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Satya upadhaya(2)

Martech expert reveals the ‘customer decisioning blueprint’

Thu, 18th Dec 2025

We are now in the golden age of marketing technology, a time not of scarcity, but of abundance. Data, technology, channels, and AI are now plentiful, accessible, and scalable. Yet paradoxically, this abundance has created confusion, fragmentation, and fatigue.

Let's explore the four pillars shaping the marketing frontier.

1. Data: From collection to comprehension

The volume and variety of data have grown exponentially - from 2 zettabytes in 2010 to 180 zettabytes in 2025. Data now comes in many formats: structured, unstructured, first-party, second-party, third-party, behavioural, transactional, contextual, batch, streaming, and more.

The challenge has shifted from collection to comprehension. We have more dashboards, but fewer insights. More metrics, but less meaning.

True decisioning requires more than big data; it demands smart interpretation - the ability to connect what the data says to what the business should do.

2. AI: From automation to intelligence

AI has become the new operating system of marketing. But we must evolve beyond Generative AI prompts to predictive, adaptive, and contextual AI - systems that don't just assist but decide.

Modern marketing AI now arbitrates in real time - determining who, what, when, and why - not just which segment or next-best offer. Solutions like Pegasystems Adaptive Models, Google Vertex AI, and Databricks Mosaic exemplify this shift: AI that senses, learns, and adjusts based on outcomes.

This is the rise of cognitive decisioning - AI as a co-pilot that interprets, optimises, and improves continuously.

3. Technology: From stacks to ecosystems

The MarTech landscape has exploded, with over 15,000 platforms in 2025 compared to just 150 in 2011. The trend is shifting from best-of-breed chaos to composable ecosystems, where data, decisioning, and delivery layers interoperate seamlessly.

Modern architectures now blend:

  • Data platforms (Databricks, Snowflake )
  • Decisioning engines (Pegasystems, Adobe Journey AI, Salesforce Einstein)
  • Engagement tools (Braze, Iterable, Bloomreach , Salesforce Marketing Cloud)
  • Privacy and consent frameworks (CMPs and compliance layers)

This interoperability enables marketing that is real-time, rule-driven, and responsible.

4. Channels: From media to moments

Marketing no longer happens in "channels. "It happens in moments - each shaped by context, emotion, and immediacy. A channel is a medium for interaction, not the interaction itself. A touch point is a specific moment where a need is addressed.

Marketing has evolved beyond traditional channels to contextual engagement. Customers interact through 15+ touchpoints - web, app, email, push, retail, social, and voice assistants.

They expect continuity: 71% expect personalised interactions, and 76% are frustrated when this does not happen (McKinsey, 2023). The proliferation of APIs, event buses, and channel connectors have made omnichannel engagement technically possible. But the shift from media management to moment orchestration requires one missing piece: decisioning.

The unit of marketing has shifted from "campaigns" to "moments".

The paradox of plenty

We are working harder, spinning faster yet moving backwards. Despite this abundance of data, technology, channels, and AI, marketing effectiveness has not improved.

Research shows:

  • MIT: 95% of enterprise GenAI pilots fail to deliver measurable business impact or ROI.
  • HBR: Despite 25% of marketing budgets spent on MarTech, 49% of marketers report results do not meet expectations, and 44% of purchased MarTech tools go unused.
  • Supermetrics: Marketers handle 230% more data than in 2020, but 56% lack time to analyse it.
  • Shopify: While 92% of brands claim to offer personalisation, only 19% of US consumers rate these experiences as "good" - and 0% as "excellent".
  • McKinsey: Not a single Fortune 500 marketing leader could clearly explain how their MarTech investments led to measurable ROI.

Marketing has become more complex, not smarter. We are busy, but not better. We have become technologists of tools, not architects of decisions.

The decisioning crisis

The C-suite is at a crossroads, questioning whether variety is causing confusion, whether there is too much data and technology, and where to start: the right tools, platforms, teams, and partners.

The problem is not data, technology, or channels - it is our ability to decide. We face a decisioning problem: Who to engage, what to offer, when to act, and how to deliver consistency across touchpoints and delivering a seamless, connected, and continuous experience.

We face not an information crisis, but a decisioning crisis.

Bridging the connection gap: The need for decisioning

Marketing has always been about connections - meeting human needs at moments that matter, but

  • Every interaction generates data
  • Every channel fragment attention
  • Every new data source multiply complexity

What this does, it creates a connection gap. Decisioning is what closes this gap. It is the connective tissue between data, insight, and experience. We've matured in data and delivery, but decisioning remains an underdeveloped frontier.

Without it, marketing becomes a collection of tools - fast, noisy, and disjointed.

So, how do we address this? Welcome the Customer Decisioning Blueprint

The decisioning iceberg

Most organisations see only the visible tip of the iceberg - the AI models, dashboards, and vendor demos. That's merely 30% of the decisioning landscape.

The invisible 70% - where success actually lies - includes:

  • Governance frameworks
  • Business rules and constraints
  • Bias management
  • Performance monitoring
  • Human oversight and ethics

Decisioning is not a technology stack. It is an organisational muscle - a blend of architecture, governance, and adaptability.

To guide this evolution, we came up with the development of the Customer Decisioning Blueprint - a practitioner-owned, vendor-agnostic framework that helps organisations design decisioning systems tailored to their DNA.

The T-Shaped decisioning blueprint

The T-shaped customer decisioning blueprint illustrates:

  • Horizontal capabilities that demand enterprise alignment - Data Foundations, Decisioning Intelligence & Business Context
  • Vertical capabilities that demand deep domain skill - Real Time Optimisation, Omni Channel Activation
  • A surrounding wrapper of governance and adaptation - Continuous Measurement & Value Realisation

This ensures decisioning systems are scalable, transparent, and human-aligned.

The future of marketing: AI Agents and zero-touch execution

Looking ahead, marketing will enter the era of AI agents - autonomous systems that think, act, and converse, while humans provide governance and direction.

We will evolve through three stages:

  1. Human Initiated – Ideas, context, intent
  2. AI Structured – Data synthesis and contextual support
  3. Human Refined – Storytelling, empathy, ethical oversight

Eventually, AI will converse with humans, not just execute commands. It will reason, adapt, and negotiate outcomes in real time, while humans focus on strategy, creativity, and trust.

With this, the future is defined by two converging paradigms:

The next big thing is Autonomous Contextual Marketing enabled by zero-Touch Execution.

  • Autonomous contextual marketing marks a shift from rule-based, reactive marketing to proactive, AI-driven orchestration. Algorithms no longer follow instructions - they understand purpose. They decide what matters most, when it matters, for whom.
  • Zero-touch execution the logical endpoint of automation. Marketing systems that require no manual setup, no routine intervention. They become living ecosystem - self-optimising, responsive, and self-healing.

Together, these define the next evolutionary phase: marketing that thinks, acts, and adapts by itself.

Marketing was once about storytelling. Then it became about data. Now, it must become about decisioning - the art of connecting the two. The future of marketing will not be defined by more tools, but by smarter decisions. We will move from Martech to Mindtech - systems that don't just automate tasks but elevate intelligence.

As AI agents become our digital colleagues, marketers must evolve into decision architects - designers of intent, ethics, and outcomes. When technology begins to think, humans must lead with purpose. That is how we will build marketing systems that are not just autonomous - but truly intelligent.

Ultimately, decisioning is not the endgame - it is the enabler of a more intelligent, empathetic, and human future.