Lead with transparency
Clients and brands should be upfront about AI use, Adana said. Policy may not dictate AI disclosure, so marketers should lead by example.
“Because transparency isn’t right now woven into the best practices, we need to be transparent with how we’re using AI,” she said.
Something as simple as using the “made with AI” label on social media posts can help normalize AI transparency in the industry.
Augmentation over automation
While some marketers are confident in genAI’s rapid content creation potential, others think it will create content that looks like it was made by AI, something Toys R Us was criticized for after releasing a Sora-generated ad last year.
These campaigns happen when marketers start “with the machine instead of the craft,” according to Adana. But that doesn’t mean genAI can’t fit into creative workflows.
When evaluating genA useI, Adana said, creatives should ask themselves:
- What is my POV on AI at large?
- What am I uniquely solving with AI?
- Can I execute this idea without AI?
- How does AI fit into my creative process?
- What is my goal in this campaign, views or impact?
If marketers are aiming for a lot of views, genAI creative may be the way to go, since it can churn out content at a high volume. But if they’re going for impact, human-first creative is more likely to resonate by offering consumers something new.
Even with human-first creative, AI is useful for simulating audience reactions based on demographics, age groups, or interest areas, Adana said.
This was originally featured in the EMARKETER Daily newsletter. For more marketing insights, statistics, and trends, subscribe here.