My key takeaways from DMWF London

Last month, our Demand Generation Manager, Charlie attended the Digital Marketing World Forum (DMWF) in London – an energising day packed with forward-thinking ideas, real-world examples and lots of predictions about how AI is going to impact marketing over the next couple of years.
Here’s his key takeaways from the day:
The future of customer experience is conversational
A recurring message throughout the day: generative AI isn’t just a productivity tool – it’s reshaping how we think about engaging with customers. Soon, we’ll think of AI as something ambient, like electricity. Always on. Always working in the background.
One standout idea came from a session on Microsoft’s CoPilot – described as like having a really sharp data scientist on your team, instantly ready to unpack insights and guide decision-making.
SEO isn’t dead – It’s evolving
If you thought SEO was taking a backseat, think again. It’s just adapting to a more multimodal world – where content isn’t limited to just text. Think written, visual and spoken forms all converging.
A recent study shared during the event showed a rise in AI-generated overviews in Google search results, especially for commercial terms. But even with this shift, the fundamentals remain: EEAT (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness), trust signals and strong brand presence are still your foundation. Let’s not rip those tried and tested SEO strategies up just yet folks.
LinkedIn: The undisputed B2B powerhouse
LinkedIn featured heavily, and for good reason. One session pointed out that the UK ranks fifth globally in LinkedIn usage – and that the platform generates 3x more engagement than X (formerly Twitter). Yet too often, businesses overlook the personal side of LinkedIn.
The biggest lesson? People trust people. Socially connected employees can extend your brand’s reach by 10x compared to company pages, and some marketers have seen ROI on organic LinkedIn content outperform paid social by over 3.6x. If you’re not investing in your team’s presence, you’re likely missing a trick.
Human-Centric CX: Powered by AI, Grounded in people
One of the more thoughtful panels of the day explored how AI, automation, and the human touch can work together. Synthetic data is starting to solve real problems, especially in data privacy and bias. But the consensus was clear: AI might handle the tasks, but humans still bring critical thinking, creativity and nuance.
Using AI to personalise content and messaging across audience segments is a no-brainer – but the messaging still needs to feel human to resonate.
Final thoughts
It’s clear that AI is no longer a “nice to have” – it’s already embedded in how we think, work and connect. But the most impactful takeaway for me? The best marketers won’t just use AI tools – they’ll use them to become more human, more relevant, and more intentional in everything they do.
DMWF was a reminder that staying curious, listening deeply (yes, even on LinkedIn), and blending tech with empathy is the real future of marketing.