AI Is Making Your Brand Look Like Everyone Else — And That’s a Problem

Drew Livingston
En-same-ification
There’s no denying it — AI has changed the game. With a single prompt, you can generate logos, write copy, design visuals, and build out entire brand assets in minutes. What used to require specialists—designers, writers, strategists—now feels instantly accessible. And on the surface, that sounds like a win. But there’s a growing problem most people don’t see yet: Everything is starting to look the same.

The Rise of “Good Enough” — and Why It’s Dangerous
Right now, thousands of businesses are doing the same thing:
Typing a quick prompt into an AI tool
Accepting the first decent output
Publishing it as-is
The result?
A flood of brands that are:
Polished… but generic
Clean… but forgettable
Functional… but indistinguishable
AI has made it easier than ever to create something that looks good.
But as I’ve told clients for years:
There’s a difference between design that looks good… and design that works.
That gap is about to matter more than ever.
AI Fatigue Is Already Starting
People may not be saying it outright yet—but they’re feeling it.
There’s a growing sense of:
Repetition
Sameness
Lack of originality
Soon, this turns into something bigger:
👉 AI fatigue
And after that?
👉 A shift in behavior.
People will start to:
Tune out brands that feel templated
Distrust content that feels mass-produced
Gravitate toward brands that feel human
In time, some audiences may even actively avoid brands that feel overly AI-generated.
AI Isn’t the Problem — Misuse Is
Let’s be clear:
AI is not the enemy.
It’s one of the most powerful tools we’ve ever had access to.
But it should be used as:
A tool to enhance skill
A way to accelerate execution
A support system for ideas
Not:
A replacement for thinking
A shortcut to expertise
A “magic button” for building a brand
Because here’s the truth:
AI can generate output — but it can’t create perspective.
And perspective is what separates brands that blend in… from brands that stand out.
What Hasn’t Changed (and Never Will)
Technology evolves. Platforms change. Tools improve.
But people?
Fundamentally the same.
The same psychological drivers that worked 1000 years ago still apply today:
Trust
Emotion
Identity
Belonging
Your brand isn’t competing on tools.
It’s competing on:
👉 connection
The Brands That Win Next
The brands that succeed moving forward won’t be the ones using AI the most.
They’ll be the ones using it best.
That means:
Infusing personality into everything
Creating a distinct visual and verbal identity
Designing with intention, not convenience
Building something that feels different
And most importantly:
👉 Attracting the right people while repelling the wrong ones
Because strong brands don’t try to appeal to everyone.
They make a clear statement—and let the right audience lean in.
Use AI — But Don’t Become It
By all means:
Experiment with AI
Use it to move faster
Let it fill in gaps
But don’t let it define your brand.
Because if your entire identity can be replicated with a prompt…
It’s not a brand.
Final Thought
We’re entering a phase where:
Speed is easy
Access is universal
Execution is commoditized
Which means the real advantage shifts to:
👉 Taste
👉 Strategy
👉 Human touch
The businesses that recognize this early—and act on it—won’t just survive the AI wave.
They’ll stand out because of it.







