Deva Corriveau, Creative Director at Brandpie, writing for The Subtext, asks what happens when the customer doesn’t choose at all.
Take something mundane, like ordering a takeaway. Consumers don’t feel a deep emotional connection to whether dinner arrives via Just Eat, Deliveroo or Uber Eats. They may have habits or interface preferences, but they don’t meaningfully care about the logo on the rider’s jacket or the tone of voice in their advertising. Yet these businesses still spend tens of millions each year trying to build precisely that sense of distinction.
Now imagine a step beyond this. Instead of opening an app at all, the consumer simply instructs an AI assistant to order a pizza. The system scans available providers, evaluates delivery times, compares pricing, reviews reliability data, and executes the transaction. The entire process takes place behind a seamless, invisible layer of automation. The user does not browse. They do not compare. They are not exposed to campaigns or nudged by distinctive brand assets. The decision is simply optimized.
From a consumer perspective, this is seamless and efficient. From a brand perspective, it’s an unsettling shift in how choice is made and where influence sits.
That distinction matters. In a browser or an app, brand can still interrupt the customer at the point of comparison. Inside an agent, the brand has to show up as criteria the agent can evaluate.
Corriveau on the shift:
For decades, we’ve treated awareness as the foundation of growth. Be famous. Be distinctive. Be top of mind. When the moment of choice arrives, ensure your brand is mentally available. That logic remains sound – but only if a human is making the decision.
An AI agent does not remember your jingle or favour your colour palette. It does not feel reassured by your heritage or inspired by your purpose. It simply calculates against a defined set of criteria.
This does not mean brand disappears, but its role shifts. Marketeers must move upstream from the moment of choice to defining the parameters of the choice itself.
If the agent is comparing delivery time, service ratings, return policies, privacy history, and price, then the promises a brand makes need to map to service behaviors, policies, and performance an agent can actually evaluate. A promise the company can’t prove becomes decoration.
I don’t read this as “branding is dead.” Corriveau is saying something narrower: people still define preferences; automation changes when and how those preferences get expressed.
Discussions about automation often miss a critical point: humans still define the criteria. A user may delegate comparison and selection to an AI, but they still decide what it optimises for. They might instruct it to prioritize companies with high customer service ratings, favour businesses with strong sustainability credentials, or exclude brands that have suffered data breaches. Human values, identity, and worldview remain central – they are simply expressed differently.
Trust, identity signalling, ethical alignment: these human drivers do not disappear just because a machine intermediates the transaction. In fact, they may become more explicit. Rather than being subconsciously influenced by advertising, consumers will consciously encode their preferences into the system.
In that world, the role of brand becomes less about capturing attention in the moment and more about establishing a presence so clear and widely understood that people choose to embed it into their decision rules. The brands that endure will be those that stand for something concrete enough to be deliberately included in the instructions given to machines.
That keeps Corriveau’s argument from becoming a pure optimization story. He isn’t replacing human values with machine logic; he is moving the expression of those values upstream. The shelf moment gets quieter because the proxy has already filtered the options. Brand becomes less about a burst of attention and more about operational consistency the customer can delegate with confidence.
For designers and brand teams, the practical consequence is simple: brand claims need proof a system can read and compare. The work doesn’t stop at making a company memorable; it has to make the company’s promises observable, consistent, and legible before a human sees the options. The artifact isn’t only the campaign anymore; it’s the evidence trail behind the campaign.
The biggest risk sits in the middle. The brands whose differentiation relies primarily on communication rather than capability. Agentic AI will expose decorative branding with uncomfortable clarity. If your distinctiveness lives in marketing but not in service, performance or trust, optimisation will reduce your value to price alone.
For branding professionals, this is not a minor adjustment; it is a structural reframing. The future will rely less on megaphones and more on architecture. We must move away from simply generating awareness toward establishing qualities so credible and so consistent that they influence how customers configure their digital proxies. The question is no longer just how to be noticed, but how to be retrievable, recommendable, and selectable inside AI-driven systems.
This is where Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) begins to matter. Brands will need to think less in terms of impressions and more in terms of machine-readable signals of trust, performance, and relevance – the inputs that shape whether an AI system even considers them in a ranked set of options. Practically, this means building brand equity in ways that can be consistently interpreted by both humans and machines: structured proof of service quality, transparent value signals, strong third-party validation, and behavioural consistency over time.

AI Doesn’t Care About Your Latest Campaign
AI agents are reshaping consumer decisions. What it takes for brands to stay relevant as algorithms drive choice.





















