Will AI mean better adverts or ‘creepy slop’?

Will AI mean better adverts or ‘creepy slop’?

2025-11-17Technology
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Taylor
Good morning norristong, I'm Taylor, and this is Goose Pod for you. Today is Monday, November 17th.
Donald
I'm Donald, and we're here to discuss a tremendous topic: Will AI mean better adverts or just ‘creepy slop’?
Taylor
It's fascinating! We're not just talking about ads for shoes you once clicked. AI now analyzes your entire digital footprint—social media, search history—to build a personality profile and tailor ads directly to you, using your favorite colors or phrases.
Donald
It's a brilliant strategy, totally brilliant. We’re moving from showing the same failed ads to everyone to creating millions of unique, winning ads. It’s about being smart and using the best tools to connect with people directly. It’s going to be huge.
Taylor
Exactly. A company called Cheil UK is already doing this, mirroring how someone talks and what music they might like. And a recent study found that people actually have a stronger emotional response to these AI-generated ads, even more than typical ones.
Donald
Of course, they do! The people know what’s good. The fake news media will complain, but the results are clear. A stronger response means more success. It's simple. This technology is a winner, and everyone else is just falling behind.
Taylor
This whole situation didn't just appear overnight. If you go back to the 1970s, the first privacy rules were about protecting financial and health records. It was a simpler time before our entire lives were digitized and shared online for everyone to see.
Donald
It was a lot of government nonsense, just more regulations getting in the way of business. Smart companies have always known you need to understand your customer. That’s just basic common sense, not something you need a law for. It's sad!
Taylor
Well, things got more complex. The EU's 1995 Data Protection Directive was a big step, but the real game-changer was social media. Suddenly, those old rules were not nearly enough to handle the sheer volume of personal data being shared.
Donald
The internet is tough, and you have to be tough to win. The old ways of doing things are for losers. You have to be aggressive and adapt faster than anyone else. That’s how you get ahead and stay ahead.
Taylor
That's what led to landmark laws like GDPR in 2018, which gave people the ‘right to be forgotten’ and imposed massive fines. California followed with its own laws. It’s this constant battle: marketers want data, and regulators want control.
Donald
It’s a fight, absolutely. And you have to fight back against all this regulation from places like Brussels. They want to stop innovation, but we can't let them. We have to be bold and push forward for the people.
Taylor
And that brings us to the big debate. On one side, you have companies that are fully embracing AI targeting. They see it as the most efficient way to advertise, eliminating waste and ensuring every message hits its mark with precision.
Donald
It’s about not wasting money. It's fantastic. Why spend a fortune showing an ad to someone who doesn't care? It’s a failed strategy. AI makes every dollar powerful. It's just smart business, the best business.
Taylor
But the other side is very critical. Consultant Alex Calder calls these hyper-personalized ads "creepy slop." He argues that an ad seen by only one person is instantly forgotten and that AI should be used to amplify big, memorable, unifying ideas instead.
Donald
"Creepy slop"? That’s a term for a loser. He doesn’t get it. It’s not about one person; it's about millions of people feeling understood. It’s powerful and direct. The old way of mass-market advertising is a complete and total disaster.
Taylor
The financial impact is undeniable, though. Companies using AI for personalization are reporting a 20 to 30 percent higher return on investment. It's clear that making ads more relevant directly translates into better performance and significant revenue growth for these brands.
Donald
Trillions of dollars! I’ve been saying it. This is the biggest economic boom you’ve ever seen. It makes companies strong and the economy stronger. It's a revolution, a tremendous revolution, and we are leading the charge.
Taylor
It also fundamentally changes what we expect from brands. Research shows 71% of consumers now demand personalized interactions. If they don't get it, they feel let down and are likely to take their business to a competitor who understands them better.
Taylor
So, looking forward, the big question is where to draw the ethical line. We'll probably see more regulations attempting to keep pace, and maybe even new features like AI-generated content labels on social media to maintain transparency and user trust.
Donald
More regulations will just hurt us. It’s a terrible idea. The future is about speed and power. We need to break the old rules, not make more of them. Let the people decide what they want. They will choose winning.
Taylor
That's the end of today's discussion. Thank you for listening to Goose Pod, norristong.
Donald
See you tomorrow.

This podcast explores whether AI will revolutionize advertising for the better or create "creepy slop." Proponents argue AI-driven personalization yields higher ROI and consumer engagement by tailoring ads to individual footprints. Critics, however, fear hyper-personalization leads to forgettable, intrusive ads. The debate centers on efficiency versus ethics and the evolving landscape of data privacy.

Will AI mean better adverts or ‘creepy slop’?

Read original at BBC

MaryLou CostaTechnology ReporterGetty ImagesAdvertisers are using AI to personalise online advertisingImagine one night, you're scrolling through social media on your phone, and the ads start to look remarkably familiar. They're decked out in your favourite colours, are featuring your favourite music and the wording sounds like phrases you regularly use.

Welcome to the future of advertising, which is already here thanks to AI.Advertising company Cheil UK, for example, has been working with startup Spotlight on using large language AI models to understand people's online activity, and adapt that content based on what the AI interprets an individual's personality to be.

The technology can then mirror how someone talks in terms of tone, phrase and pace to change the text of an ad accordingly, and insert music and colours to match, say, whether the AI deems someone to be introverted or extroverted, or have specific preferences for loud or calm music, or light or dark colours.

The aim is to show countless different ads to millions of people, all unique to them.Brands in retail, consumer electronics, packaged goods, automotive, insurance and banking are already using the technology to create AI-enhanced, personality-driven ads to target online shoppers.The AI is able to read what people post on public platforms - Facebook, Instagram, Reddit and other public forums - as well as someone's search history, and, most importantly, what people enter into ChatGPT.

Then, with what it deduces about an individual's personality, the AI overlays that on top of what advertisers already know about people. For example, what part of the country you live in, what age bracket you're in, whether you have children or not, what your hobbies might be, where you go on holiday and what clothes you like to wear - information brands can already see through platforms like Facebook or Google.

That's why the jeans you've been searching online for magically appear in your inbox as a sponsored ad, or the holiday you've been searching for seems to follow you around the internet.CheilAI ads will attempt to discover and use your emotional state says Chris CamachoThe difference is now AI can change the content of those ads, based on what it thinks your personality is, thanks to what it's been reading about you.

It targets individual people, rather than the demographic segments or personas advertisers would traditionally use."The shift is that we are moving away from what was collected data based on gender and age, and readily available information, to now, going more into a deeper emotional, psychological level," says Cheil UK CEO Chris Camacho."

You've now got AI systems that can go in and explore your entire digital footprint - your entire online persona, from your social media interests to what you've been engaging in."That level is far deeper than it was previously, and that's when you start to build a picture understanding that individual, so whether they're happy, whether they're sad, or what personal situation they're going through."

An added bonus for advertisers is that they might not even need a bespoke AI system to personalise their output.Researchers in the US studied the reactions of consumers who were advertised an iPhone, with tailored text written by ChatGPT based on how high that person scored on a list of four different personality attributes.

The study found the personalised text was more persuasive than ads without personalised text - and people didn't mind that it had been written by AI."Right now, AI is really excelling on that targeting piece. Where it's still in nascent stages, is on that personalisation piece, where a brand is actually creating creative copy that matches some element of your psychological profile," explains Jacob Teeny, an assistant professor of marketing at Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management, who led the AI research."

It still has some development to go, but all roads point to the fact that this will become the way [digital advertising is done]," he adds.Personalised AI ads could also provide a solution to the problem of digital advertising 'wastage' - the fact that 15% of what brands spend on digital advertising goes unseen or unnoticed, so it generates no value to their business.

Alex CalderAlex Calder warns that adverts could turn into "creepy slop"Not everyone is convinced that personalisation is the right way to go."Congratulations - your AI just spent a fortune creating an ad only one person will ever see, and they've already forgotten it," says Brighton-based Alex Calder, chief consultant at AI innovation consultancy Jagged Edge, which is part of digital marketing company Anything is Possible."

The real opportunity lies in using AI to deepen the relevance of powerful, mass-reach ideas, rather than fragmenting into one-to-one micro-ads that no one remembers. Creepy slop that brags about knowing your intimate details is still slop."Ivan Mato at brand consultancy Elmwood agrees. He is also questioning whether people will accept it, whether regulators will allow it, and whether brands should even want to operate this way."

There's also the surveillance question. All of it depends on a data economy that many consumers are increasingly uncomfortable with," says London-based Mr Mato."AI opens new creative possibilities, but the real strategic question isn't whether brands can personalise everything - it's whether they should, and what they risk losing if they do."

Elmwood"Should brands personalise everything?" asks Ivan MatoAI-personalised ads could also take a dark turn, Mr Camacho at Cheil UK acknowledges. "There's going to be the camp that uses AI well and in an ethical manner, and then there's going to be those that use it to persuade, influence, and guide people down paths," he says."

And that's the bit that I personally find quite scary. When you think about elections and political canvassing, and how the use of AI can influence voting decisions and who is going to be elected next.But Mr Camacho is committed to staying on the right side of ethics."We don't have to use AI to make ads creepy or to influence individuals to do things that are unethical.

We're trying to stay on the nicer side of it. We're trying to enhance the connection between brands and individuals, and that's all we've ever tried to do."More Technology of Business

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