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Seemingly overnight, artificial intelligence (AI) writing became really...intelligent. As a content marketer, learning that ChatGPT was creating entire SEO articles that sound pretty close to human writing was a bit chilling.
While AI marketing has a long way to go before it could replace me, it's already quickly changing the marketing landscape, and I expect that the biggest changes are yet to come. In this guide, I'll unpack what AI marketing really means and how you can utilize it to do human-grade work, saving you time and bringing your campaigns to life (artificial life?).
AI marketing refers to all the ways AI technology can help you carry out successful marketing efforts. It mostly comprises the tools that use customer data to generate and deliver the best-targeted messages at the best times possible. But it also encompasses everything from AI creating blog outlines to chatbots that learn from their interactions.
For marketers, AI marketing saves huge amounts of time that they would otherwise spend manually analyzing data and developing targeted campaigns. For consumers, it makes it more likely that they'll see the content they like, which can either excite them or creep them out—if not both.
Frankly, if you don't integrate AI into your digital marketing efforts, there's a good chance your competition will leave you in the dust. AI supplements human intelligence to make processes drastically more efficient and effective than they've ever been, and it's only getting better from here.
Apart from the whole "don't get left behind" sentiment, here are some concrete reasons you should integrate AI into your digital marketing efforts.
Saves time: AI can collect user data and use it to develop insights in a fraction of the time it would take a person to do so. This frees up your team's time to focus on more important tasks, like campaign strategy development, including how to best leverage AI in upcoming campaigns.
Refines your personas: Your personas should be a direct reflection of your customers and, therefore, central to your marketing campaigns. Use AI insights to improve your understanding of your customers, and adjust your personas to more accurately reflect them and their needs.
Sparks creativity: ChatGPT may spew out some ludicrous concoction of phrases and sentences pieced together like a janky puzzle, but hey—it can certainly get the creative juices flowing. When you're at a loss for words or ideas, have AI come up with something. Even if it isn't perfect, it may provide a trailhead toward better creative ideas.
Increases customer satisfaction: AI makes it easier to anticipate user needs by learning from their behavior. The better you can meet your customers' needs, the happier they'll be. Hopefully, hearing this doesn't blow your mind.
An illustrated matrix showing the four categories of AI marketing
Not all marketing AI is equally powerful. Its categories can be broken down by intelligence level (from simple task automation to more complex machine learning) and composition (whether it stands alone or integrates into a program). That said, modern marketing software often blends automation and machine learning, blurring the lines between these categories.
Automation is incredibly powerful, but it doesn't require nearly as much intelligence as machine learning programs. Stand-alone automation apps aren't part of a more comprehensive program like a CRM and don't "learn" from their interactions like machine learning apps. What they can do is perform automated tasks and power complex workflows.
Level of complexity: Low
Examples: Automated publishing tools that publish content on a specific schedule and chatbots that take users through a pre-set decision tree.
Integrated automation apps also follow logic-based rules, don't learn from their interactions, and require relatively little intelligence. But unlike stand-alone apps, they operate within a larger system.
Integrated automation is often used in CRMs to assist with simple tasks like customer categorization based on behavior.
Level of complexity: Low
Example: If a customer subscribes to the small business version of an accounting app, the CRM could automatically label them as a small business rather than an enterprise-level organization.
Machine learning puts the "I" in AI—it's where the real magic happens. Stand-alone machine learning apps operate independently and use huge amounts of data to make complex decisions. Advanced machine learning tools can even learn from user interaction to improve their predictions and decisions.
Level of complexity: High
Examples: Tools that create customized plans for users (such as a skincare routine based on facial analysis) and advanced chatbots that analyze user behavior to determine when to transfer users to a live customer service representative.
You can best leverage AI when integrating machine learning with a program like a CRM or advertising tool. Integrated machine learning apps can analyze user behavior and quickly decide what to offer users.
Unlike stand-alone machine learning apps, the user doesn't need to request information from a separate platform—integrated apps secure the data and provide insights without being asked.
Level of complexity: High
Example: An integrated machine learning app could collect user browsing and purchasing data to provide highly targeted ads.
Let's get granular with AI marketing—how can you use it to improve your day-to-day initiatives? I consulted with my colleagues in marketing to compile some practical use cases for AI. In the following section, I'll also discuss some real-world scenarios applying some of them.
Let's practice what we've learned. Don't worry—no homework on your part. Here are some examples of ways various industries currently (or may in the future) leverage AI to improve their processes and make their customers happy.
If you've had your eye on the news (or have felt that eerie sensation when the targeted ads are a little too targeted and timely), you already have an idea of why implementing AI marketing isn't always rainbows and butterflies. I'll unpack some of these challenges.
Don't get me wrong—there's no single "AI platform" that will meet all of your needs. Every platform serves a different purpose, and with the rate AI is advancing, nearly every platform will deploy AI in some shape or form in the coming years. That said, here are some important considerations to remember when choosing apps to take care of your AI marketing needs.
AI is complex and expensive. Here are some common questions marketing leadership may have when deciding whether and how to implement it in their processes.
AI can be utilized in nearly every area of marketing. It's used to collect data, analyze that data, make decisions and predictions based on that analysis, generate personalized messages, optimize content, and more.
AI marketing is a wise investment for organizations that can afford it and that would benefit significantly from an increase in speed and the ability to deliver highly personalized content to its customers.
An AI marketing tool is any software that uses AI to make automated decisions using data. These tools vary widely from content optimization and personalization tools to chatbots.
By Luke Strauss
Source: zapier.com
The world is changing everyday! Don’t miss the latest trends in Creativity, Marketing and Business! We will bring the whole world to you.