We think about this a lot from our Malibu office — usually after a surf check and before opening our dashboards.
ClickMint wasn’t born in a vacuum. Our founder previously built and scaled one of the top 50 marketing firms in the U.S., landing it on the Inc. Fastest Growing Private Companies list seven times. That company grew in an era when search ads were exploding, affiliate was misunderstood, and Facebook CPMs felt like cheat codes.
Every few years, someone declared:
“This will eliminate agencies.”
Programmatic.
Smart bidding.
Self-serve ad platforms.
AI creative tools.
And yet, agencies didn’t disappear.
They evolved.
Now AI is accelerating everything — creative production, media optimization, data analysis, site design. E-commerce brands have more tools than ever. Shopify ships new features constantly. Ad platforms auto-optimize. AI can generate landing pages in seconds.
So the real question is:
Will agencies like this even need to exist in the future?
Short answer: yes.
Long answer: not in their current form.
On paper, it seems logical.
If brands can:
Why hire an agency?
Because tools optimize locally.
Brands need optimization globally.
Platforms optimize for their objective functions:
None of them optimize for a brand’s incremental gross margin across the full revenue funnel.
That coordination gap does not disappear with better tools.
It widens.
AI will absolutely eliminate:
Agencies built on labor arbitrage will struggle.
Agencies built on structured revenue systems will compound.
The next decade belongs to agencies that stop selling services and start becoming revenue infrastructure.
That means:
This is not “we manage your ads.”
This is “we engineer your revenue efficiency.”
That distinction matters.
Brands are building internal teams. That trend will continue.
But internal teams face a new reality:
Tool proliferation without integration.
Shopify shows transactions.
Ad platforms show cost per result.
GA4 shows behavior.
Email shows retention.
AI suggests optimizations everywhere.
More data.
More dashboards.
More recommendations.
Less unified decision-making.
The future agency doesn’t compete with those tools.
It orchestrates them.
The agencies that survive the next decade will:
They won’t be vendors.
They’ll be embedded revenue operators.
That’s a different role entirely.
Yes.
But the middle disappears.
The generic “we run ads and optimize sites” model compresses.
What remains:
AI doesn’t eliminate agencies.
It raises the floor and lowers tolerance for mediocrity.
The brands that win will demand measurable revenue impact — not activity reports.
And the agencies that can deliver that will become more valuable, not less.
The future isn’t anti-agency.
It’s anti-inefficient-agency.
The shift is already underway.
The next decade won’t reward the loudest firms.
It will reward the ones that can engineer incremental revenue faster than anyone else — and prove it.
That’s not a service model.
That’s infrastructure.