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Dr. Ibrahim Hegazy: AI is Reshaping Global Marketing, With 2026 as a Key Turning Point

Dr. Ibrahim Hegazy, a marketing expert, explains how artificial intelligence is completely changing the global marketing landscape. He highlights that smart agents are becoming more important, while traditional advertising methods are losing their effectiveness.

AI Asim Ibrahim Updated 0 min read
Dr. Ibrahim Hegazy: AI is Reshaping Global Marketing, With 2026 as a Key Turning Point

The global marketing industry is experiencing an unprecedented transformation as it rapidly adopts artificial intelligence technologies. At the same time, traditional rules for advertising and influencing consumers are gradually losing their effectiveness. New models are emerging, relying on data, algorithms, and virtual agents capable of making purchasing decisions independently. In this context, Dr. Ibrahim Hegazy, a marketing professor at the American University in Cairo, emphasized that the global market is currently going through one of the most transformative phases in marketing history. He explained that many traditional tools used for decades are no longer able to keep pace with the nature of the new consumer or the changing digital environment, especially with the growing role of AI in search, comparison, and decision-making processes. During his participation in The Marketers League events, Hegazy clarified that the future of marketing is no longer based solely on creative campaigns or impactful emotional messages. Instead, it has become linked to brands' ability to understand how a “smart agent” works, as these agents are now handling an increasing portion of purchasing decisions on behalf of users.

Moving from Marketing to Humans to Marketing to Smart Systems

This shift reflects a fundamental change in the philosophy of marketing itself. After years where companies relied on psychological and emotional influence to attract consumers, smart systems today deal with products and services according to completely different criteria, related to data quality, accuracy, and ease of machine readability. Hegazy pointed out that traditional advertisements, which rely on human stories or temporary offers, no longer achieve the same impact in an AI environment. This is because virtual agents do not interact with emotional messages; instead, they rely on analyzing “Metadata,” “API” (Application Programming Interfaces), and technical information related to the product or service. This means that future competition among brands will not only be at the level of brand image or the strength of an advertising campaign, but also at the level of a brand's “digital readability” and how well smart systems can understand, classify, and accurately compare it.

The End of the Traditional “Marketing Funnel” Model

According to Hegazy, the “Marketing Funnel” model, which has been the foundation of global marketing strategies for decades, is currently seeing a clear decline. It is being replaced by a new model known as “A2A” or “Agent to Agent,” where evaluation and purchasing processes occur through the interaction of smart systems with each other, often without direct human intervention. He explained that the new model relies on three main stages, starting with “Indexing,” which includes collecting data related to price, technical specifications, and operating information. Then comes the “Verification” stage, during which smart systems compare information across different platforms to ensure its accuracy. This leads to the “Execution” stage, where the purchasing decision is made based on the most reliable data. This shift indicates that companies are now required to completely rebuild their marketing infrastructure, so that their products and services become capable of automated interaction with digital systems, and not just attractive to human consumers.

“Code” Outperforms Emotional Messages

Hegazy believes that 2026 represents a significant turning point in the marketing industry. He explained that “program code” has become more influential than traditional promotional messages, given that smart systems rely on programmatic analysis and precise data to make purchasing decisions. This reality compels brands to transition from the concept of “brand personality” to “programmability.” This means the brand must be understandable to smart systems and capable of being read, analyzed, and directly interacted with. He also noted that the concept of an “ad impression” is no longer just linked to the number of people who saw an advertisement. It now also includes the ability of robots and digital systems to read ad content and analyze its data within different platforms, even without direct human interaction.

The Consumer Inside the “Digital Bubble”

Hegazy explained that the modern consumer now lives inside a “digital bubble” represented by mobile phones, smart applications, and virtual assistants. A growing segment of users relies on artificial intelligence tools to organize options, gather information, and make purchasing decisions. This reflects a deeper change in global consumer behavior, as purchasing decisions are no longer based solely on desire or personal impression. Instead, they are the result of a comprehensive digital analysis managed by smart algorithms that continuously evaluate alternatives and select the most suitable one.

A New Opportunity for Egyptian Youth

Despite the challenges posed by this transformation, Hegazy affirmed that Egyptian youth have a real opportunity to play an influential role in the industry's future, especially with the increasing global reliance on digital technologies and artificial intelligence. He pointed out that understanding the nature of interaction between smart systems and consumers will become one of the most important elements of success in the coming years, both for companies and for professionals in marketing and digital transformation, at a time when global markets are moving towards redefining the relationship between brands and customers in an unprecedented way.

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