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What CMOs are actually thinking about AI.

It’s Wednesday. McDonald’s iconic McRib is at the center of a class-action lawsuit, in which plaintiffs claim the sandwich is misleading to consumers since it doesn’t contain rib meat. (McDonald’s says the suit “distorts the facts.”) Rest assured: this newsletter is only made with the highest-quality word ingredients.

In today’s edition:

—Alyssa Meyers, Jasmine Sheena, Jennimai Nguyen, Katie Hicks, Kristina Monllos

AI

A graphic with 3 parts; an AI hand holding a mouse, a laptop screen with binary code and a woman giving a presentation

Morning Brew Design, Photo: Adobe Stock

Like it or not, there was no doubt that AI had a huge influence on marketing in 2025.

Whether it was AI-generated ad creative’s increasing frequency, the tech’s proliferation on CTV platforms, or the focus on building “algorithmic trust” to improve brand visibility when consumers shop using AI-powered tools, AI is reshaping marketing workflows and objectives. In the new year, there’s no sign of it slowing down.

We asked several CMOs and marketers what they’re prioritizing in the new year—and unsurprisingly, adjusting to AI continues to be a top focus. We rounded up some of those marketers’ answers below to get a sense of how they continue to adopt the new technology.

Brand discovery: “How do you get your brand discovered in a world of AI? The landscape has completely shifted, and so [we are] really heavily focused on how we are showing up everywhere that people are searching online. Whether that’s on Instagram, whether that’s on LLMs, whether that’s in Google, showing up in AI overviews, brand discovery has completely shifted.”—Sara Brooks, chief growth officer, BetterHelp

Focusing on human power: “AI is changing the center of gravity in marketing. Execution is increasingly automated, so our teams’ value comes from what AI can’t do—deep customer insight, strategic judgment, and creative curiosity. My priority is building a culture of “master prompters” who know how to get the best out of AI to move faster while differentiating us in ways that are more human.”—Thomas Ranese, CMO, Intuit

Trying it out: “One of my top priorities is upskilling my team—helping everyone get more hands-on with AI to work smarter, collaborate better, and build new ways of operating. The first step: giving people permission to experiment…I encourage my teams to test various tools, summarizing documents, refining messaging, and finding all the big and small ways AI can simplify workflows.

The next big opportunity is rethinking how our teams work in an AI-first world: redesigning processes, expanding roles, and giving people more ownership across end-to-end workflows. The upside is huge: new opportunities, new skills, and real career growth.”—Stacy Martinet, VP of integrated marketing and communications, Adobe

Continue reading here.—AM, JS, JN, KH, KM

From The Crew

SPORTS MARKETING

Williams F1 Team office

Atlassian Williams F1 Team

The F1 paddock is a colorful place—and we mean that literally. Ferrari is known for its iconic red. McLaren lives by papaya orange. And in 2026, the Williams team wants to become synonymous with its refreshed blue color palette.

The team’s colors aren’t the only thing getting an update in the new year. Ahead of the 2026 F1 season, Williams, now officially racing under the name Atlassian Williams F1 Team, took on a new name, logo, and brand identity as part of its yearslong effort to return to Formula 1 glory.

Williams’s rebrand, team execs said, is meant to encapsulate the team’s goal of reclaiming the Constructors’ Championship, and is designed to maintain some of its history while catching the eyes of newer F1 fans.

“We are an icon of the sport, but we are future-focused,” Marcus Prosser, Williams’s marketing director, told Marketing Brew. “We want young fans, these new-wave and avid fans, to jump on this journey with us.”

Read more here.—AM

CES

Three mobile phone screens showing the Uber map and an offer for riders, displaying different offers from Coca-Cola and different car icons depending on the user's region

Uber

In a rideshare? You’re probably watching the map, keeping a keen eye on the car icon as you move closer to your desired destination.

If that rideshare happens to be an Uber, that map and its icons are now up for grabs for some advertisers.

It’s all part of a new offering from the company, dubbed Journey Takeovers, which gives advertisers the ability to create full brand experiences, complete with ads, on the tablets in cars, in the app, and, now, within the map, all at the same time.

“We’re covering every angle of where people are looking,” Kristi Argyilan, global head of Uber Advertising, told Marketing Brew at CES. “We already have, on average, about 20 minutes of someone’s attention when they’re in an Uber…Now we’re actually connecting one of our most prized brand assets that we have, which is the map, which is where we all really stare when we’re in the car.”

The aim, Argyilan explained, is for the experience to be additive and contextually relevant to wherever the rider is headed, as well as timed to specific cultural events. There’s already some proof of concept: During this past holiday season, Coca-Cola ran a takeover campaign that popped up when riders were on their way to places where they could likely purchase Coke products, including restaurants, grocery stores, and sporting events.

The company worked with Uber’s in-house agency, Creative Studio, to create icons that would speak to the specific markets where it was shown. For example, riders in Spain, Portugal, and the United States saw a Coca-Cola Christmas caravan; riders in Mexico got to see Santa’s sleigh; and riders in Australia and New Zealand saw a Kombi van.

Continue reading here.—KM

FRENCH PRESS

French Press

Morning Brew

There are a lot of bad marketing tips out there. These aren’t those.

Pin it down: A rundown on how a potential OpenAI acquisition of Pinterest could change the game in online shopping.

RIP, old feed: Adam Mosseri weighed in on the death of the polished IG feed due to AI and ruminated on an emergent “more raw aesthetic.”

Listening and learning: The details on Amazon’s message to advertisers at CES, per Adweek.

METRICS AND MEDIA

Stat: 47%. That’s the portion of CMOs at large companies (making $20 billion in revenue or more) that expect to cut jobs largely due to AI in the next year or two, according to a survey from executive search firm Spencer Stuart reported on by the Wall Street Journal.

Quote: “They changed the entire DNA of Vera Bradley—trying to get younger, trying to get more fashionable…Unfortunately, the only net impact was that it infuriated the core [customers] of Vera Bradley.”—Eric Beder, CEO of Small Cap Consumer Research, speaking to the Wall Street Journal about Vera Bradley’s recently reversed rebrand

Read: “Inside Unilever’s plan to make Vaseline TikTok famous” (Business of Fashion)

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