Why experience matters more than ever in an age where information is nearly free.
Marketing Strategist & International Multimedia Advertising Consultant | Stars and Stripes Europe Theater | Military Audience Strategy | AI-Era Visibility | Strategic Advisor
Executive Summary
Artificial intelligence has fundamentally changed the economics of knowledge. Information that once required years of experience, expensive consultants, or countless hours of research is now available in seconds, leading many business owners to wonder whether professional expertise still provides enough value to justify its cost.
The answer lies in understanding what expertise has always been. While AI has become remarkably effective at organizing information and producing thoughtful analysis, it has not changed one of the most important realities of professional decision-making: successful businesses are rarely built by finding better answers. They are built by asking better questions. As information becomes increasingly abundant, judgment, context, and experience become more valuable, not less.
The Wrong Question
One of the most common conversations taking place among business owners today begins with what appears to be an entirely reasonable assumption.
“If artificial intelligence can write my marketing plan, analyze my competitors, build my website, create my advertisements, and even recommend a media strategy, why would I still need an advertising consultant?”
At first glance, the question seems difficult to answer. AI produces remarkably competent work. It writes clearly, organizes information effectively, and often uncovers opportunities that might otherwise require hours of research. Many of the tasks that once distinguished professionals from nonprofessionals are now available to anyone with an internet connection.
The question, however, rests on an assumption that deserves closer examination. It assumes that expertise has always been defined by access to information. For much of modern business, that was largely true. Professionals built careers on specialized knowledge that was difficult to obtain, and clients sought them out because they possessed information that was otherwise inaccessible.
Artificial intelligence has changed that equation forever. Information is no longer scarce. What remains scarce is the ability to interpret that information within the context of a particular business, a particular market, and a particular set of circumstances. The competitive advantage has quietly shifted away from information itself and toward something far more difficult to acquire: judgment.
When Information Isn’t Understanding
One of the great misconceptions of the Information Age is the belief that access to information creates expertise.
It does not.
Anyone can purchase a medical textbook. With enough time and determination, they could learn the names of diseases, study anatomy, memorize treatment protocols, and perhaps even understand much of the science behind modern medicine. Few of us, however, would conclude that reading those books qualifies someone to diagnose a patient, distinguish between two similar conditions, or determine the most appropriate course of treatment.
The distinction is obvious because medicine forces us to confront the difference between information and judgment. Physicians spend years developing pattern recognition that cannot be acquired simply by accumulating facts. They learn which symptoms deserve immediate attention, which can safely be monitored, and how seemingly unrelated observations often point toward an entirely different diagnosis. The science may be available to everyone, but the ability to interpret it accurately is developed only through experience.
The same principle applies across nearly every profession. An attorney recognizes legal risks that a client never considered. An engineer notices structural concerns hidden beneath an attractive design. An experienced advertising consultant often discovers that what appears to be a marketing problem is actually an issue of positioning, customer experience, operations, or business strategy.
Artificial intelligence has made professional information dramatically more accessible. It has not made professional judgment universally available. Information can now be gathered almost instantly, but understanding how that information applies to a particular situation remains one of the defining characteristics of expertise.
Marketing Is No Different
Consider a small massage therapy practice in Florida preparing to increase its advertising budget.
The owner opens an AI platform and makes a perfectly reasonable request.
“Design an advertising campaign for my massage therapy business.”
Within seconds, the response appears. It recommends search advertising, local SEO, referral programs, social media content, email marketing, online reviews, and partnerships with nearby businesses. The recommendations are thoughtful, organized, and entirely appropriate for many businesses.
The difficulty is not that the advice is wrong. The difficulty is that the question itself lacks the context necessary to produce meaningful strategic guidance.
Before recommending a single advertising dollar, an experienced consultant would almost certainly begin somewhere else.
- How busy is the practice today?
- What percentage of first-time clients return for additional appointments?
- What differentiates this practice from dozens of other massage therapists in the area?
- Is the website converting visitors into appointments, or would additional advertising simply send more potential customers toward an ineffective sales process?
- Has the business clearly identified the type of client it hopes to attract, or is the marketing trying to appeal to everyone?
Those questions rarely appear because they require more sophisticated prompting. They appear because experience has taught the consultant that businesses often mistake symptoms for causes. Declining appointments may indeed reflect ineffective advertising, but they may just as easily point toward pricing, positioning, customer retention, operations, or changing market conditions. Until those possibilities have been explored, recommending a marketing campaign is little more than an educated guess.
Artificial intelligence performed exactly as it was asked. The limitation was never the technology. The limitation was the question.
What Are You Really Trying to Save?
One of the reasons artificial intelligence feels so compelling is that it appears to reduce the cost of professional services. A business owner who once paid thousands of dollars for strategic guidance can now generate marketing plans, advertising ideas, and campaign recommendations for the cost of a monthly subscription.
Viewed that way, the economics appear obvious.
Unfortunately, that comparison overlooks the one resource every entrepreneur possesses in limited supply.
Time.
Suppose a business owner decides to become their own marketing strategist. Even with AI as a guide, they spend evenings learning advertising platforms, experimenting with campaign settings, redesigning their website, testing different audiences, analyzing reports, refining messaging, and gradually discovering what works. After several months of trial and error, they may become reasonably proficient.
The question is not whether they succeeded.
The question is what they chose to stop doing while they were becoming a part-time marketing consultant.
Those hours were not spent improving operations, strengthening customer relationships, developing new products, training employees, building partnerships, or serving the clients who already trusted them. Every hour invested in mastering a profession outside their own represents an hour no longer invested in the business they originally set out to build.
This is where return on investment becomes more complicated than comparing consulting fees against software subscriptions. The hidden cost of doing everything yourself is rarely measured in dollars alone. It is measured in delayed growth, missed opportunities, and the gradual diversion of attention away from the work that only the business owner is uniquely qualified to perform.
None of this suggests that entrepreneurs should avoid learning about marketing. On the contrary, business owners who understand the fundamentals are better equipped to evaluate recommendations, ask informed questions, and make thoughtful decisions.
Understanding a profession, however, is not the same as practicing one.
The New Economics of Expertise
Artificial intelligence has not diminished the importance of experienced advisors. It has changed where they create value.
For decades, professionals were hired because they possessed specialized information. Today, that information is increasingly available to everyone. As a result, the market has begun rewarding something much more difficult to duplicate: interpretation.
Financial advisors increasingly distinguish themselves through behavioral coaching rather than stock selection. Physicians rely on sophisticated diagnostic technology while contributing the clinical judgment that determines how those findings should be interpreted. Attorneys spend less time locating information than helping clients navigate uncertainty, competing priorities, and risk.
Marketing is following the same path.
Clients no longer need consultants simply to explain what programmatic advertising is or how search engine optimization works. They need someone capable of evaluating whether those tools are appropriate for their objectives, competitive landscape, operational readiness, budget, and long-term strategy. The conversation has quietly shifted from How do I advertise? to Should I advertise this way at all?
That distinction may seem subtle, but it fundamentally changes the role of professional advisors in the AI era.
Final Perspective
Artificial intelligence has done something few people anticipated. Rather than eliminating expertise, it has clarified where expertise has always created its greatest value.
Professionals were never hired simply because they possessed information. They were hired because experience changed what they noticed, which assumptions they challenged, and how they interpreted what they observed. AI has made information dramatically easier to obtain, but it has done little to compress the years required to develop sound judgment.
The businesses that thrive over the next decade will not choose between AI and experienced advisors. They will understand how each contributes something the other cannot. AI accelerates research, organizes information, and expands possibilities. Experienced professionals provide context, perspective, and the ability to recognize problems before they become expensive mistakes.
Perhaps that is the greatest misunderstanding surrounding artificial intelligence. Many people assume its greatest contribution is providing better answers.
Its real contribution may be revealing that the greatest value was never in the answers at all.
AI answers the questions you ask. Experts discover the questions you never thought to ask.
— Kandace Blevin, Advisor’s Edge™ Visibility Wins.
About my work: I operate at the intersection of programmatic advertising, strategic visibility, and institutional trust helping organizations align media with real-world demand and long-term credibility.
In addition to publishing Advisor’s Edge, I work with Stars and Stripes, supporting advertisers and organizations that serve U.S. military and international communities. This includes programmatic strategy, audience sequencing, and visibility planning across trusted editorial and relocation-focused environments.
My work focuses on how AI-mediated systems evaluate credibility, context, and consistency, and how organizations can structure their visibility to influence both human and algorithmic decision-making.
If a conversation would be useful, I’m available for consultation to evaluate whether programmatic advertising is the right tool and how it should be structured to capture demand, not just generate impressions.
Contact: blevinkandace@gmail.com | Schedule a Consultation: Calendar Link
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