1. Loyalty programs will quietly die

    If guests need a calculator to understand the value, it’s already broken.

    Instant gratification wins. Points math loses. Every time.

  2. AI creative will flood the market — and most of it will underperform

    When everything looks “good enough,” taste becomes the differentiator.

    Human judgment > infinite variations.

  3. Follower counts will stop mattering

    Reach will come from moments, not audiences.

    If your content can’t travel on its own, it won’t travel at all.

  4. “First-party data” will be exposed as mostly unusable data

    Brands collected emails. Not intent.

    Data without context will mislead more than it helps.

  5. Hyper-personalization will backfire

    Consumers don’t want brands that know everything.

    They want brands that understand when to show up and when not to.

  6. Attribution will get worse — and the smartest brands will stop pretending otherwise

    The obsession with “perfect measurement” will fade.

    Directional truth beats false precision.

  7. Performance marketing will cannibalize brands that don’t invest in demand creation

    You can’t retarget your way out of irrelevance.

    If no one cares, efficiency doesn’t matter.

  8. Marketing teams will look more like operators than campaign managers

    AI will handle execution.

    Humans will handle decisions, tradeoffs, and taste.

  9. Community will outperform CRM

    Real relationships beat perfectly segmented lists — especially in low-trust economies.

  10. Restaurants that market like software companies will fail

    Subscriptions, apps, automation — all useless without a reason to care.

    Food still has to be emotional.

  11. The biggest competitive advantage will be clarity

    Clear positioning. Clear offers. Clear signals.

    Confusion is the most expensive line item on the P&L.

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