Marketing AI Institute | Blog

Two Things Every B2B Marketer Should Be Doing With AI Now

Written by Cathy McPhillips | Jun 23, 2026 3:14:08 PM

Our 2026 State of AI for Business Report surveyed more than 2,100 business professionals, including nearly a third who are marketers and 84% who work for B2B organizations.

Respondents said 41% of their organizations describe their AI momentum as inconsistent or siloed. More than half of individual professionals have moved past experimentation, yet their organizations haven't caught up. 

The gap can show up as stalled content pipelines, slow campaign cycles, and competitive ground lost to B2B marketing teams that move faster.

The AI for B2B Marketers Summit will address systems B2B marketers can put to work now.

1. Turn Your Content Engine Into a Pipeline Accelerator By Shifting From Production to Orchestration

The report’s data shows 53% of individual professionals are now in the Integration or Transformation stages of AI adoption, having moved past experimentation into actually embedding AI in their workflows or reimagining their roles entirely. That's up from 43% just a year ago.

But while individuals have raced ahead, only 25% of organizations have reached the Scaling phase. The largest share (47%) are still piloting. Individual contributors are working faster and smarter, but is team-level content velocity keeping pace?

Most B2B content marketers are still structured around production — writing posts, building assets, drafting emails — rather than orchestration, the skill of directing AI across a content system to produce and distribute at scale.

Orchestrating AI

That distinction matters because the output gap is enormous. A content marketer who orchestrates AI across a workflow — ideation, drafting, reformatting, repurposing, distribution — can produce what used to require a team of three or four. This is what’s happening at the teams that are accelerating.

At the Summit, Mike Kaput, Chief Content Officer at Marketing AI Institute, returns with an updated version of his foundational SPARK Flywheel framework rebuilt for 2026. A lot has changed since last year: the tools are more capable, the workflows look different, and the role has shifted. Kaput will walk through what a real AI-powered production week looks like now, including where the biggest gains in content velocity are hiding for teams willing to rethink how they work.

The concrete outcome here isn't more content. It's content that functions as pipeline infrastructure — always-on, persona-specific, built to fill funnel gaps faster than any human-only team could.

2. Build AI Agent Playbooks Before Your Competitors Do

The top trend in the 2026 State of AI for Business Report: AI agents. Forty percent of respondents say AI agents are the trend they're following most closely.

And the training demand data tells the same story: 51% of professionals want training on using AI agents in their work, the second most-requested topic overall. It trailed only "integrating AI into existing workflows" at 58%.

The implication is clear. B2B marketers aren't asking how to start with AI anymore. They're asking how to operationalize it, and agents are the next frontier.

But most marketing teams that have built AI agents are running on fragile infrastructure: workflows only one person knows how to run, experiments that don't survive personnel changes, and tools that require constant rebuilding. That's not an AI strategy. It's an AI liability.

Building a Competitive Edge with AI Agents

The organizations pulling ahead aren't the ones with the most agent experiments. They're the ones that have built what Rachel Woods, founder and CEO of The AI Momentum Protocols (AMP), calls an AI Operations layer, the system infrastructure that turns isolated agent experiments into durable, team-wide capabilities. That means designed agent playbooks, defined human-AI handoffs, and feedback loops that compound over time.

Woods will bring that framework to the Summit, drawing from her agency's client work across content creation, campaign execution, research, sales enablement, and SEO. The outcome she's building toward isn't just efficiency; it's a sustained competitive gap that's very hard to close once established.

This matters for pipelines specifically because agent-powered workflows compress campaign cycles. Research that used to take a week happens overnight. Content that fed a single channel now feeds six. Sales enablement assets that require coordination across teams can be generated and tailored in hours. The teams building this capability now will be the hardest to catch in 12 months.

Mike Kaput, Rachel Woods, and a full lineup of practitioners will be presenting concrete, deployable systems built for exactly where B2B marketing teams are right now at the Summit.

To learn more and register for the B2B Marketers Summit this Thursday, June 25: https://www.marketingaiinstitute.com/events/ai-for-b2b-marketers-summit