Marketing has taken huge strides in the last few years. With rapid AI innovation, rising ad fatigue, and a more competitive playing field, brands have had to adapt fast and think differently to stay relevant.
Running digital ads alone isn’t enough to grow anymore. It now takes creative storytelling, value-led branding, and early adoption of new technologies to stand out.
If you are looking for fresh, unconventional ways to market your business, here are six marketing trends to keep on your radar.
AI personalisation
Consumers are beginning to have a good eye for spotting AI vs human-generated content. The general consensus is that customers don’t want to consume obviously AI video ads or generic, regurgitated writing. However, they do still expect speed, relevance, and constant creation, all of which AI can do.
This tension creates a sweet spot for businesses that are able to use AI alongside humans for what is being called either “AI content validation” or “generative AI co-creation”. What both of these refer to is having content marketers who are skilled at using AI to work at pace, but also have the creative eye and vision to bring something unique to their campaigns. This could mean having AI run checks on human-written work, removing background noise on your podcast, or transporting your product to a new background for a new campaign.
SEO split testing
Strong SEO is still one of the most powerful, cost-effective ways to show up in search when your customers are looking for advice. Now in 2025, high-performing content marketing teams aren’t making sweeping changes and hoping for the best; they’re running controlled SEO experiments at scale.
SEO split testing (also known as SEO A/B testing) lets you roll out two versions of similar pages and tweak elements like title tags, internal links or structure to see which performs better in search rankings. Better still, strong SEO performance now plays a bigger role than ever in helping you appear in AI-powered search results (more on that later).
B2B micro-influencers
In B2B marketing, trust has always been the number one deciding factor. Even in the days of merchants and trade routes, business owners relied on trusted peers to point them toward the best suppliers, tools, and partnerships. That same dynamic still exists today in a digital form.
B2B micro-influencers are the modern version of those trusted voices. They’re niche experts with small but highly engaged followings. Unlike the influencer culture of the 2010s, today’s buyers are more sceptical of celebrity endorsements and big-brand hype. They want recommendations from people who actually understand their world. So when these trusted industry voices back your product or service, their audience listens.
When looking for a B2B micro-influencer to partner with, don’t get bogged down looking at followers or other vanity metrics. Instead, look at their engagement rate and what results they have driven for other brands.
Spatial and ambient marketing
We’ve had the golden age of digital marketing, so much so that marketing leaders are beginning to look back to traditional marketing methods, think your billboards and TV ads. Spatial and ambient marketing takes traditional marketing and flips it on its head.
Instead of interrupting someone with an ad, this approach integrates your message into the environment in unexpected ways. It’s about using physical space to create a memorable, often interactive brand experience that positively catches people off guard.
For example, some companies use billboards in high-traffic areas that are immersive. As you walk underneath, directional sound follows your movement, making it feel like you’re inside the ad, while a subtle perfume is diffused into the air around you. This might sound out-there, but these experiences make people stop in their tracks and remember your brand.
AEO (Answer Engine Optimisation)
AEO is the slightly more mysterious twin of SEO. With AI tools changing how people search, marketers need to know how to get their brand into AI-generated answers.
AI overviews now show up in around 60 per cent of searches and can take up to 76 per cent of mobile screens, pushing standard listings out of sight. This might sound bleak, but here’s the good news: 75 per cent of AI overview mentions come from pages already ranking in the top 12. This means that good SEO is still as important as ever.
Better yet, many of the same elements that search engines have traditionally rewarded under SEO, such as clear answers, structured content, and strong authority, are exactly what AEO relies on to surface your brand.
Customer digital twins
In marketing, a digital twin is a virtual customer model built from shared behaviours, preferences, and patterns in your data. It’s not a replica of a single person, but a model based on a segment of customers. Marketers use digital twins to test and improve campaigns in a simulated environment before launching them live.
You can use platforms like Salesforce or Adobe to build these models using your first-party data, to combine behavioural trends, purchase history, and engagement patterns. You can then test different scenarios, like “What if we move this CTA earlier in this email?”. Feedback is then provided back in the form of predictive analytics, typically shown as charts, confidence scores, or projected outcomes.
Looking ahead, digital twins are set to become a core part of omnichannel planning, with AI continuously refining models in real time. Brands that embrace this early will be better equipped to anticipate customer behaviour and stay ahead.
How could these insights shape your next campaign?
After hearing about all these exciting trends, you shouldn’t feel pressured to jump on everything at once. If something feels right for your business or sparks a new idea, choose a place to start and focus on doing it well.
Think about what makes sense for your budget. While some brands might be ready to explore spatial and ambient marketing, most SMEs will get the best return from lower-cost, high-impact strategies like SEO split testing, AEO, or working with industry influencers.
As marketing continues to evolve, staying curious and willing to try something new will keep your brand ahead of the curve.
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