Should AI attempt absolutely everything?

Just because it can be fun seeing what AI will do with a prompt, it’s not necessarily helping with your marketing. Stop and think.



Artificial Intelligence is a wondrous thing.  While it’s been around for a long while, it recently has really started to enter our lives in obvious ways.  For instance, martech platforms are rolling out tools that allow users to generate campaign ideas.


However, this leads to an interesting question: Just because an AI tool can write creative copy, should it always do so?  There are certainly some AI ethical questions, but there are also other questions worth asking.


Drums, dinosaurs, and ducks


Recently, I was using a marketing campaign management platform.  It provides an AI tool through which one can provide a few keywords or prompts to generate text content as a jumping off point.  


The tool uses best practices from high performing material from past campaigns run by the company’s clients to inform its suggestions.  The tool impressed me; while the suggestions aren’t stellar, they’re not horrible either.  That makes it a great tool for brainstorming and overcoming writer’s block.


Intrigued, I decided to have some fun by entering keywords that shouldn’t have much to do with the context at hand.  I wanted to see what hotel campaign ideas could possibly come from a prompt of “drums, dinosaurs, and ducks,” and the tool suggested:



  • “Looking for a unique getaway?  Discover our themed hotels with drums, dinosaurs, and ducks!  Book now for an unforgettable experience.”
  • “Get ready for an epic adventure!  Discover the perfect destination for drums, dinosaurs, and ducks.  Book your stay now and make unforgettable memories.”

While I appreciate the effort, the results aren’t really usable.  


 


Harmless but largely useless


In defense of the tool presenting suggestions, there are innumerable scenarios, and in some edge cases, these seemingly unrelated keywords may have relevance (like the Peabody Ducks in Memphis, TN).  


Ducks at the Peabody Hotel in Memphis, escorted by the official Duckmaster.

Further, in the hotel space, some customers travel with pets and need pet-friendly places to stay.  So, while “ducks” may not make sense the vast majority of time, prompts like “cats and dogs” are relevant.


While such suggestions seem harmless, how much better would this tool be if it inquired more about a seemingly nonsensical prompt before providing suggestions or offering guidance?  For instance, if “drums” were in the prompt, what if the tool responded with, “Check out our guide for targeting niche audiences?”   Such a response would likely provide more value to the user. 


Ill-equipped for some prompts


It is also helpful to consider data.  Many data professionals will attest that data in untrained hands can yield ill-advised conclusions.  Sometimes some data in untrained hands can lead to disastrous results.  While there are certainly a lot of situations when someone who isn’t a data specialist can draw valid conclusions, that’s not always the case.


In this context, giving an AI tool prompts that it isn’t equipped to handle can also yield questionable results.  So, that’s also worth considering.  Don’t ask an AI tool to do something that it’s not trained to handle.   


Stop and think


One thing that I’ve learned during my career — and life in general, for that matter — is that sometimes it is wise to take a step back and think about something regardless of whether it is a question, task, or fork in the road.  While it feels good to provide a quick answer and check something off of a to-do list, a quick answer or decision isn’t always a wise one.


I think that this can apply here.  Granted, AI can “think” far more quickly than mere mortal humans, but perhaps AI systems should be trained to consider more than the obvious when producing output.  


As the example above illustrates, perhaps inserting random words in relevant phrases isn’t what the user truly needs.  Thus, a link to guide to targeting niche audiences would help more than trying to shove virtually anything into the sample campaign text just because it can.


Real intelligence


It is easy and fun to hand stuff over to an AI to see what will happen.  However, it is always wise to exert one’s own real intelligence.  


Is this task really suited for this AI tool?  Just because the AI tool can spit something back, is that output really what’s needed?  Asking and answering those questions certainly seems wise.








 



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About the author






Steve Petersen





Steve Petersen is a B2B and B2C marketing technologist. He currently is a member of Wyndham Hotels & Resorts’ Digital Product Team and has also worked in marketing technology roles at revenue management platform provider Zuora and before that at Western Governors University. Petersen holds a Master of Information Management from the University of Maryland and a Bachelor of Arts in International Relations from Brigham Young University. He’s also a Certified ScrumMaster and lives in the Salt Lake City, UT area. Petersen represents his own views, not those of his current or former employers.

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