We now live in an era where professional-level visuals can be mass-produced instantly and for free, requiring nothing more than a few taps on a smartphone screen. Countless companies and independent business owners are eagerly integrating generative AI into their official websites, landing pages, and social media creatives. Backdrops boasting the cold, heavy texture of marble, models with flawless physical symmetry, and dramatically calculated shafts of light appear in seconds. These are visuals that once required booking top-tier photographers, stylists, and expensive studios for days on end.
Yet, a curious phenomenon is unfolding in parallel. Discerning consumers, whose eyes have become highly sophisticated, are rapidly growing tired of this "codified perfection."
No matter how high the resolution or how flawless the details, something essential is missing from websites lined with these images. In fact, the moment a viewer senses that a visual is AI-generated, their trust in the brand quietly but distinctly retreats.
In an age where anyone can obtain flawless visuals at the touch of a button, what is the point of paying a premium to hire an art director? It is not about purchasing the technical skill to make things. It is about employing the "eyes for selection and subtraction" to stop the runaway train of technology and make a brand truly function as a brand.
The Deluge of Perfect Images Thins Out Brand Value
If you feed it the right prompts, today's image-generating AI will endlessly output neat, flawless images. However, the result of this infinite ability to create "clean" things is a dramatic homogenization of visuals across industries.
No matter whose website you open, similar-looking, sanitized images with the exact same artificial atmosphere are lined up. They are technically beautiful and free of defects, yet they fail to leave an impression. The very elements that once symbolized luxury—marble textures, golden highlights, and cold, aloof model expressions—have been codified and mass-produced by AI. Consequently, these elements have degraded into symbols of cheapness.
Consumers now unconsciously sniff out the "scent of AI." Symmetrical faces that are too perfect, light reflections that defy nature, and spaces devoid of any signs of actual human life. The moment these appear on a screen, the human brain flags them as "fake," and the hand scrolls past them without hesitation.
The true value of a brand lies in the "subtle differences" from others and the "imperfect presence" behind that perfection. Now that anyone can generate flawless visuals, simply displaying clean images causes a reverse phenomenon where you blend into the noise and look cheap.

