Friday, 5 September 2025
As children, stories were everywhere, in bedtime books, TV shows, and playground games. We didn’t just consume them, we lived them.
Stories showed us how the world worked, how to connect with other people, and how to imagine futures that hadn’t happened yet.
That doesn’t disappear when we grow up. Our brains still crave stories. We still search for patterns. And when life feels uncertain, we reach for imagination to find a way through.
It’s exactly this mix – stories, patterns and imagination – that Angus Fletcher, PhD, explores in ‘Primal Intelligence: You Are Smarter Than You Know,’ and in conversation with Andy J Pizza on the Creative Pep Talk podcast (episode 519).
Fletcher explains how these abilities are biological. They’re hardwired into us. And crucially, they’re things machines can’t replicate.
When a story takes an unexpected turn, our brains light up in ways algorithms never can. We notice emotion, intention and nuance. The tiny human details that data alone can’t explain.
And when we feel anxious, frustrated or stuck, our minds don’t just freeze. They invent. They experiment. We imagine new possibilities. We find solutions. It’s how we’re wired.
That’s why these matter for PR.
Yes, AI can summarise content, optimise for search, and even churn out copy. But it can’t sense the subtle shift in audience behaviour that says a message will fall flat. It can’t create a story that makes someone feel understood. It can’t build the trust that comes from a genuine connection.
That’s our edge.
PR isn’t mechanical. It’s relational. It’s about empathy, judgment and storytelling. About noticing the patterns that matter, weaving them into a narrative, and helping brands connect with people in ways no algorithm ever could.
So while AI crunches numbers and predicts trends, it can’t play. It can’t imagine. It can’t feel.
Stories, patterns, and imagination aren’t just abstract ideas. They’re our secret weapons. They’re what make PR not just relevant, but essential.
So ask yourself. How will you lean into those superpowers today? What story, pattern or spark of imagination could make your PR strategy not just effective but unforgettable?