Over the last few years, AI has been framed almost entirely through the lens of efficiency.
Faster workflows. Smarter automation. Cheaper execution. The majority of AI hype, investment and transformation has organized itself around task completion at scale.
The top use cases for generative AI in 2024 reflected exactly that: expediting tasks, drafting content, crunching information. Industries sprang up overnight to capitalize on this. RFPs, roadmaps and full-scale transformations all raced toward a singular idea: optimize everything.
But something much more profound — and much less understood — is happening underneath all of this: the rise of emotional intelligence in AI.
The Real Definition of Intelligence
Too often, people still think “artificial intelligence” simply means the ability to generate words, images and videos faster and more impressively. But if we step back, it’s clear:
True intelligence isn’t the ability to generate information.
True intelligence is the ability to generate emotion.
A real intelligence, whether human or artificial, doesn’t just compute. It connects. It makes us feel. It understands nuance. It navigates the full range of human emotion: excitement, comfort, empathy and intimacy.
Without emotion, intelligence is mechanical. With emotion, it becomes meaningful.
Proof It’s Already Happening
The latest Harvard Business Review study on AI usage makes this shift impossible to ignore. Today, the top three reasons people turn to AI are emotional:
- Seeking creativity
- Seeking companionship
- Seeking guidance
In other words, emotional resonance is now surpassing executional efficiency. People aren’t just using AI to get answers anymore. They’re using it to feel connected. To be inspired. To feel human.
The era of Information Technology (IT) is giving way to the era of Emotional Technology (ET).
The past three decades have been spent building an internet that prioritizes speed, access and the volume of information. While this changed the world, it also hollowed out human experience in the process.
Now, a second chance is emerging. AI can finish what the internet started — but this time, with the emotional depth we’ve been missing.
Emotion as a Design System
Even the CMOs, who understand the need for emotion on some level, are still playing small. They know how to tell emotional stories through content and how to spark emotional moments through campaigns. But it stops there.
Emotion isn’t a campaign tactic anymore. It’s becoming a system design principle. This isn’t just about marketing. It’s about experience. It’s about infrastructure. It’s about building brands and businesses that feel — at every touchpoint, every interaction, every scale. Yes, user experience, user interface and ultimately the entire customer experience can be designed to feel.
And the businesses that don’t make that leap? They’ll be left behind, focusing only on what ultimately will become a commodity when the tools get easier and more connected with every business minute that goes by.
What the Future Demands
The future of AI won’t be about how fast it computes — but how deeply it connects.
Brands that treat AI like a glorified taskmaster will fade. Brands that treat AI like a co-creator of human experience will win. The real use of AI isn’t just to optimize workflows. It’s to create emotional experiences at scale with moments that don’t just solve problems but reshape lives.
Because ultimately:
- Information was never the point. Emotion is.
- Intelligence without emotion is noise. Intelligence with emotion is meaning.
There isn’t a single industry today that isn’t ripe for emotional differentiation. Healthcare remains famously unempathetic. Travel and hospitality struggle, loudly, to connect with people emotionally in moments of discovery. Education not only lacks personalized lesson plans, but often fails to teach in ways that truly engage and resonate.
When people make decisions — especially purchase decisions — they are driven by needs, wants and desires. And at the core of all of it is one simple truth: it’s all tied to emotion.
Companies built technical stacks. Now they must build emotional stacks: systems that recognize, respond to and deepen human connection at scale.
Dan Gardner is co-founder of Code and Theory. To read more about the future of customer experience and emerging technologies, see the stories below:
- The Fate Of Human Work In The Age Of Intelligent Machines
- Gen Alpha Never Left the Metaverse, Marketers Did
- AI’s Bubble is Bursting Because You’re Missing Two Letters: CX
- AI is Transforming Customer Service: Travel Could be The First Stop
- Publishers Don’t Repeat the Same Story, Become Leaders of Technology