Scroll through LinkedIn or TikTok long enough and you will find the same advice recycled in every format available: steal your competitor's traffic, clone their ads, reverse-engineer their strategy. The advice is presented as tactical intelligence. It is not. It is the surrender of imagination dressed up as efficiency.
The platforms that reward this behavior do so because volume is easier to measure than originality. That is a platform optimization problem, not a strategic truth. The businesses that built lasting authority online, the ones that created categories rather than joined queues, did so by refusing to define themselves relative to someone else's work.
When your entire value proposition is a watered-down version of what someone else already built, you are not competing. You are auditioning for second place.
This matters more now than it ever has. Generative AI tools from providers including OpenAI, Google DeepMind, and Anthropic give marketers unprecedented capacity for research, ideation, and strategic exploration. A task that once required a three-person team and two weeks can now be prototyped in hours. The resource constraint that historically justified shortcut thinking is gone.
What remains is a choice. Marketers who use AI to clone and accelerate are choosing to be faster followers. Marketers who use AI to research more deeply, think more freely, and build more rigorously original frameworks are choosing to be the ones others eventually follow.
There is no neutral ground. In a market saturated with imitation, originality is the only differentiator that cannot be replicated by definition.
Why Does the Copy-of-a-Copy Pattern Persist?
The pattern persists for three structural reasons. First, imitation carries no creative risk. If the competitor's approach already works, copying it feels like evidence-based practice rather than intellectual surrender. Second, most marketing measurement frameworks reward short-term performance over brand authority, which pushes teams toward whatever is already proven to convert. Third, generic tools produce generic outputs by design. A template is optimized for the average case. The average case is not your brand.
None of these are good reasons. They are explanations for mediocrity, not justifications for it.
