Over the past decade or so advertising has changed drastically. From the humble copywriter/editor complement, advertising today has turned into a multidimensional effort with professionals from multiple verticals pitching in to achieve the end result. This, of course, is no surprise considering the deep impact that IT has had on almost anything and everything. If a copy editor were to tell you 15 years ago that his computer will be taking care of your advertisement and its standing, you would have thrashed him with his keyboard and taken him to a mental asylum. Yet here we are at the pinnacle of IT (as far as we know) and computers are planning ad placement, bidding for keywords and updating you the status of their efforts. So the question we need to ask ourselves is how far can this be leveraged.
The use of AI and Machine learning for such processes is nothing new. As a matter of fact, the current usage of AI in advertising is still relatively primitive. But the inroads we are making through the use of this technology is substantial. However, for AI and machine learning to make any sort of assessment the most important thing is data and it needs lots of it.
Anything you do on the internet required the use of data and while you do it generates data as well. From a business perspective, one of the biggest reasons why organizations use the internet is for advertising. Advertising is a multi-billion dollar industry with many dimensions within. Among them internet today is the most prominent and offers the most comprehensive results. So what kind of data is it that floats around the internet to help out with advertising. Well, the answer is pretty much everything, from search histories to personal information, social media updates to data pertaining to behavioral attributes, the internet is a repository for all these. Big data as we all have come to know it is what drives this process. While in the past data-driven advertising was largely based on manual analytics, the vertical today relies on automated technology.
While still in their inception stage, both machine learning and AI are being used more than we might have anticipated.
While the current state of AI does leave much to be desired for advertisers, we are not that far from perfecting it for that purpose. There are plenty of prospects to be had on the advertisements themselves as AI and machine learning develops. Machine learning, in particular, could be leveraged to design ads without any human involvement. Currently, technologies such as deep learning are being used in the imaging process in games and movies, which point to good prospects on that front.
There are many more technologies that are still in the prototype stage being tested under various scenarios to eventually integrate into the mainstream processes within advertising. So let us wait and watch as this bit of technology evolves and its story unfolds.