When Brands Start to Speak

When Brands Start to Speak

Voice is becoming the primary interface, forcing brands to define how they sound, not just how they look.


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After decades of swiping, scrolling, and staring at screens, the way we interact with technology in the future is set to be very different. As AI grows more conversational, brands are faced with a new challenge in how they communicate, that is how they sound. What happens to brand identity when voice, not images becomes the primary interface? 

This topic was a thread from a conversation I had with Rosh Singh, chief executive at the immersive studio Astral City, about Big Tech’s growing investment in spatial computing, and glass more specifically

“We've come through decades and decades of user interface, design and iterations, and development of what UI looks like. But we're at the precipice now of a moment where voice is going to be the next UI and understanding voice is going to be super important,” Rosh tells me. 

Brandmakers with Louise Foley, Director of Marketing, Europe at Pinterest

Brandmakers with Louise Foley, Director of Marketing, Europe at Pinterest

Listen on Spotify Listen on Apple Music Watch on YouTube Welcome back, it's week three of the Brandmakers podcast, and Hannah is joined this week by Louise Foley, who is director of marketing, Europe at Pinterest. Louise and Hannah got stuck into the subject of trends and signals, and what marketers need to do to stay on the right side of cultural relevance. She also detailed her own marketing strategy and her push into fun and meaningful experiential events. Disclaimer: we recorded thi


Hannah Bowler

Hannah Bowler