Albert AI for Creative Optimization generates 800% Ad Spend Return

With ad creative optimization subject to user biases, like preferences for bold headlines, images, and colors, etc., Zoomd-owned Albert AI technology enables true creative optimization driven by real-time creative performance across products, ads, campaigns, and market segments.

One of the last areas of marketing to benefit from AI-driven optimization is ad creative.

The actual creation of ads will probably be the last area of marketing to benefit from AI-driven technology, even with the recent breakthrough of technologies like Chat GPT-4.

But the optimization of ad creative is very well-suited for AI technology today because of the subjectivity people apply when optimizing ads. While it’s easy to compare the performance of two distinctly different ads, optimizing creative performance to determine the optimal size and color of the font for the ad’s headline and other subjective creative elements is difficult for people because of our inherent biases.

“A creative director who has succeeded with bold headlines or has a preference for certain colors and color combinations will bring these biases to the ad creation and optimization process,” said Nir Huberman, VP Product at Albert AI, part of the Zoomd marketing and publisher platform. “But Albert is more methodical, breaking down each potential parameter that impacts performance, testing each one by one. That’s why Albert’s technology can improve creative performance by optimizing ad parameters from among the options provided which enables exceeding client KPIs. Albert also provides a lot of value for marketers by knowing when to refresh or replace an ad’s creative.”

And by determining which ad creative performed best using Albert, marketers are in a better position to create new ads that will perform.

An e-commerce company contracted to work with Albert AI with the stated KPI of increasing Return On Ad Spend (ROAS) by 500%, a KPI that Albert’s team believed was realistic. A few months after the conclusion of the onboarding process, Albert achieved an 800% improvement in ROAS. And in subsequent years, this e-commerce company, now in its fourth year working with Albert, is still achieving improvements in ROAS that are between 10-20%.

For this e-commerce company, Albert was able to optimize ad creative by creating the best-performing ads for each target segment and each ad platform/channel. Albert’s technology creates the optimal ad by selecting the best images, colors, fonts, and texts that will generate the most cost-effective performance for the target audience. Finally, Albert’s technology was able to efficiently determine when to refresh and then change ads to ensure optimal ROAS.

Albert is an advertiser and an agency’s autonomous marketing ally. The technology leverages AI to create ads that optimize campaign performance, from keyword, audience, platform, and device selection and bidding to creative optimization across search, social, display, and cross-channel. Albert assists marketers and agencies – from defining campaign strategies and messaging to the creation and optimization of ads across audience segments and platforms. By working 24/7 to continuously optimize campaign performance, Albert AI complements marketer and agency teams, giving them the insights to make them smarter as well as more efficient and effective.

6 Advertiser Blind Spots To Overcome in 2023

With the excitement of a new year comes an increasing sense of responsibility to deliver meaningful results for our companies. 2023 started with a bang – not only a looming recession but also article after article predicting how machines will replace many of us in the advertising industry. 

The best and most optimal results can only be achieved with human-machine collaboration even in these AI-ruled days. We have seen AI helping advertisers overcome significant blind spots time after time, and we know it can help you too, whichever tool you choose to use. Here are 6 major blind spots you must overcome in 2023 to make a real difference in your company’s bottom line. 

1) Acquisition or Retention? 

Now that we’re in a recession, budgets get limited, and you find yourself wondering where to invest more. Some say retention must come first. They say that, if you invest in the customers you already have, you’ll grow tenfold. Customers that have already had great experiences with your product, will want to buy more. They’ll tell their friends – a recommendation that’s worth way more than anything we can say about our brand ourselves. 

Some are pro acquisition – the more customers you have, the better. They know that many customers churn, and you have to keep spreading brand awareness, to keep introducing your products to as many people as possible. This way, they say, you’ll always have a solid, growing customer base. 

Usually, they’re both right. We need to take good care of the customers we already have, while constantly introducing our brand to new audiences. But we often don’t have enough data on what drives larger lifetime value in our specific situation, what that lifetime value is worth to us, or what types of campaigns work best for each type of customer. And if we’re looking for new customers… We don’t always know where to find them. 

2) We Can’t Find New Audiences 

If you set out to find new audiences and keep landing on the same ones you’ve already reached, you’re not alone. 

=> Maybe we’ve thought of our product one way, and didn’t know it could have additional usages. 

=> Maybe a feature we discounted was gold for someone out there. 

=> Maybe new audiences hide in plain sight, like a small market within our segmentation, that with some new messaging, could grow exponentially. 

If you’re not reaching new audiences, you’re not leveraging enough – or the right – media sources. You need to find new places to advertise. Albert, for example, uses existing audiences’ interests and lookalikes on Google and Facebook, among others, to find new audiences. It also makes it easier to discover what each of your audience segments wants. 

3) What Each of Our Segments Wants 

After testing 11,340 variations in audiences, channels and strategies, we managed to discover a global FMCG/CPG company used the wrong messaging. Wanting to connect with their audience, they used messaging that focused on character, when their audience actually wanted to get promotions across a range of options. 

But who has the time to run 11,340 tests? 

An AI software. In this case, testing was done quickly, way faster than what a human could do. 

4) The Right Personalization for Every Situation of Every Segment 

The more accurate you are, the more each segment will feel understood and seen, the more likely they are to click and convert. But what happens if you have hundreds, or even thousands, of segments? 

You need automation. 

Some AI-driven AdTech, like Albert, can take… 
 

=> A wide variety of ad copy options 

=> … and visual options 

=> … and audience segmentation options 
 

… and create a long list of combinations, which it can then check across audiences and channels. It can do so responsibly, spending most of your budget only on the best-performing options. It can give you insights, or use them itself to plan the next step of the campaign. 

5) How Unconnected Campaigns Impact Each Other 

If you advertise offline – OOH, TV, CTV – you need a way to connect these ads’ performance with your KPIs, so you can know how effective they are. There’s a variety of ways to do it. Connecting what seems like unconnected campaigns can help. For example, one of our clients only advertised on a specific TV show, then targeted that show’s audience online for better measurement. 

But whether you advertise offline or not, what do you do when you reach your audience members? How do you know they’re ready for the next funnel stage? 

Data, of course. You want to see enough signals that tell you this lead is “worth” investing in further. But there’s only so much you can discover about a lead from one channel or one point in time. To truly understand a lead, you’ve got to look at… 

=> Her behavior and preferences in every separate channel. 

=> Consider your ideal customer’s overall experience and behavior across channels. Maybe she searches on Google, but only buys the actual product from TikTok influencers she trusts? 

=> Analyze her historical data, including what she’s searched, what she’s put in her cart, the content she’s interacted with, etc. 

As human advertisers, we’ve got to prioritize our data analysis and campaign tasks. No matter how big our departments are, we can’t do it all. Therefore, it’s very challenging – especially if you have lots of products and/or large audiences – to do it manually. With AI, you dedicate some time to set it up and monitor it, but it can do a lot more than we can in a lot less time. 

6) Where Our Money is Best Spent 

Ultimately, overcoming your advertising blind spots means you’ll know how your money is best spent. Among others, you need to know: 

=> Which messaging works best for which segment, and in which situations 

=> Which visuals work best with which texts 

=> Which channels convert best with which audience segment and/or creative asset 

=> How different channels impact one another, and how to build an omnichannel campaign that takes historical data into consideration, too.  

If you need a tool that can simplify this for you – even automate it for you – check out Albert:  

Do Things Differently This Year 

Albert is all about saving you time, making your work more efficient, empowering your creativity, simplifying your work and keeping you in control. 

Our AI AdTech software can take your KPIs, analytics and creative assets and turn them into a data driven, self-improving omnichannel campaign.  

That said, while we trust Albert, we do provide extra human support to monitor campaigns, to verify they’re brand safe and everything is going on track, just as you want. 

Ready to give it a try? Schedule your free demo