words spelling out social media and the impact of ai

AI is everywhere in marketing. It’s in the tools we use, the insights we gather, the content we shape. It arrived quietly at first – suggesting captions, spotting patterns, nudging us toward what might work next. Now it’s unmistakably part of the landscape.

NB: This is an article from 80 Days

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But, AI is not the answer. It’s simply a new ingredient.
Useful, powerful, sometimes brilliant – yet only ever as good as the humans guiding it.

And for hospitality brands, where emotion, atmosphere and story mean everything, that distinction couldn’t matter more.

THE MYTH OF THE MAGIC BUTTON

There’s a seductive idea floating around: press a button, get a month’s worth of perfect social content.

Except hospitality doesn’t work like that.

Guests don’t travel because a caption is tidy or a Reel is timed well. They travel because a hotel makes them feel something – welcomed, understood, transported.

AI can draft a sentence. It cannot understand why your rooftop bar feels different at sunset, or why your concierge’s smile is part of your brand.

That’s where expertise comes in: AI provides the scaffolding; specialists build the story.

WHERE AI ACTUALLY ADDS VALUE

AI proves its worth in the practical, often time-consuming aspects of the work: analysing engagement patterns, identifying high-performing themes, suggesting variations of copy and accelerating early content drafts.

For hospitality teams, it can help highlight which visuals resonate before peak season, flag emerging destination trends or streamline the planning of social calendars.

These efficiencies allow marketers to focus on the work that drives long-term growth: creative direction, brand positioning and strategic storytelling.

AI supports expertise; it does not compete with it.

THE RISK OF OVER-RELIANCE

However, an over-dependence on AI comes with its own risks. Excessive automation tends to flatten brand personality, producing content that feels formulaic or indistinguishable from competitors.

As more hotels begin to use the same tools, originality becomes harder to maintain. When everything sounds familiar, audiences disengage.

A strong social presence still relies on identity, nuance and distinctive voice – qualities no model can replicate without human refinement.

Read the full article at 80 Days