
Laura Jones explains that generative AI is raising the bar for creativity. When everyone can produce “pretty good” content, the real challenge is creating something that actually stands out. The risk is not poor output, but settling too quickly for what already works. She argues that as products become more similar, brand becomes a signal of trust. Not in a visual sense, but in the experience behind it. At Instacart, that shows up in details like how a banana is selected. With over a billion bananas delivered and millions of orders including notes on ripeness, customers are expressing very specific preferences. That behavior led to both new product features and the creative idea behind their Super Bowl campaign. The conversation also explores how teams should work with AI. While it can automate repetitive tasks and speed up iteration, it can also create a tendency to agree with what’s generated, especially when working alone. Laura emphasizes that the best ideas still come from people challenging each other, building on different perspectives, and pushing beyond the first acceptable answer. Key takeaways: Mediocre is easier than ever, which raises the bar for originality When AI gets everyone to “pretty good,” the work that stands out has to go further. The bar is not lower. It is higher. Brand becomes trust when products converge As functionality becomes easier to replicate, the question becomes who you trust to get it right. Brand is the answer to that. Only do what only you can do Use AI to take on repetitive work, then spend your time on judgment, insight, and decisions that require a human point of view. Need-finding still requires real people Synthetic research can help, but it cannot replace observing real behavior. The banana insight came from what customers actually did. Human plus bot plus human Working only with AI makes it easy to agree and move on. The best ideas come from people challenging each other, with AI in the middle, not as the whole process. Instacart: instacart.com Super Bowl ad: Super Bowl (Instacart ad) Laura LinkedIn: linkedin/laurajones ro's post: ro.co/perspectives/super-bowl-economics 00:00 Intro: Originality vs AI Complacency 00:27 Meet Laura Jones 01:23 Brand as trust when products converge 03:50 Personalization and reducing mental load 06:24 What still matters in marketing 10:33 Why need-finding cannot be shortcut 14:09 Using AI without losing judgment 16:33 New channels and where customers actually are 21:35 Why “dopey ideas” matter 25:42 Human plus bot plus human 28:44 Inside the Super Bowl ad 31:47 From banana insight to product 34:49 Taking creative risks at scale 37:34 Fear, pressure, and team chemistry 46:24 AI and faster prototyping 53:26 The debrief 📜 Read the transcript for this episode proof-of-craft-what-it-takes-to-stand-out-when-everything-looks-good-with-laura-jones-cmo-of-instacart/transcript For more prompts, tips, and AI tools. Check out our website: https://www.beyondtheprompt.ai/ or follow Jeremy or Henrik on Linkedin: Henrik: https://www.linkedin.com/in/werdelin Jeremy: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyutley Show edited by Emma Cecilie Jensen.