ADV20001 Assignment 1 (1)
ADV20001 Assignment 1 (1)
“Whilst AI may do away with human writing, it will benefit advertising marketing communications, facilitating
deeper engagement with consumers efficiently and more effectively”
While AI improves efficiency, scalability, and precision targeting, it cannot fully replace human creativity,
cultural nuance, and ethical judgment (McStay, 2018). AI-generated content often lacks the emotional depth
and authenticity necessary for compelling brand storytelling, which remains a uniquely human skill (Van Esch
& Stewart Black, 2021). Furthermore, concerns regarding AI-driven misinformation and deceptive marketing
practices have prompted regulatory scrutiny, such as Australia’s proposed reforms on AI-powered gambling ads
(ACMA, 2021).
This paper critically examines the dual impact of AI in advertising—its transformative benefits and ethical
dilemmas. First, it explores AI’s contributions to advertising efficiency, personalisation, and cost reduction.
Next, it addresses the ethical risks of AI adoption, including privacy exploitation, biased algorithms, and
consumer manipulation. Finally, it evaluates the role of ethical AI frameworks, regulatory compliance, and
human oversight in ensuring AI remains a tool for responsible innovation rather than exploitation. By balancing
technological progress with ethical responsibility, this essay argues that AI should complement, not replace,
human creativity in marketing.
A prime example of AI's cost efficiency is Harley-Davidson's AI-powered marketing platform, which
autonomously adjusted ad placements and refined messaging based on real-time consumer data, leading to a
2,930% increase in qualified sales leads (Power, 2018). Similarly, brands leveraging AI-driven ad platforms,
such as Google Ads and Facebook's machine-learning algorithms, continuously analyse engagement patterns
and adjust bidding strategies in real time to maximise ad reach while minimising expenses. AI allocates
marketing budgets efficiently, reducing wasteful spending and enhancing ad targeting precision (Gonçalves et
al., 2023).
Beyond cost savings, AI significantly enhances personalisation in advertising, allowing brands to deliver hyper-
targeted content tailored to individual consumer preferences. AI-powered recommendation systems used by e-
commerce platforms analyse consumer browsing behaviour, purchase history, and engagement patterns,
ensuring that marketing messages resonate with the right audience at the right time (Haleem et al., 2022).
Additionally, AI-driven customer service tools like chatbots provide real-time support, product
recommendations, and seamless brand interactions, helping businesses scale consumer engagement without
increasing operational costs. For instance, Sephora's AI-powered chatbot has led to a 40% reduction in response
times and a 5–15% revenue increase, demonstrating AI's ability to enhance digital customer experiences (Patov,
2024).
However, over-reliance on AI in advertising presents notable challenges, particularly regarding the diminishing
role of human intuition, ethical oversight, and strategic creativity. While AI excels at data processing and
performance optimisation, it often prioritises cost-effectiveness over long-term brand positioning, emotional
resonance, and authentic consumer relationships (McStay, 2018). Brands that rely excessively on AI-generated
content risk losing their distinct brand voice, as AI lacks the cultural awareness, empathy, and nuanced
storytelling that human marketers bring to advertising strategies (Van Esch & Stewart Black, 2021).
Moreover, hyper-personalisation, if not managed ethically, can blur the line between relevance and intrusion.
While AI ensures that ads are highly tailored, excessive tracking of consumer behaviour raises concerns about
data privacy and algorithmic bias (Su et al., 2023). The Facebook-Cambridge Analytica scandal highlighted
how AI-powered advertising can be exploited for manipulative targeting, undermining consumer trust
(Magennis, 2024). Similarly, AI-driven gambling advertisements in Australia have been criticised for targeting
vulnerable individuals, prompting regulatory scrutiny (ACMA, 2021). These concerns reinforce the necessity of
human oversight and responsible AI governance in digital marketing.
Thus, while AI optimises efficiency and enhances targeting capabilities, brands must balance automation and
authenticity. AI should be seen not as a replacement for human creativity but as a tool to enhance marketing
innovation while maintaining ethical and consumer-centric advertising practices.
Another significant issue is AI's potential to reinforce bias in advertising. Since machine-learning algorithms are
trained on historical data, they inevitably reflect and amplify existing biases, which can result in discriminatory
marketing practices (Van Esch & Stewart Black, 2021). AI-driven recruitment advertising, for example, has
been found to disproportionately show high-paying executive job listings to men rather than women, reflecting
the gender biases embedded in past hiring patterns. Similarly, AI-powered financial services have been shown
to exclude certain demographic groups from receiving credit and loan offers, reinforcing existing
socioeconomic disparities. These examples demonstrate that AI could unintentionally deepen digital inequalities
without human oversight, making fairness and inclusivity secondary to algorithmic efficiency.
While AI is undoubtedly a powerful tool for improving advertising efficiency, it should not be seen as a
substitute for human creativity, ethical judgment, or strategic oversight. Brands that rely solely on AI-driven
automation risk losing authenticity, consumer trust, and the ethical integrity that underpins responsible
advertising. The challenge is not whether AI should be used in marketing, but rather how it can be integrated
responsibly to enhance innovation without compromising fairness, transparency, or consumer rights. Businesses
must ensure that AI implementation remains transparent, ethical, and consumer-centric, with clear regulatory
frameworks to protect against misuse. Human oversight is essential to preserving authenticity, preventing bias,
and ensuring AI is an enabler rather than replacing strategic, emotionally resonant marketing. By balancing
technological advancement with ethical responsibility, companies can harness AI's full potential while
maintaining the human-centric values that make advertising genuinely effective.
CONCLUSION
In conclusion, AI has transformed advertising by enhancing efficiency, personalisation, and cost-effectiveness,
yet its rapid adoption has introduced pressing ethical concerns. Privacy violations, consumer manipulation,
algorithmic bias, and threats to human creativity demand urgent attention. While AI optimises marketing
strategies and engagement, unchecked deployment risks eroding consumer trust and deepening digital
inequalities.
To ensure AI drives innovation rather than exploitation, businesses and policymakers must adopt ethical AI
governance, enforce transparency, and encourage AI-human collaboration. Upholding fairness, accountability,
and compliance with data protection laws is essential to protecting consumer rights and ensuring responsible AI
use.
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Future research should focus on bias detection, data privacy, and misinformation control to integrate AI
ethically into marketing. By balancing technological progress with ethical responsibility, the advertising
industry can maximise AI's benefits while securing long-term trust and sustainability.
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References
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