AI-Driven Brand Communication: Power, Trust and Identity in Digital Marketing Ecosystems
Godwin Okwara *
Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Georgia State University, Georgia.
Aladeotan Kehinde Omolara
Graduate Research Assistant, University of Louisiana, Louisiana, USA.
Moyosoreoluwa Odugbesan
Department of Media and Communication, East Tennessee State, Tennessee, United States.
Rahmat Kofoworola Sanusi
Richards College of Business, University of West Georgia, Carrollton, Georgia, USA.
Adeshewa O. Ibrahim
Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, Illinois, United States.
Adetomiwa Adesokan
Department of Economics, University of Nevada Reno, USA.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Artificial intelligence (AI) is reshaping digital brand communication by redistributing communicative power among brands, platforms, algorithms and consumers. This review critically examines how AI-mediated tools influence power, trust and identity within digital marketing ecosystems. It focuses on applications such as chatbots, recommender systems, generative content tools, sentiment analysis and algorithmic personalisation, and considers their implications for consumer-brand relationships. A structured narrative synthesis approach was used to review multidisciplinary literature and selected case-based evidence published mainly between 2018 and 2025, while retaining earlier foundational studies relevant to branding, trust and digital communication. Thirteen case studies were thematically organised into four domains: AI-powered trust formation, brand identity evolution, algorithmic power in platform-mediated branding, and AI-driven personalisation and engagement. The synthesis indicates that AI can support timely, scalable and personalised communication, improve service responsiveness and strengthen some aspects of brand relevance and consumer engagement. However, these benefits are accompanied by concerns about data privacy, algorithmic opacity, uneven service quality, loss of human agency and the possible fragmentation of brand identity. The review also shows that trust in AI-mediated brand communication depends not only on system performance but also on transparency, perceived fairness, ethical governance and the credibility of the parent brand or platform. Overall, AI should be understood as a socio-technical participant in brand ecosystems rather than as a neutral communication tool. The paper contributes by integrating power, trust and identity into a conceptual account of AI-driven brand communication and by identifying areas for future empirical research on responsible and coherent AI use in digital marketing.
Keywords: Artificial intelligence in marketing, AI-mediated brand communication, algorithmic power, platform governance, consumer trust, brand identity co-creation, digital marketing ecosystems, personalised marketing