When the Algorithm Knows Your Archetype, mirror on a desert area

When the Algorithm Knows Your Archetype (Part 2)

Why beliefs matter more than personas in a personalized-feed world

This reflection builds on Part One of this series, where I explored why identity begins with revelation, not invention. If branding is really about remembering what God has said is true, then we need to understand how our digital world responds to those deeper identity currents.

This reflection grew out of a recent conversation with Russ Ewell on his podcast, Deep Spirituality, where we explored how personalized feeds shape the stories we live. You can watch that interview here.

Every major platform tells us the same thing: “We feed you what you show interest in.”

This is not a theory. It’s how the systems are built. Our taps, searches, hesitations, and scroll paths become signals, and the feed becomes a reflection of those signals.

Which means no two feeds ever look alike.
Because no two patterns ever look alike.

What these systems serve us is not random content. It is a personalized story, curated for one person at a time. And it raises a deeper question for those of us working in ministry communication, branding, and creative work:
If the platforms are shaping content based on the deeper storylines we inhabit, not surface behavior, what does that mean for how we build brands, tell stories, and create with integrity?

The Algorithm Isn’t Guessing

Platforms have been explicit about this for years. They reward whatever we reinforce.
If you watch videos about leadership, you’ll get more leadership.
If you click on wounded-hero arcs, you’ll get more of those too.
If you dive into theological debates at midnight, the platform learns that this—right now—is what you care about.

These systems don’t care about our demographics. They care about our bents. Our longings. Our curiosities. Our beliefs. They detect the inner gravity of our mind long before we name it out loud.

And when you zoom out, it starts to look less like preference-matching and more like archetype-matching.
We are drawn to certain stories because they resonate with the story we are living. The mentor. The builder. The rebel. The quiet burden-bearer. The one who creates. The one who heals.
Your feed responds to that identity-level wiring.

This matters. Because if archetype is driving resonance, then persona-based branding begins to wobble.

Why Personas Are Losing Power

Personas were a helpful tool when behavior was the clearest data we had.
But behavior is shallow compared to identity.
Personas reduce people to patterns:
“She likes X, so she’ll probably do Y.”
“He gives to A, so pitch him B.”

But algorithms don’t operate on personas. They operate on personal gravity.
They amplify the storyline each person inhabits, not the generic behavior a persona predicts.

So when we build brand messaging on personas, we end up shape-shifting to match an audience profile that already feels outdated the day it’s written.
Worse, we end up trying to be too many things at once.
Persona-chasing nudges brands toward being “all to all people,” which sounds inclusive but often results in blandness, drift, and the slow erosion of identity.

Beliefs Keep a Brand Human

Beliefs do what personas cannot.
Beliefs give a brand backbone.
Beliefs say:
This is who we are.
This is the story we live.
If you resonate, join us.

Beliefs create alignment without contortion.
Beliefs help ministries speak with a steady voice in a shaky digital world.
Beliefs give people something to hold, especially when their feeds are shaped by algorithms designed to feed their impulses.
Genuine love requires a genuine identity.
That’s what beliefs protect.

Personas chase behavior.
Beliefs shape belonging.

Beliefs don’t invent a brand’s identity—they reveal it. This entire article builds on the idea I explore more fully in Part One of this series, Branding Isn’t About Inventing Identity—It’s About Revealing It: that Christian brands resonate most deeply when they reflect who God has already said we are. Identity isn’t crafted; it’s uncovered. And when we communicate from that place, we don’t have to posture or perform—we simply invite people into the truth we ourselves are learning to live.

The New Creative Tension: AI

The conversation complicates further when AI joins the picture.
Now we have tools that can produce content faster than ever. Tools that can imitate voices, styles, and even faith-based language.

The question for creative agencies is no longer, “Will we use AI?”
We must.
The question is, “What kind of agency are we becoming?”

Are we becoming an AI agency—or a human agency that uses AI?

This distinction matters because creativity isn’t just cognitive.
It’s incarnational.
It holds memory, conviction, calling, lament, hope, and imagination.
AI can remix what people made.
It cannot originate from lived suffering or lived faith.

Forest Frank, a Christian artist who has exploded on the scene in the last couple years and who you’re probably already familiar with, has expressed concern about AI-generated Christian tracks climbing the charts.
Songs that sound devotional but weren’t born of devotion.
Tracks that echo the language of worship without coming from a worshiper.

It is sobering.
A familiar voice.
No lived story behind it.

The psalmist prayed, “Teach us to number our days that we may get a heart of wisdom” (Psalm 90:12, ESV) .
Wisdom takes time.
AI doesn’t understand time.
It processes patterns, not formation.

Becoming a Human Agency in an AI World

For us at Reliant Creative, the path is simple.
We use AI. But we’re doing everything we can to not let AI use us.

We keep human craft at the center.
We stay rooted in the real stories of real ministries.
We practice slowness where slowness is required.
We protect the voice of the Gospel from becoming a hollow imitation of itself.

AI can make us faster.
It cannot make us faithful.

A human agency keeps the soul of the work intact.

What This Means for Ministry Leaders

Three shifts matter right now, especially in a world where algorithms are shaping identity-level stories and AI is accelerating production:

1. Anchor communication in beliefs, not personas.
Personas are too shallow for the world we live in.
Beliefs provide clarity, courage, and consistency.

2. Let your ministry’s real story speak louder than tactics.
Algorithms reward authenticity.
People do too.

3. Use AI as a tool, not a shortcut.
Let AI support your process.
But keep the human voice, the pastoral heart, and the lived testimony at the center of your message.

This is how we help ministries communicate with clarity and faithfulness in a crowded digital world.

This is how we keep the work human.


One Next Step

If you want help clarifying your brand beliefs, sharpening your story, or building a human-centered creative strategy that uses AI wisely, reach out for a short, confidential call. We’ll walk with you and help you take your next faithful step.


About the Author:

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Zach Leighton

Zach Leighton has been working with Christian ministries and nonprofits for over a decade, helping them tell their stories and testify of God's redemptive work. He has done extensive work applying The Hero's Journey as a framework that can be used in a wide range of ministry maketing applications. When he's not working directly to serve ministry clients, as the Principal Creative at Reliant, he spends much of his time developing strategy and casting vision for the ministry of Reliant.

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