The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - Is AI Killing Advertising? & Scott’s Best Financial Decision
Episode Date: March 20, 2026Scott Galloway breaks down how AI is impacting the marketing industry, explains why choosing the right partner may be the most important financial decision you’ll ever make, and shares his approach ...to raising independent kids. Want to be featured in a future episode? Send a voice recording to officehours@profgmedia.com, or drop your question in the r/ScottGalloway subreddit. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Chances are your favorite websites used to depend on Google for traffic and money.
But that's not really working anymore.
Now publishers are scrambling for new lifelines.
Neil Vogel, who runs People, Inc., says his company figured it out a couple years ago.
You would think, given what everyone said about us,
that we would be the guys that would be doing the work.
now, we're kind of the guys doing the best now.
I'm Peter Kafka, the host of channels, the show about tech and media and what happens when
they collide.
You can hear my conversation with Neil Vogel now, wherever you listen to your favorite podcasts.
Welcome to Office Hours with Propgee.
This is the part of the show where we answer your questions about business, big tech, entrepreneurship,
and whatever else is on your mind.
If you'd like to submit a question for next time, you can send a voice recording to OfficeHours
of Propteammedia.com.
Again, that's Office Hours at Propteamedia.com.
Or post your question on the Scott Galloway subreddit, and we just might just might be
feature it in our next episode. Question number one. Our first question comes from Michael on LinkedIn.
Michael says, AI is one of the key drivers behind the recent collapse and irrelevance of the advertising
agency industry. What will happen to the whole marketing domain then? Okay. Could you be a little
broader in your questions? All right. What's happening in the agency world? WPP, one of the world's
largest holding companies, announced a major plan to cut a half a billion pounds and costs by 2028,
by restructuring and integrating AI tools.
And is aiming to return the company to growth by 2027.
The new center share price to its level since 1998.
Think about that.
28 years later, Omnicom's $9 billion merger
with Inter-Public Group will result in about 4,000 job cuts,
which accounts for around 3% of the company's combined headcount.
And then in 2025, total ad agency employment in the UK dropped over 14%
with the under 25 workforce shrinking nearly 19%.
driven in part by AI automating roles and reducing demand for entry-level work.
So the industry's navigated platform transitions before print, broadcast, digital, and mobile.
Let's bring this back to me. I've been able to reinvent myself and get out of shitty businesses
before they got terribly shitty. I started, in my second year of business school, I started a brand
strategy firm called Profit. And my basic thesis was I read something from my brand strategy professor,
or David Ocker, that the only sustainable advantage was the intangible associations of developing
these brand codes and then using this incredibly cheap, cheap medium called broadcast advertising
to hammer home these brand associations of maternal love or European grace or sex or American
toughness. And that that was how you created a rational margin. And from 1945 to the introduction
of Google, whether it was P&G or Nike or General Motors, they basically, the kind of the algorithm
for above market shareholder value was a mediocre product with amazing brand values.
All that changed with Google, and that is all of a sudden your ability to find,
instead of deferring to the brand as a weapon of mass diligence, you could type using your
social graph, using Google and search, using different digital properties between, I always used
to stay at the trip at the Four Seasons or the Ritz Carlton when I traveled.
Why?
because someone else was paying.
I was traveling for clients or speaking gigs.
And they always deliver an eight out of ten.
And then once there was TripAdvisor and Instagram and Facebook and Google,
I now found that, oh, wait, when I'm in Berlin,
I want to stay at the show house because it has the best gym.
When I'm in London, I want to be a Chiltern Firehouse
because it has the coolest bar with the hottest people.
You know, I basically want to be the Beverly's Hotel
because it has the polo lounge where, you know,
I can establish high contact with a lovely Russian lady.
That's not true.
Anyways, I could find what worked for me,
and I no longer needed to defer to the institutional brand
and that a series of smaller brands
or that basically product innovation broke through.
That if you had an amazing product,
like a 10x better product,
people would learn about it without the benefit of advertising.
The majority of the companies have added tens of billions
of dollars in shareholder value over the last 30 years
have one thing in common,
and that is they spend a disproportionately low percentage of their gross proceeds on advertising
because they just have, they pour all their money into product innovation because
digital kind of unlock this incredible era of product innovation.
Tesla spent no money on advertising because it had an individual who created a massive
amount of awareness and you could tune up the car over the wirelessly.
Google, Instagram, they're 10x better products.
So there has been an era moving from brand.
to innovation, and it's mostly been driven by these direct response mediums that have incredible
technology that are automated, that don't require a person to show up and talk about brand codes
wearing black, and then enter into this exceptionally inefficient, expensive ecosystem where they
take millions of photographs and pay Annie Leavis a quarter of a million dollars for a shoot
of Kate Moss to find a moment in time and then run an ad for Tom Ford and Vogue magazine that
costs $180,000 that is relevant to 2% of the market.
And Google basically said, we can target people now to teenagers who just got driver's licenses
in New York if you're GEICO in New York.
Anyways, these companies are now in just full-blown structural decline, which means
they're going to have to cut costs and consolidate and merge.
But you're going to see the next kind of step change down is going to be when these AI
companies launch advertising.
And they're already beginning to experiment with advertising.
formats. Conversational AI systems, including chat GBT, have started introducing sponsored responses
and paid placements in certain contexts. That's going to be really fucking strange when your AI,
which knows your history, starts serving you ads. And the best ads are the Super Bowl hands
down. I think we're anthropic mocking the idea of chat GPT going into ads. Those ads were just,
oh my God, they were outstanding. In some, I just want to relate this to, so AI is another tool
that will continue to kick the shit out of traditional masters of the universe from the last century,
and that is the ad agency guys. So let's bring this back to me. Best consulting gig I ever had
was right out of business school. Again, I'm Warren Helman of Helman and Friedman. I met him. We hit it off,
and he said, I've got a great assignment. I'm going to pay you for two years to come to the board
meetings of Levi Strausson company. At the time, it was the most valuable private company in the world.
You know, everyone had Levi thought advertising was just it.
Like the right ad campaign could change everything for them
because they had an okay denim product
and they wrapped it in amazing grand codes.
It cost them eight bucks to produce these things
and they sold them for $38 bucks at JCPennings
and $150 bucks in Germany.
And I'm not exaggerating.
I haven't seen an ad man or an ad woman
in a board meeting in 20 years.
No one gives a shit what they think.
They literally,
Don Draper has been drawn
and quartered. And so the advice is kind of the following. These are just shitty places to invest in
work. Now, having said that, if you're over, say, the age of 40, 45, and you already have good
momentum there and you have clients that like you, you are always going to need people to interpret
changes in marketing and advertising and AI for clients who are willing to spend their company's
money to help them navigate an ecosystem, which is increasingly complex. But every year, their
business gets smaller and smaller and shittier and shittier. So you're over the age of 40 or 45 and you're
doing well, fine. But if you are under the age of 40 and you have a chance to get out of the
fucking, get on the helicopter out of Saigon. Because traditional kind of image-based broadcast-driven
advertising, oh my God, that's a shitty business. It's like going to work in cable news right now.
So what happens to the whole domain of traditional marketing? Pain. Thanks for the question.
Question number two also comes from LinkedIn.
Noah Frank asks,
what is the most underrated financial decision you made
that had nothing to do with investing?
Easy.
I married a competent partner.
I married someone who's a decent person who's competent.
I have a lot of friends who are men and women
who don't have a competent partner.
And it means they have two jobs,
which means they can't be very good, you know, don't half-ass two things, whole-ass one thing.
You end up half-assing two things if your partner, if your husband or your wife isn't competent.
You're managing the relationship, you're managing the household.
So building something with someone who's competent and loving and understanding and makes you feel good about yourself,
and manages the parts of your life well or the home well,
who brings in their own money and is smart.
I mean, one plus one equals three.
The majority of very, very wealthy people are married
and have a competent partner.
And my dad always made good money.
And it goes the other way.
You want to be a good partner as well.
My dad was made good money.
He was talented.
He ended up, at the age of 60,
he ended up broke without a pot to piss in
because he got married and divorced four times.
So it goes both ways.
One, the most important decision you will make financially
and in terms of your own psychological well-being,
hands down, is finding the right partner.
And what I don't like is all this shit
that's especially on TikTok telling women that, you know,
if he doesn't open your door, he's out of there.
Like, find red flags and everything.
Well, that's not helpful either.
But the question is, all right,
how do you select a good partner,
if that's the most important thing.
And I think most people would probably say, okay, that makes sense.
One, it's sex and affection.
You're saying, I choose you.
I think it's really important.
And I think you constantly need to reaffirm that and work on it and express physical desire.
I think, let me say it, I think women want to be wanted.
And I think sex, it brings peace and harmony to a relationship and says, I choose you.
Two values.
I think it's important that you're generous and very open with each.
about things like religion as relates to your kids,
how close you want to live with your family,
and that you're generous with each other around those things.
And then the third is, I was joking to say,
never let a woman be cold or hungry,
Pasamina some power bars at all times.
The biggest blowups I've had in my relationships have been
when someone didn't have lunch.
They skipped lunch.
Watch out.
Where am I going with this?
Anyways, picking the right partner.
And then also, so how do you pick the right partner?
So how do you pick the right partner?
Volume.
What do I mean by that?
Get out.
Yeah, it's great to sit at home and eat an edible and hang out with your dog and watch Netflix.
No, fucking get out.
Find friends.
Go out.
Be friendly.
Somebody asks you out for a coffee and it's not like sparks right away.
Okay, go to a second coffee.
You might find that you, over time, you're really into, start to get more into him or into her.
Get out.
Meet friends.
Express romantic interest.
Be bold.
Approach strangers.
put yourself in situations where the serendipity of, you know, meeting somebody.
Be bold, be brave.
How did I find the mother of my children?
I saw a woman I was attracted to at the hotel pool, the Raleigh Hotel.
I went out to get my – I promised myself I was going to speak to her before I left.
I didn't.
I went out to get my car, and I'm like, fuck.
And I grabbed the – I told the valet guy to hold on to my car, and I went back in,
and I rolled up and said, hi, my name Scott, where are you guys from?
and I don't know, 18 months later, our first son's middle name is Raleigh.
My point is, it's easy to say, okay, you're going to get it.
Partner is the most important financial decision, right?
You're probably, like, if you're not nodding your head, okay, you don't get it.
It is the most important decision.
The most important decision, I think you can sort of control.
Two, all right, great, how do I find a great partner?
Putting yourself out there, going out, being kind.
If you're a man, leveling up.
Level up, for God's sakes.
Young men need to level up because young women are leveling up,
and it's only natural and understandable that their standards are going up,
as they would if you were fucking leveling up the way women are leveling up.
Anyways, oh, where am I going with this?
Most important decision, financial, emotionally, psychologically,
who you decide to build a life with.
How do you find the right partner?
You get out.
You level up yourself.
You make yourself more attractive.
you develop resilience and you put yourself in a ton of situations where you could meet somebody.
Thanks for the question.
We'll be right back after a quick break.
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Welcome back. Question number three.
Hey, Scott.
My wife and I both inherited reasonable amounts of money from our families.
We worked our asses off, managed it well,
and now we're sitting on significant wealth
that we need to tell our 21 and 24-year-old kids about.
Our goal is to give them the freedom to do the work that they love
without financial pressure.
But our fear is that we don't want to create spoiled brats
who think that finding themselves is a career.
How do my wife and I thread this needle?
And what's the script for you never have to worry about money,
but if you stop working, I will haunt you from the grave.
I need the Galloway playbook here on how to avoid raising waiters.
You know, people who just wait around for their inheritance
instead of building something with their lives.
Looking forward to your advice.
So this is what you call a good problem,
But it's going to be a problem because there's going to be a ton of generational wealth transfer over the next 10, 20, 30, 50 years.
So I love these member clubs because my arrested adolescence tour continues unfettered.
I'm in the midst of a midlife crisis.
That's the bad news.
The good news is I think I'm going to get through it in about 30 or 40 years.
But part of that manifestation is I join all these members clubs, mostly in New York, but there's some here in London.
London actually invented them, but it's been infected in New York.
And I like going to a place where I know I'm going to get in.
It's going to have like a curated group of people.
Hello, douchebag.
That's right.
Daddy, first word douche, second word bag.
Whatever.
I'm just leaning into it.
And one of the members clubs I go to is Casa Chippriani downtown in New York.
And I went there with some friends, three of us, a couple, mostly appetizers, a few drinks, 700 bucks.
And I met the GM and I said, I said, who could?
I see all these young people here, people in their 20s and 30s, who can afford this?
And he said, well, one, none of the women are paying for anything.
And two, most of the men here, it's not their credit card.
It's their parents' credit card.
And it's a lot of trust fund kids from New Jersey.
And it just struck me that I wonder if about a third of the people in New York, their parents are putting them through Manhattan.
There's just going to be so much inherited wealth.
Now, this is a good problem.
I technically share this problem.
I have some economic security that I hope and trust at some point.
My kids will have access to.
The way I think about it is the following.
One, a lot of it isn't up to you in the sense that you'd like to think that we'd like to think as parents that we are engineers,
that all of our behavior will mold this block of clay into a wonderful person.
If we're not careful and we chisel off the arm that we raise assholes,
Yeah, some of that. I can see that. But what we don't recognize is that a lot of it is in the batter. First Lady Obama, who I think gives great parenting advice, said that they come to you. And there were more than being engineers were shepherds. And that is we choose the fields they graze on. We point him in the right direction, but they kind of come to you. And as evidenced by an approach to money, I have one kid who I bought a cashmere hoodie for that was 240 pounds. And he liked it. And then he saw the price tag. And he said, this is.
too expensive. And I said, well, I bought it. I can afford it. Don't worry about it. When
returned it and credited my credit card because he just was uncomfortable with me spending that
much money on him on a cashmere hoodie. Whereas I have another, another one of my kids is,
you know, we just found out, is spending 100 pounds a day on Deliveroo and Uber. So a lot of it
is in the batter. Now, having said that, my approach, I think about this a lot. And that is,
how do you not raise assholes or spoiled kids?
And the Warren Buffett adage is really a good one.
And that is you want to give your kids enough money
so they can do anything, but not enough money
so they can do nothing.
The way I approach it is the following.
And I learned this from Morgan Housel,
and I like this a lot.
I am going to scale up or scale down my kid's life
with my money or lack they're up.
What do I mean by that?
If my kid goes to college and wants to be a high school
math teacher, I'm going to scale his life up. If he gets up every morning and decides he wants to
teach math to high school kids and he lives a good honorable life, I'm going to give him enough money
to buy a house and have a nice life, and I'm going to make sure that he doesn't have the economic
stress of most teachers. Is that a total, you know, nice to have moment of privilege? Yeah, and I've worked
hard, and that's one of the things I will do for my kids if they're doing something worthwhile that's
good for society and they're trying hard and they're good citizens and they don't have the money
to live the kind of life, you know, live in a city. I want them to live nice lives. I deserve that.
I've worked for it. I want it for them. If my kid is rolling around in a range rover and not doing a
whole lot and starting and stopping shit and constantly and maybe still living at home or just
spending more than he's making and not doing much of anything, I am going to try and cut him off.
So I'm going to scale up or scale down based on their activities.
So, you know, I will, in terms of what I leave my kids, I'm probably going to leave them enough money to make sure that they have a home and can afford education.
But I'm not, you know, I'm hoping to be around a while.
But basically my attitude is if you have the benefit of money, scale up or scale down, I don't think letting them know they have money means they're going to wait around for you to die.
I just don't, I don't think that's going to happen.
But this is, again, the mother of all good problems.
But what I, you know, they also, they, it's not what you tell them, it's what you show them.
I don't know if I send a good or bad message.
I spent a shit ton of money, but the same time I don't have a car, I give a lot of money away.
I think I model good financial behavior on a lot of levels and probably not on other levels.
I do.
Anyways, enough of that.
my kind of only, and I have not figured this out, my sort of lesson here advice would be scale up or scale down based on their behavior and the way they acquit themselves in terms of the professional commitment in the lives that they lead. Thanks so much for the question.
That's all for this episode. If you'd like to submit a question, please email a voice recording to office hours atprofitjummedia.com. Again, that's office hours ofprovedtionmedia.com. Or if you've been
prefer to ask on Reddit, just post your question on the Scott Galloway subreddit, and just might
feature it in an upcoming episode.
This episode was produced by Jennifer Sanchez and Laura Janair.
Camryk is our social producer, Brad Williams is our editor, and Drew Burroughs is our technical
director.
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