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Joe's Recent LinkedIn Posts

Joe

Joe

@joepulizzi

Author: Burn the Playbook (Build a Life on Your Terms) | Content Marketing, B2B

en10 posts

Posts

Joe Pulizzi

Tech & AI

3mo

Scott and I go in-depth on my "Trust Portfolio" model. Basically, when all the content is going synthetic, how do brands adapt their content marketing. I believe it's through distributed trust (like a stock portfolio). Take a listen.
29

Joe Pulizzi

Tech & AI

3mo

A new piece from the Wall Street Journal introduces the idea of being “alternatively influential”…people who drive real impact without massive follower counts. Joe and Robert break it down: Is this just a rebrand of “niche creator” or “thought leader”? Or is it actually the future of influence in an AI-saturated world? And most importantly…does audience size matter less than trust, proximity, and credibility? The bigger question: Are we entering an era where being known by the right people beats being known by everyone? AI Isn’t Just Helping…It Might Be Hurting A new Morning Brew piece highlights research showing that AI can actually decrease focus and increase mental fatigue when overused. Key findings: Productivity rises with 1–3 AI tools…then drops off after that Workers report “mental overload” and decision fatigue Time saved gets filled with more work, not better work Joe and Robert’s take: This isn’t really about AI It’s about multitasking overload AI just accelerates a problem we already had Bottom line: More tools ≠ better thinking Focus is still the competitive advantage Substack Goes Full Stack (Again) Substack continues expanding its platform, now rolling out a recording studio feature to support video and podcast creation. The discussion: Substack is no longer “just newsletters” It’s becoming a complete creator operating system Email platforms, podcast hosts, and even YouTube should be paying attention The real question: Does Substack become the home base for creators…or just another tool in the stack? Winners and Losers Marketing Winner: Calvin Klein Dakota Johnson’s new campaign hits the mark Clean, simple, effective brand storytelling that cuts through the noise Marketing Loser: The Oscars Still struggling to stay culturally relevant A branding problem, not just a ratings problem Marketing Loser (Joe): World Baseball Classic Timing Great product…questionable timing Hard to build momentum when the schedule works against you Rants and Raves Joe’s Rant: Why Team USA Lost to Venezuela Joe’s hot take: It wasn’t about effort It was about constraints Team USA had: Contracts Pitch limits Usage concerns Calls from MLB teams Meanwhile, Venezuela had: Fewer restrictions More freedom to just play The lesson: The team with less to manage often performs better Robert’s Rave: Where AI Actually Gets Its Content Robert highlights a new piece on AI sourcing: AI doesn’t create from nothing It builds on existing human work The real leverage is still in original thinking and creation Subscribe and Follow: Follow Joe Pulizzi and Robert Rose on LinkedIn for insights, hot takes, and weekly updates from the world of content and marketing.
23

Joe Pulizzi

Tech & AI

3mo

I see so many people getting into the wrong argument. The discussions and questions around how much AI a human should use to create their content are, in my opinion, silly. This has happened before, again and again, so we know where this is headed. Content, simply put, doesn't need a heartbeat behind it.
57

Joe Pulizzi

Tech & AI

3mo

This week, Joe and Robert dig into fascinating new research from Anthropic that reveals how large language models are already capable of executing many traditional marketing tasks. The conversation quickly turns into a deeper question. Is the real disruption AI itself, or the fact that many leaders in mid-size and enterprise organizations never truly valued marketing in the first place? If machines can now execute the tactics, what happens to marketing teams that were already fighting for credibility inside their organizations? The discussion explores what the research means for the future of marketing roles, how AI will reshape tactical execution, and whether strategy, creativity, and trust-building become the true competitive advantages. As usual, Joe and Robert have plenty of opinions and a few laughs along the way. In other news, Meta makes another big move by acquiring Moltbook. Is this a calculated, low-risk gamble from the tech giant, or does the move signal growing pressure in the AI platform race? Meanwhile, LinkedIn content is increasingly appearing in responses from AI chatbots and generative search tools. Joe and Robert discuss what this shift means for marketers and content creators trying to remain visible as discovery moves away from traditional search engines. Winners and Losers Winner #1: Tecovas: A clever follow-up short film connected to a Super Bowl ad campaign shows how brands can extend the life of expensive tentpole advertising. Winner #2: Coinbase launches its new “NPC Break-Free” campaign that will run during the Academy Awards, taking a bold creative swing at culture, conformity, and crypto skepticism. Rants and Raves Robert dives into BlackRock and the fallout surrounding its private credit strategy, raising questions about risk and transparency. Joe closes the show with a rant about a stunning operational blunder by United States national baseball team during the World Baseball Classic. Subscribe and Follow: Follow Joe Pulizzi and Robert Rose on LinkedIn for insights, hot takes, and weekly updates from the world of content and marketing.
42

Joe Pulizzi

Tech & AI

2mo

I sat in Miami and watched Venezuela beat a very talented USA baseball team. I watched as team Venezuela dropped to the ground, in tears, hugging the ground in victory. You could feel that this wasn’t just a win. This was, in that moment, everything to them. Team USA wanted to win. They competed. They cared. They showed up. But something felt different. Different throughout the entire tournament. One team was playing free. The other team was managing something. Something was holding them back. And that something happens to all of us. And...we can fix it if we know what to look for...
59

Joe Pulizzi

Tech & AI

3mo

This week, Joe Pulizzi and Robert Rose tackle one of the boldest statements in recent marketing memory. The CEO of Unilever says big brand advertising is dead. Is he right? Or is this a Trojan horse for something much bigger? Big Brand Advertising: Dead or Disguised? When the head of one of the largest consumer goods companies in the world questions traditional brand advertising, it’s not a throwaway comment. Joe and Robert unpack what’s really happening: Are we witnessing the collapse of mass brand-building? Or is this a pivot toward creator-led, performance-driven, and retail media strategies? Is “brand is dead” just cover for short-term earnings pressure? Facebook’s Creator Monetization Shift Next, the hosts examine Facebook and its evolving creator monetization programs. Here’s the surprising part: most of the creators earning real money aren’t in the U.S. or Europe. What does that signal? Is Facebook optimizing for lower-cost content markets? Is this about global growth or cheaper engagement? Does this open the door to more synthetic and AI-generated content? Joe and Robert debate what this means for marketers investing in creator partnerships and for Western creators assuming they’re at the center of platform economics. AI Actors, Hollywood, and Trademarking Yourself A fascinating conversation between Matthew McConaughey and Timothée Chalamet sparks a larger discussion: what happens when AI enters the craft of acting? Will we eventually see: Best AI Actor? Best Synthetic Film? Or entirely new creative categories? Joe raises a bigger issue for marketers and creators: should you trademark your name, image, and likeness? As AI-generated replicas improve, protecting your identity may become a business necessity rather than a vanity move. Winners and Losers Winner: The Creator Betting on Landline Phones Joe highlights a surprising trend: a creator sells old-school landline phones. Marketing Loser: U.S. Men’s Hockey Robert explains why the United States men's national ice hockey team earns this week’s marketing “L.” Brand positioning, expectations, and execution all come under scrutiny. Rants, Raves, and Heated Debate Robert dives deep into Anthropic and its recent moves around AI safety. Is the company quietly shifting away from its core safety mission? Then things get heated. Joe and Robert spar over an article by Matt Shumer on the future of AI. Is exponential acceleration inevitable? Are we underestimating the timeline? Or overhyping the disruption? Subscribe and Follow: Follow Joe Pulizzi and Robert Rose on LinkedIn for insights, hot takes, and weekly updates from the world of content and marketing.
32

Joe Pulizzi

Tech & AI

3mo

It was a wild week in artificial intelligence. Joe and Robert break down a surprising stumble from OpenAI and the aggressive counter-moves coming from Anthropic. The hosts unpack what these developments signal for the broader AI landscape and why the growing concentration of power among a small number of platforms should concern marketers and creators alike. If a handful of companies ultimately control how AI works and how it distributes information, that likely tells us exactly where marketing is headed as well. Along the way, Joe and Robert offer a few friendly suggestions to Sam Altman on how he might rethink his public communication strategy during moments of controversy and rapid change. Next, the show shifts to a supposed social media “problem” involving the CEO of McDonald's on Instagram. Except… it wasn’t really a problem at all. Joe and Robert argue the episode was actually a major brand win. The bigger lesson? Companies should stop hiding their quirky, weird, and interesting employees. Celebrating authentic personalities inside organizations may be one of the most underused marketing advantages available today. The conversation then moves into the exploding trend of 90-second serialized dramas dominating short-form video platforms. What started as a niche format is quickly becoming a global phenomenon, reshaping storytelling and opening the door to entirely new forms of brand entertainment. Winners and Losers Joe highlights the creative marketing moves coming from Staples and why the brand may be onto something smart in a crowded retail environment. Robert, meanwhile, calls out what he believes was a strategic misstep from global advertising giant WPP. Rants and Raves Joe raves about a growing opportunity inspired by a recent article in The Wall Street Journal on the rise of subscription mail products and why creators should pay close attention to physical experiences in a digital world. And in a rare twist, Robert offers praise for the research and insights coming from Gartner… something listeners may not have expected. As always, Joe and Robert break down what it all means for marketers trying to build sustainable media brands in a world increasingly shaped by platforms, AI, and shifting audience behavior. Subscribe and Follow: Follow Joe Pulizzi and Robert Rose on LinkedIn for insights, hot takes, and weekly updates from the world of content and marketing.
25

Joe Pulizzi

Tech & AI

3mo

Hot take after watching the World Baseball Classic championship with my son: Team USA didn’t lose because they didn’t care or didn't want it enough. IMO...they lost because they had more to manage. Pitch limits. Future contracts. Quiet pressure from teams on how players should be used. Venezuela had one goal. There’s a big difference. And bar none, the greatest live sporting event I've ever attended. What an incredible atmosphere!
82

Joe Pulizzi

Tech & AI

3mo

Short-form content works. Of course it does. But just because we can, doesn't mean marketers and creators should be doing it. In this article, I talk about my own struggles with creating short-form content knowing the destruction it's doing to the human brain (and if we keep doing it, how to handle it properly).
63

Joe Pulizzi

Tech & AI

3mo

Over the past few weeks, a handful of small things happened that honestly freaked me out a little. Nothing dramatic… just little moments where technology showed up in ways that made me stop and think. So I wrote about them in this week’s issue of The Tilt. Sometimes the future doesn’t arrive with a bang. It shows up quietly in everyday moments.
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Joe Recent LinkedIn Posts | EXEED AI