AI Enabled Creative Inspiration Engines for B2B
By Scott Gillum
Estimated read time: 5 Minutes
Imagine adding one of the world’s greatest artists to your creative team. Or, how about saving time and money on creative brainstorming by starting with a first draft to inspire the team. How about creating dozens of creative concepts in the same time it currently takes to develop a handful.
Intrigued? This is the promise of AI creative engines for B2B marketing. And with that possibility, could it also help make B2B marketing as sexy and exciting as B2C advertising?
The big story of this year will be the widespread adoption of AI creative tools. Chat GPT is just the beginning. Expect to see agencies widely embrace AI for all types of creative – not just content. Open AI’s CEO, Sam Atlman, sees the “greatest application of AI for creative use,” not in replacing blue collar jobs as many had predicted.
After experimenting with AI tools for the last couple of months, you may be interested to know that I totally agree with Sam’s statement. In fact, the image used for this blog was created using Jasper’s AI image generator.
I selected Salvador Dali as my inspiration, acrylic paint as the style, the context of creating an exciting and bold prediction for the future, out pops the image you see. There were almost endless options of possible combinations that could be used from style to mood, and everything in between.
Rather than these tools being utilized to replace people, they have the potential to be incredibly useful tool sets that in a sense, may serve as an “inspiration engine” for creatives. The potential for increase in productivity is huge!
In fact, think of the possibility of having a famous artist inspire the creative team. Instead of replacing people, you’re gaining access to an incredible talent pool that would otherwise be impossible. Talk about shaking up the world of B2B that has a tendency to lean on technical language and images of products.
The creative process is nothing if not iterative. Imagine how fast the team can play around with concepts by using AI content generators to create first, second, and third drafts that are then edited and approved by a human as final copy.
Consider the time saved by having a designer build the exact image they want, rather than scanning Getty Images for hours on end. Oftentimes, just getting started creates a delay. Working off an AI generated first draft could accelerate the process – at least, that’s the hope.
Now the warning. It is very easy to write long form and short form copy using AI tools, especially for digital ads, blog posts and emails. For B2B marketers, this could mean that there is an easily accessible cornucopia of content to blast out to prospects. Please use these tools judiciously.
The assumption that more content equals more engagement is incorrect. Relevant content is closer, but it still requires insight and strategic thinking, which you will not find in AI tools. The new generation of AI generators is very powerful, in particular, with the coming release of GPT-4 and the advancements made in language modeling.
The tools still require time to learn and understand how to best utilize their power and get the output you desire. There is, however, a learning curve – it is not as simple as input and output. There are numerous variables that need to be refined or manipulated by humans in order to achieve a quality output. The expression of “crap in, crap out” still holds true.
Agencies and companies who carefully consider experimenting with these new tools will now be better off in the long run as technology continues to advance. And here’s another warning based on our learning in young marketing using technologies, they are not the goal.
It’s not enough to only know how to use the tool, you still need to think creatively. AI generators can be great tools to aid the creative process, don’t let them become the process.
They don’t become a threat for replacing humans if you understand how to use them properly. And no, I didn’t use an AI content engine to write this blog…or did I?