When Dan Kahn isn’t hosting “The Only The Strong Survive” podcast, he serves as CEO of Kahn Media and the outdoor-focused TREAD Agency. Both agencies offer a wide range of innovative marketing services to everything from small startups to mid-size companies to massive OEMs. His “day job” of leading both agencies and over two decades of experience give Dan deep insight into the marketing landscape and the many challenges brands currently face.
In this unique solo episode of “Only The Strong Survive,” Dan takes a break from the podcast’s usual format. Instead of interviewing a guest, he takes time to reflect on how modern marketing is rapidly changing and what brands can do to stay ahead.
Click on the icon above to listen to the entire insightful episode, and here are our top takeaways:
There is a huge shift in consumer behavior happening right now.
The current marketing landscape is stuck between two different economies.
Building brand authenticity is still one of the best ways to connect with consumers.
Breaking through to consumers without damaging your brand is vital.
The Big Shift
One massive change Dan explains is happening right now is the shift from an attention economy to a filtering economy. Most of us are familiar with the attention economy, where brands that make the most “noise” tend to win. However, that is now being replaced by an environment in which marketing messages are “filtered” before ever reaching consumers.
“We have become completely overwhelmed with content. What that means now is people are relying on third parties to sort and prioritize that content for them,” explained Dan. “That could be an algorithm on a social platform, it could be AI in your Gmail helping you organize spam from emails you are getting directly from your coworkers or it could be even something like an LLM. Those filters are helping people assess what information they want from the stuff they don’t want.”
The New Grey Area
AI acts as a large-scale filter, providing an ever-increasing number of consumers with product information and recommendations. Its mass adoption has helped to usher in a new filtered economy. However, according to Dan, that shift isn’t fully complete, leaving brands having to operate in a grey area between an older attention economy and a newer filtered one.
“It is one of the biggest shifts in consumer behavior that has happened in the last century. We don’t even know when that transition will be completed because we are still certainly living in this transitional phase right now,” said Dan. “The attention economy does still function, and the filtering economy is still coming online. The number of people adopting AI for decision-making is doubling about every six months, and at this point, the most recent study I read said over 1 billion people on Earth have now used AI in the last month.”
Future Proofing Your Brand
Many companies are struggling with this huge shift in consumer behavior. How does one stand out when there are now multiple filters between a brand and consumers? For Dan, the answer is to lean hard into building an authentic brand as it will always be the best way to connect with your customers.
“How do you future proof your business? How do you figure out how to stand out in a world where algorithms and LLMs are making a lot of decisions for you? Well, one of the ways you do it is through authenticity,” said Dan. “To me, branding is not just a logo. Your brand is who you are, what you stand for and your values. It is what it says about a person or a customer when they buy your product. What are they aligning themselves with?”
The Challenge
Some brands are looking for gimmicky ways to break through the new filters and gain attention. However, the recent Ferrari Luce launch and highly questionable Jaguar rebrand are good examples of how that tactic can fail. The biggest challenge is connecting with consumers in a way that doesn’t damage your brand, which requires longer-term thinking and a deeper understanding.
“How do you stay loyal and true to the values that brought you to the customer in the first place while also being visible enough that you can break through that filtered economy and get the algorithms and the LLMs to recommend you? That is the challenge, and it is an interesting one,” said Dan. “You can turn the hard stuff into good stuff if you are willing to understand how this transitory ecosystem we are living in actually works.”











