marketers, educators and brand strategists have to acknowledge and adopt.
At the core of this evolution is neuro-marketing, the study of how people in general emotionally respond to advertising stimuli. Contrary to outdated marketing assumptions, decision-making is not rational; it is emotional first, rational second. The brain is composed of three key systems: the reptilian brain (instinct), the limbic system (emotion), and the neocortex (logic). Effective marketing speaks to all three, but begins with emotional resonance. Brands must learn to stop saying what they want to say, and focus on the emotion they want to trigger.
The six principles of brain stimulation identified in neuromarketing research offer marketers a clear blueprint. Content should be self-centred not in tone, but in focus; addressing the consumers’ needs rather than promoting the brand. Strong contrasts, such as before/after or safe/risky, should be used to create clarity.
Benefits should be tangible, clearly presented at the beginning and end of the message to ensure memorability. Visuals are critical, as our brains process colour before shape, and images before words. Most importantly, emotion is the core trigger of attention and memory, and should always be at the centre of a brand’s story.
The marketing landscape is further transformed by AI-powered tools that enable rapid and scalable creativity. AI platforms and tools are now empowering marketers to generate content, simulate human voices, build narratives, and design visual assets in record time. But without emotional intelligence and a strategic vision, these tools risk becoming engines of irrelevant, robotic content.
AI should be treated not as a replace-ment for creativity, but as a powerful amplifier of human ideas that are guided by intention, context and craft.
Equally important is a real shift in how performance is measured. Traditional metrics, like impressions and clicks, are being replaced with hook rate, hold rate, and return on involvement (ROI). In today’s world, lasting impact is driven by the depth of attention, not breadth of exposure.
Content strategy has also evolved. Through content compounding, marketers can build once and distribute forever, repurposing core messages intelligently across platforms. And, with influence increasingly shifting into dark social spaces, like WhatsApp and direct messages (DMs), the focus must move from broad demographic targeting to interest-based and cultural targeting, where relevance meets immediacy.
Finally, modern marketing must operate on a digital value exchange. Consumers give time, data, or loyalty only when they receive something meaningful in return whether that is insight, inspiration, utility or emotional resonance. The more consistent this value is, the stronger will be the level of trust; and in today’s digital economy, trust is the new currency.
Marketing in Pakistan must evolve. It must be rooted in psychology, powered by AI, and, finally, designed with precision.
Fizza Rafiq Godil
Karachi
Published in Dawn, August 8th, 2025