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Realistic-looking shampoo bottles and seltzer cans are popping up on videos from digital creators on TikTok and YouTube in a new form of old advertising.

Melissa Becraft, wearing a pink workout outfit, strikes a dance pose in a kitchen.
A screenshot of a recent TikTok from the dancer Melissa Becraft that used A.I to digitally superimpose a poster for Bubly, the sparkling water brand owned by PepsiCo, onto the wall of her apartment.Credit…via TikTok

Product placement, one of the oldest tricks in advertisers’ toolbox, is getting an A.I. makeover.

New technology has made it easier to insert digital, realistic-looking versions of soda cans and shampoo onto the tables and walls of videos on YouTube and TikTok. And a growing group of creators and advertisers is grabbing at the chance for an additional revenue stream.

A recent TikTok from the dancer Melissa Becraft featured a poster for Bubly, the sparkling-water brand owned by PepsiCo, hanging on the wall of her apartment as she shimmied to a Shakira song. A duo known as HiveMind chatted about bands while an animated can of Starry soda, another brand owned by PepsiCo, landed on a table between them. And a YouTube video of the “AsianBossGirl” podcast recently displayed a table of Garnier hair products.

Virtual product placements have been offered by start-ups and streaming services like Amazon Prime and NBC’s Peacock in recent years. But a recent wave of them on social media, in which brief, animated messages disclosing the sponsorships appear on the videos themselves, is the work of a start-up called Rembrand.

The ads provide a glimpse into one way A.I. might shape advertising in the future, especially as marketers look to reach younger viewers who are apt to skip or ignore standard ads.

Rembrand’s executives say their technology could transform product placements, which have often been used to cut production costs on bigger projects and can take weeks, months or sometimes years to negotiate.

For creators, it’s a way to make money from advertisers without physically handling products or discussing them.

“This feels like I’m making my own genuine content, but it doesn’t scream that I’m making an ad,” said Ms. Becraft, 28, who has made two TikTok videos that featured Bubly. “There’s no obligation for me to talk about it.”

Product placements in the United States are estimated to be a nearly $23 billion industry, according to PQ Media, a research firm. It has become increasingly appealing to advertisers, which have grown worried about consumers skipping commercials or the ads before YouTube videos.

The shifting viewership to social platforms and advances in technology have opened a new frontier for this work, moving it beyond getting Coca-Cola cups on the “American Idol” judges’ table or cereal brands into WB shows.

Our business reporters. Times journalists are not allowed to have any direct financial stake in companies they cover.

Rembrand, which has 42 employees and is based in Palo Alto, Calif., believes it’s on the forefront of these changes. It raised $14 million in seed funding from the likes of Greycroft and the venture arms of UTA Ventures and L’Oreal since it was created in 2022. One of its founders, Omar Tawakol, 55, spent years in programmatic advertising and is best known for founding and selling BlueKai — which helped marketers track users’ online behaviour for ad targeting — to Oracle in 2014.

Mr. Tawakol said he saw an opportunity to use A.I. to insert virtual products in influencer videos and make it a fast and easy ad buy.

Rembrand uses a form of generative A.I. that can “take an existing scene and figure out how to put a product in it,” Mr. Tawakol said. “The product has to look exactly right — Pepsi is not going to be forgiving if you screw with their logo,” he added.

The company “had to train the laws of physics into the network,” Mr. Tawakol said, so that objects would properly respond to things like light, camera distance and motion. Rembrand started placements with podcasts on YouTube because “they tended to be indoors, they tended to have fixed cameras, and they tended to have a table and a wall,” he said.

It then expanded to LinkedIn and TikTok; Instagram is next. (The company said it went with the name Rembrand — an allusion to the Dutch artist, who spelled it Rembrandt — because it wanted an artistic bent while also sounding like shorthand for “remember the brand.”)

Rembrand is still asking creators like Ms. Becraft to film indoors as they improve the technology. “The things I’m more famous for are dancing outside in the rain and dancing in Times Square,” she said. “They told me that if you do that our technology might have a heart attack.”

The placements are not as subtle as the ones in TV shows. Starry and Bubly cans wiggle before entering videos, and logos hover above them. The company shared a demo in which a digitized Tide Pen danced onto a podcast host’s shirt and wiped away a stain before vanishing, “Fantasia” style. The company experimented with “what animations were acceptable,” after realizing they could spike attention on the products, said Cory Treffiletti, 50, Rembrand’s chief marketing officer.

 

Madison Luscombe, chief marketing officer of the Creator Society, an agency that works with Ms. Becraft, said that while the use of A.I.-generated product placement was in its early days, the deals could be valuable for “entertainment creators” who are focused on performing, podcasting or playing games, and aren’t necessarily approached by brands as often to extol mascara or new snacks to their fans.

Advertisers use Rembrand’s marketplace to connect with more than 1,000 creators from agencies it works with. Creators upload their videos to its platform and receive them within 24 hours with the product placements. Rembrand has someone check for quality and someone else for how the brand appears. Then creators upload the clips and eventually get paid from the brands based on video views. Rembrand declined to share specific figures around payouts.

The company said it expected to turn into a “self-service platform” by the middle of this year, where any creator or brand could connect and run digital product placement campaigns without Rembrand’s involvement.

When asked why YouTube, TikTok and Instagram wouldn’t just offer this option directly to creators on their platforms, Mr. Tawakol said he would “love” if they wanted to work with him. “I designed my business to integrate it with platforms,” he said. “We want to be the world’s best at this one very specific problem.”

Sourced from The New York Times

 

By Ben Sherry,

New platforms are simplifying the path to entrepreneurship for a new generation.

There has never been a better, easier time to start a business.

Artificial intelligence technology is chipping away at the barriers to entry for aspiring entrepreneurs, which represent a meaningful segment of the U.S. population. A 2021 survey conducted by Harris Poll found that 61 percent of Americans have an idea for a business, but are stymied by a lack of access to business tools and knowledge on how to get started. The founders behind a new crop of A.I.-powered platforms envision a world where, instead of needing an MBA, you can leverage technology to help launch your business.

For burgeoning entrepreneurs looking for an all-in-one platform to provide guidance and assistance in starting a business, there’s Tailor Brands, which launched in 2014 as a simple logo creator before adding additional features designed to help entrepreneurs start small businesses. Requiring just a brand name and some basic information about the status of the business, the system can create a custom to-do list for founders, including items such as securing a domain name, launching a website, registering as an LLC, and obtaining trademark approvals.

Tailor Brands CEO Yali Saar hopes that by providing a framework for people to build their businesses, entrepreneurs will have more time to spend perfecting their specific product or service. “We’re trying to create a world where building your business is easy, and you’re actually measured by the quality of your product or service,” says Saar.

One service not currently offered by Tailor Brands is copywriting. Making sure that your social media content and advertising is SEO-friendly and finely curated to your target audience is key if you want to increase awareness of your brand and grow. One company offering such services is Pluralytics, a “content intelligence solutions” platform founded in 2020 to help companies discover their “brand voice” and ensure that their messaging is always pinpointed to engage their target audience.

The Pluralytics algorithm assigns a “value” to every single word in a given post, such as “confident” or “energized,” and then scores that post against a custom benchmark set up to replicate the values of the post’s intended audience, according to co-founder Alisa Miller. Business owners can then turn their copywriting into a science, using data to ensure that every word is as effective as possible at converting ad viewers into customers. As an example, Miller says that the algorithm can determine the subtle differences between words with the same meaning, such as give versus donate.

While Pluralytics can be useful for improving content that’s already been written, Jasper, which bills itself as an “A.I. content platform,” goes even further by creating fully original material from scratch. Founders can choose from a large variety of templates, such as “video script” or “real estate listing,” and then submit a brief description of the intended message. The program then crafts a custom piece of copy in the style of the founder’s choosing.

According to CEO and co-founder Dave Rogenmoser, Jasper can’t fully create perfect posts yet, as most need some editing and cleanup done after the fact, but he estimates that the program gets most clients “around 80 percent of the way there.” For some entrepreneurs, Rogenmoser says, more helpful than automating copywriting is simply eliminating the feeling of staring at a blank page and not knowing where to start.

What might be the broader impact of these kinds of tools on the business world? According to Tailor Brands’ Saar, “we’re going to see independent businesses become a larger portion of the economy because of these A.I. platforms, which are allowing independents to do everything they need to do on their own.”

Feature Image Credit: Getty Images

By Ben Sherry,

Sourced from Inc.

By Peter Roesler

A.I. is at the forefront of the latest and greatest technology developments. Learning how to make the most of this technology for your brand is necessary.

Feature Image Credit: Getty Images

By Peter Roesler

Sourced from Inc.

Artificial intelligence could outsmart and enslave humanity, but our species’ future could turn out even worse if we don’t advance in the field. That’s according to Tomas Mikolov, a research scientist at Facebook A.I. Research, who believes that catastrophic events could have a detrimental effect on society, and it may be machines that save humans from themselves.

“There are these arguments that maybe we should not develop A.I. because it’s going to destroy us,” Mikolov said at the Human-Level Artificial Intelligence conference organized by GoodAI in Prague, Czech Republic on Saturday, describing this scenario as resulting from science fiction drama. “What if actually not achieving A.I. is the biggest existential threat for humans? As the technology is getting increasingly complex, we are producing more artificial substances that could get into the environment. We as humans are actually very bad at making predictions. What will happen in some distant time, 20, 30 years from now if we make some bad decisions? Maybe actually it will be A.I. that will help us to become much smarter.”

Researchers across the industry are grappling with the issue of super-smart A.I. taking control. Elon Musk has called for stronger government regulation, Stephen Hawking warned it could destroy humanity, and roboticist Noel Sharkey is just one of many experts warning about autonomous weapons. A Future of Life Institute survey last year found 15 percent of researchers think A.I. will be either bad or extremely bad for the species.

Mikolov’s comments touch on a more positive aspect of this new technology, though. A.I. is helping save coral reefs, discover new medical drugs, and research new cancer treatments. Norway has used smarter machines to integrate more renewable energy into the grid, while Indian farmers have boosted crop yields by 30 percent in some cases. With NASA declaring last year the second-hottest on record, such advancements could help avoid a major calamity.

Mikolov did agree with Musk on one thing, though. He claimed that developing a symbiotic relationship between man and machine could avoid computers taking over, echoing Musk’s efforts with his firm Neuralink.

Editor’s Note: The Human-Level Artificial Intelligence conference funded Inverse’s travel and accommodation to cover the event, but the organization has no input over Inverse’s editorial coverage.

Photos via Flickr.com/Insomnia Cured Here

Sourced from Inverse