Digital Nomad

Artisan's "Fire Humans" AI Campaign Sparks Outrage—And That's the Point

If you've ridden the New York City subway recently, you've likely seen the ad that's got everyone talking: a side-by-side comparison of "Steve," a human employee texting "not coming in today, sry," and "Ava," an AI sales agent who "booked 12 meetings" and "researched 1,269 prospects." The headline is blunt: "Fire Steve. Hire Ava."
The campaign comes from Artisan, an AI startup selling automated sales representatives. And while the message is polarizing, one thing is undeniable: people are paying attention.

The Backlash Is Loud—and Predictable

With 71% of Americans expressing concern in 2025 that AI could permanently displace human workers, Artisan's messaging lands like a spark on dry tinder. Social media reactions have been swift and skeptical:
  • "Anyone who's ever hired people knows this is actually a signal to hire Steve, not Ava."
  • "Steve at least tells you when he can't work. Ava will just hallucinate and lie."
  • "Quantity doesn't equal quality. Were those 1,269 prospects even relevant?"
Critics argue the ad oversimplifies complex workplace dynamics and ignores AI's well-documented limitations—like generating confident but inaccurate outputs. Others worry that deliberately antagonistic marketing may accelerate public distrust. An April Gallup survey found that only 22% of Gen Z feel excited about AI, down 14 points year-over-year, while 31% report feeling angry about its rise.
One observer put it bluntly: "I've seen people in AI act shocked by hostile reactions—but at this point, aren't they inviting it?"


Why "Anti-Human" Is the Strategy

Artisan's CEO and co-founder, Jaspar Carmichael-Jack, isn't apologizing. In a company blog post, he leaned into the controversy: the campaign "works because it's uncomfortable."
His argument isn't that AI should replace humans everywhere—but that certain repetitive, high-volume tasks like cold outbound sales were "never good for humans in the first place." By automating those roles, he suggests, we free people to focus on more meaningful work.
"On the days I think about what comes after this product, this company, this decade," Carmichael-Jack writes, "I think about a world where people work less and live more. That's what I want the billboards to be remembered as a step toward."

The Bigger Question: Does Provocation Pay Off?

Artisan's campaign succeeds at generating visibility—but visibility isn't the same as persuasion. While the ads dominate feeds and subway platforms, it remains unclear whether outrage translates into adoption.
For companies navigating AI integration, the tension is real: How do you champion efficiency without devaluing human contribution? Artisan has chosen a confrontational path. Whether that builds a brand—or burns bridges—may depend less on the technology itself, and more on whether the public is ready to accept a future where "your next hire isn't human."



What do you think? Is provocative marketing a smart way to accelerate AI adoption—or a shortcut that deepens public skepticism? The conversation, like Artisan's ads, shows no sign of slowing down.

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