
Podcast: El Gamal on going beyond trends, transactions, performance and promotion
El Gamal reveals that the Middle East brand and marketing industry has, indeed, been overcorrecting towards performance, taking examples of brands such as Airbnb that have great success stories by doing the opposite – focusing on brand.
'Brand and performance doesn't have to be a tug of war,' El Gamal says, 'It's not about brand versus performance. It's about brand and performance. Ultimately, if you treat them as separate, and have separate teams for them with different KPIs – that's where the problems arise. The role of brand is to create demand and desirability, which is so much more than awareness. Brand is demand, which helps you raise your pricing power. So, if you're able to create value through brand initiatives or demand initiatives, then performance supplements it.'
El Gamal adds, 'Performance is like sugar, and brand is like nutrition. We need both. But if these teams are cycling in different directions and they're not speaking to one another, then you have a tug of war-type situation and this is where the problem arises.'
The conversation also delves into the ongoing debate about agency-client relationships, which have, reportedly, become transactional in a world where we preach the buzzwords of relationships, relevance, empathy and positive experiences.
Without mincing words, El Gamal calls for immediate change, saying, 'If you have a transaction with an agency, expect a service. If you treat them like a partner, you get great work, you get credibility, creativity and trust. This is a two-way street. Brands shouldn't treat agencies as vendors. Clients and agencies both have a responsibility to get to know each other a lot better. While their are campaign KPIs, it's also important to make the effort to understand the bigger picture.'
El Gamal adds, 'Agencies tend to live in the fourth P of marketing – promotion. And if you live there not knowing the nuances of the business, the reasoning and strategy behind the other three Ps of pricing, place and product, and if you don't know the client's KPIs and if the client doesn't provide clarity on the agency's KPIs, then the model doesn't work. Sometimes during the RFP process, there's a chemistry meeting, but even this needs to go deeper for brand and to build meaningful relationships.'
He then shares his take on when marketers to say 'No' to tempting trends and brands such as Duolingo that are perfecting the balance between leading on trends while staying on-brand. El Gamal also opens up about the pain points within the procurement and pitching process, from the lack of detailed briefs to the lack of clear evaluation criteria and clear feedback loops.
Before he concludes the conversation, El Gamal shares a key message, 'A lot of the focus among marketers has been scaling and speed. If we take a second to pause and reflect, we'll realise that the brands and marketers that win aren't those that focus on scale and speed, but those who choose to focus on trust and credibility – whether that's internally or externally. If brands don't focus on building trust and credibility with their respective audiences, they will begin to struggle really soon.'
For more such insights from a very intriguing conversation, watch the full video above.

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Campaign ME
5 days ago
- Campaign ME
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Campaign ME
5 days ago
- Campaign ME
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This represents a significant evolution beyond traditional AI models, which have primarily focused on data analysis or content generation. Agentic capabilities, being integrated into platforms, aim to provide personalised recommendations, insights and automate problem-solving.' Expo City Dubai's Douglas-Home goes to the extent of calling agentic AI a 'game-changing opportunity for brand owners,' especially given that AI agents are becoming the 'masters' of personal shopping and customer service by handling autonomous, multi-layered and informed brand interactions. He says, 'Handled correctly, any AI agent delivering customer experiences that genuinely resonate with a brand's values, messaging, tone of voice and principles will open the door to a holy grail of optimised marketing campaigns through ultra-niche personalisation and empathy on steroids.' While eMarketer data reveals that the adoption and execution of such AI experiences still lags behind technological advancement, leaders share that companies such as Google that are deepening AI integration into their core products will catalyse the shift towards agentic AI. However, industry leaders also caution that this shift should be built on foundations of trust and led by utility. With increasing consumer demand for personalised and seamless brand experiences, marketers need to wade carefully into the agentic AI realm, rather than diving in merely because the option exists. OMD's Mo says, 'Consumers will shift to agentic AI if they trust that AI over the brand. For example, I might use an agent to book a holiday. But if I have a favourite hotel group, then will I use an agent on that brand's website or will I use a commercially available agent to search for cheaper prices, acting like a modern OTA? That choice will depend on the individual consumer. The only wrong move is when a brand ignores the possibilities of agentic. That's just bad customer experience (CX).' Dutton adds, 'We shouldn't get bogged down 'developing an agent' but rather focus on leveraging the right environments to create meaningful consumer utility experiences.' 'The shift in conversation away from media metrics and towards business impact is one of the healthiest things to have happened to digital media for many, many years.' Diversify and measure search for better outcomes The truth of the matter is: Search has diversified far beyond Google and Bing. It also includes retail platforms such as Amazon and noon, social search on TikTok and Instagram, and AI-driven discovery through tools such as OpenAI's ChatGPT and Google's AI Overviews. With marketers navigating fluctuating cost per click (CPC), new channels such as retail media and consumer demand for personalised recommendations are now forcing marketers to diversify and measure better. Gleadhill says, 'As CPCs rise on core search channels, marketers need to diversify within the search ecosystem – investing in retail media for high-intent moments, optimising feeds and product data for visibility, and using first-party signals to personalise experiences.' She adds, 'Measurement must evolve too: incrementality testing, margin-based metrics and cross-channel attribution are critical to prove what's truly driving business results, not just clicks.' The Trade Desk's Kane agrees, 'Don't chase CPCs. The key is to diversify and focus on goals and tangible outcomes. Retail media, connected TV and audio all work better when you have a unified view of your customers and their behaviours in real time across all these channels. Fragmented 'disconnected' campaigns are often a sign that the right tech stack isn't in place.' Kane also calls for marketers to leverage programmatic advertising for enhanced targeting, deeper insights into campaign performance, real-time optimisation, and personalisation at scale across the open internet. Leaders also agree that marketers must: Embrace AI-powered ad products designed to reach users across new 'inputs and outputs' without requiring additional work; Prioritise high-quality data and comparable measurement to track true performance and optimise campaigns; and Focus on the full funnel, from discovery to decision, ensuring a strong presence across all stages where consumers interact with information. Dutton says, 'This requires a shift from the popularity of lower-funnel, performance-based media metrics to holistic brand growth measurement frameworks that capture brand lift, cultural resonance, and the overall impact on brand health, enabling data-driven decisions that maximise return on investment (ROI) and build lasting brand value. Overcoming this challenge requires a focus on long-term brand building and a willingness to experiment with new measurement methodologies.' If done right, this move from monitoring CPCs to holistic brand growth through new measurement methods could be just the medicine the industry needs to revive itself. Spark Foundry's Dallasheh says, 'Leveraging data analytics and AI insights enables precise tracking of consumer behaviour and preferences, allowing more tailored personalised recommendations that collectively drive desired business growth. Implementing advanced attribution models facilitate more effective cross channel impact evaluation, improving investment efficiency amid fluctuating CPCs.' She adds, 'By prioritising customer experience and engaging content across various touchpoints, marketers can now strengthen brand loyalty while adeptly measuring and adapting to the rapidly evolving marketplace.' Mo sums it up, saying, 'CPCs were never a reliable metric, and any move we can make towards new measurement solutions is a win for the industry. Even brands and advertisers can shift focus to metrics such as brand lift and digital attention measurement, or use marketing mix modelling to measure the overall impact on business objectives.' He adds, 'The shift in conversation away from media metrics and towards business impact is one of the healthiest things to have happened to digital media for many, many years.' All in all, marketers have their work cut out for them in the way they craft content and search strategies; embrace and engage with generative AI, agentic AI and shopping agents; and go the extra mile to connect with consumers calling for relevance, personalisation and memorable brand experiences.


Campaign ME
10-07-2025
- Campaign ME
The platform updates you need to know from June
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This AI-powered feature automatically resizes existing video content to fit any missing aspect ratio, ensuring optimal performance across various placements globally. TikTok: TikTok hosted a Family Academy initiative in the UAE. The event showcased TikTok's latest safety feature enhancements designed to support family wellbeing. Many of these enhancements build on Family Pairing, a feature launched five years ago, which continues to evolve with input from families and digital safety experts. Key enhancements include: Time Away: Allows parents to decide when it's best for their teens to take a break (e.g. during dinner, study time, or bedtime). Teens can request extra time, but parents make the final decision. Allows parents to decide when it's best for their teens to take a break (e.g. during dinner, study time, or bedtime). Teens can request extra time, but parents make the final decision. Privacy Controls: Parents can view who their teen follows and who follows them on TikTok, along with accounts their teen has blocked. They can also manage who sees their teens' content, who can interact with them, and who can send them direct messages. Parents can view who their teen follows and who follows them on TikTok, along with accounts their teen has blocked. They can also manage who sees their teens' content, who can interact with them, and who can send them direct messages. Wind Down Mode: Teens under 18 who use the app after 10 PM will receive a full-screen reminder accompanied by calming music to help them unwind. A second reminder follows, harder-to-dismiss, full-screen prompt will appear if they continue scrolling. Teens under 18 who use the app after 10 PM will receive a full-screen reminder accompanied by calming music to help them unwind. A second reminder follows, harder-to-dismiss, full-screen prompt will appear if they continue scrolling. Screen Time Management: Parents can set personalised reminders for teens to limit app usage throughout the day. Snapchat Snapchat has relaunched its Family Safety Hub, a refreshed and more inclusive platform designed to help families navigate the app confidently and safely. The updated Hub offers clearer guidance, accessible resources, and new tools that reflect the evolving needs of both parents and teens. The revamped Family Centre section includes updated guidance on how to use in-app features that enable parents to see who their teen is communicating with – without viewing the content of conversations – helping to strike a balance between safety and autonomy. New additions to the Hub include a dedicated FAQ section and a reorganised overview of Snapchat's features, providing a tab-by-tab explanation of the platform and offering practical tips for families. The site also hosts downloadable tools and resources that were previously only available at in-person Snap events. These will be continuously updated as Snapchat's product features and safety offerings evolve. In addition, relevant videos from Snap's YouTube channel have been integrated across the platform and will be refreshed quarterly, ensuring the content remains engaging and up to date. In an effort to educate parents, creators and press, Snapchat hosted an educational session in collaboration with the Abu Dhabi Early Childhood Authority and life educational coach, Hala Kazim. Google Google launched Audio Overviews on NotebookLM in more than 50 languages including Arabic, starting this week. Audio Overviews, which turn uploaded sources into engaging, podcast-like conversations, were launched late last year in English. With Gemini's native audio support, people can use Audio Overviews in their preferred language, and more updates will come to the feature based on users' feedback. Audio Overviews are generated in the preferred language of the user's account. This update also introduces a new 'Output Language' option in NotebookLM's settings. People can change the language at any time, making it easy to create multilingual content or study materials as needed. For example, a teacher preparing a lesson on – climate change in the region can share resources in various languages – like an Arabic documentary, an English research paper and Spanish study reports – with students. The students can upload these and can generate an Audio Overview of key insights in their preferred language. This capability breaks down language barriers and makes the information more accessible to everyone. The feature now generates podcasts in Modern Standard Arabic, and Egyptian colloquial Arabic, and the tool will add more dialects soon. NotebookLM is an AI-powered collaborator and is accessible on the web Pinterest Pinterest introduced AI-powered auto-collages and new shopping trend forecasting ahead of Cannes Lions 2025. As part of Pinterest Ad Labs, the platform is piloting auto-collages –a new AI feature that allows advertisers to turn their existing Pinterest product catalogue into thousands of new shoppable collages in minutes. Collages are already one of the most popular and engaging content types among Gen Z Pinterest users; as early tests indicate that users saved auto-collages at twice the rate of regular product Pins. Auto-collages will enable advertisers to reach their customers more easily by providing a multitude of creative options for their campaigns on Pinterest – all while saving them time and creative resources. So, how does it work? Auto-collages intuitively curates, cuts out and groups product images together into new shoppable visual content based on: User engagement: Creates new collages that emulate existing collages with strong user engagement. Creates new collages that emulate existing collages with strong user engagement. Similar products: Selects similar products and groups them together in a grid-style collage. Selects similar products and groups them together in a grid-style collage. User saves: Creates new personalised collages featuring products similar to what users have saved on their boards. In the coming months, Pinterest is planning gradually expand access to more advertisers. For more monthly platform updates, check here.