From Mad Men to machines? Big advertisers shift to AI
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[August 18, 2023]
By Richa Naidu and Martin Coulter
LONDON (Reuters) - Some of the world's biggest advertisers, from food
giant Nestle to consumer goods multinational Unilever, are experimenting
with using generative AI software like ChatGPT and DALL-E to cut costs
and increase productivity, executives say.
But many companies remain wary of security and copyright risks as well
as the dangers of unintended biases baked into the raw information
feeding the software, meaning humans will remain part of the process for
the foreseeable future.
Generative artificial intelligence (AI), which can be used to produce
content based on past data, has become a buzzword over the past year,
capturing the public's imagination and sparking interest across many
industries.
Marketing teams hope it will result in cheaper, faster and virtually
limitless ways to advertise products.
Investment is already ramping up amid expectations AI could forever
alter the way advertisers bring products to market, executives at two
top consumer goods companies and the world's biggest ad agency told
Reuters.
The technology can be used to create seemingly original text, images,
and even computer code, based on training, instead of simply
categorizing or identifying data like other AI.
WPP, the world's biggest advertising agency, is working with consumer
goods companies including Nestle and Oreo-maker Mondelez to use
generative AI in advertising campaigns, its CEO Mark Read said.
"The savings can be 10 or 20 times," Read said in an interview. "Rather
than flying a film crew down to Africa to shoot a commercial, we've
created that virtually."
In India, WPP worked with Mondelez on an AI-driven Cadbury campaign with
Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan, producing ads that 'featured' the
actor asking passers-by to shop at 2,000 local stores during Diwali.
Small businesses used a microsite to generate versions of the ads
featuring their own store that could be posted on social media and other
platforms. Some 130,000 ads were created featuring 2,000 stores which
gained 94 million views across YouTube and Facebook, according to WPP.
WPP has "20 young people in their early twenties who are AI apprentices"
in London, Read said, and has partnered with the University of Oxford on
courses focused on the future of marketing. The "AI for business"
diploma offers training in data and AI for client leaders,
practitioners, and WPP executives, according to WPP's website.
The team work under AI expert Daniel Hulme who was appointed chief AI
officer at WPP two years ago.
"It's much easier to think about all the jobs that will be disrupted
than all the jobs that will be created," Read said.
Nestle is also working on ways to use ChatGPT 4.0 and Dall-E 2 to help
market its products, Aude Gandon, its Global Chief Marketing Officer and
an ex-Google executive, said in an emailed statement.
"The engine is answering campaign briefs with great ideas and
inspiration that are fully on brand and on strategy," Gandon said. "The
ideas are then further developed by the creative team to ultimately
become content that will be produced, for example for our websites."
While lawmakers and philosophers alike still debate whether content
produced by generative AI models amounts to anything like human
creativity, advertisers have already begun using the technology in their
promotional campaigns.
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Mark Read, CEO of WPP, the largest
global advertising and public relations agency, poses for a portrait
at their offices in London, Britain, July 17, 2019. REUTERS/Toby
Melville/File Photo
IMAGINED SCENES
In one instance, Dutch gallery Rijksmuseum's research team went
viral online on Sept 8, 2022 after using X-Ray to reveal new objects
hidden in Baroque artist Johannes Vermeer's oil painting 'The
Milkmaid'.
Less than 24 hours later, WPP used OpenAI's generator system DALL-E
2 to "reveal" its own imagined scenes beyond the borders of the
painting's frame in a public YouTube ad for Nestle's La Laitière --
or Milkmaid -- yogurt and dairy brand.
Through almost 1,000 iterations, the video of Nestle's version of
The Milkmaid generated 700,000 euros ($766,010) of "media value" for
the Swiss food giant. Media value is the cost of advertising needed
to generate the same public exposure.
WPP said the content cost it nothing to make. A spokesperson for the
Rijksmuseum said it had an open data policy for non-copyrighted
images, meaning anyone can use its images.
Nestle is not alone in its experiments.
Unilever, which owns more than 400 brands including Dove soap and
Ben & Jerry's ice cream, has its own generative AI technology that
can write product descriptions for retailers' websites and digital
commerce sites, it said.
The company's TRESemmé haircare brand has used its AI content
generator for written content and its automation tool for visual
content on Amazon.co.uk.
But Unilever is concerned about copyrights, intellectual property,
privacy and data, Aaron Rajan, its global vice president of Go To
Market Technology, told Reuters.
The company wants to prevent its technology from reproducing human
biases, like racial or gender stereotypes, that might be embedded in
the data it processes.
"Ensuring that these models when you type in certain terms are
coming back with an unstereotyped view of the world is really
critical," he said.
Nestle's Gandon told Reuters the company was "keeping security and
privacy top-of-mind."
Consumer companies are using data from retailers like Walmart,
Carrefour and Kroger to power their AI tools, said Martin Sorrell,
executive chair of advertising group S4 Capital and the founder of
WPP.
"You've got two buckets of clients: one that is jumping in fully and
the other that is saying 'let's experiment'," he said.
Some consumer goods firms remain wary of security risks or copyright
breaches, industry executives say.
"If you want a rule of thumb: consider everything you tell an AI
service as if it were a really juicy piece of gossip. Would you want
it getting out?," said Ben King, VP of customer trust at Okta, a
provider of online authentication services.
"Would you want someone else knowing the same sort of thing about
you?," he added. "If not, don't tell the AI."
($1 = 0.9138 euros)
(Reporting by Richa Naidu and Martin Coulter; Editing by Matt
Scuffham and Daniel Flynn)
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