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A person using a laptop with the ChatGPT interface open on the screen, displaying examples, capabilities, and limitations of the AI tool.
Bowen He is the founder of Webzilla, a Google Premier Partner agency serving clients globally. Recognized as a University of Auckland 40 Under 40 Entrepreneur, Bowen has helped hundreds of brands grow through expert SEO, SEM, and performance marketing. Under his leadership, Webzilla became the first Chinese-owned agency nominated for IAB NZ’s Best Use of SEO. With a proven track record across New Zealand, Australia, and China, Bowen brings deep expertise and real-world results to every campaign.

ChatGPT Advertising: Revolutionising Digital Marketing

ChatGPT Advertising: Revolutionising Digital Marketing

OpenAI has signalled it might introduce advertising into ChatGPT for non-paying users. Given more than 800 million people use the assistant each week and most arrive with specific questions, this could be the most meaningful new media channel since social platforms opened to businesses. It is not live yet. But the groundwork for a conversational ad ecosystem is starting to show.

If your team manages paid media, SEO, or content, now is the time to plan. Waiting until a formal rollout will put you behind brands that already tuned their content for AI answers and honed conversational offers that feel helpful, not pushy.

 

 

Key takeaways

  • OpenAI is evaluating ads for the free tier, creating a fresh way to reach high-intent users in problem-solving mode.
  • Likely formats include sponsored responses, native product mentions, and context-driven suggestions inside an answer.
  • Targeting will lean on query intent and chat context rather than only keywords or third-party cookies.
  • Privacy, safety, and trust will shape both policy and creative craft. Clear labels and strict guardrails will be essential.
  • Brands can prepare now: build AI-readable content, strengthen authority signals, and structure data with schema.
  • Even without paid inventory, you can increase organic mentions by improving content quality, citations, and Q&A coverage.

 

 

What we know so far

ChatGPT, which currently operates without ads, is being considered for advertising by OpenAI’s leadership as a way to monetize its vast non-paying user base and offset significant compute costs (source: OpenAI CFO, 2024). With over 800 million weekly users actively engaging in detailed, goal-oriented conversations—far beyond typical two-word keyword searches—ChatGPT presents a uniquely high-intent audience for potential advertisers. OpenAI is reportedly exploring various monetization strategies, including partnerships with publishers and the integration of sponsored content directly into the chat experience. While no official timeline has been released, the platform already possesses the foundational infrastructure for advertising, such as advanced conversation context, personalization capabilities, content retrieval systems, and established UI patterns for cards and links, making the transition to an ad-supported model both feasible and potentially transformative for digital marketing.

 

 

Why this could reset paid strategy

Traditional search is built around short queries and blue links. Social feeds reward thumb-stopping visuals and broad interest targeting. ChatGPT operates differently. Users type full sentences, elaborate constraints, and ask follow-ups. The assistant clarifies, adapts, and stays inside the task until the user is satisfied.

From an advertiser’s point of view, that creates three advantages:

  1. Intent clarity
    People often describe the job to be done in detail. That reduces ambiguity and makes it easier to match a solution without guesswork.
  2. Natural timing
    Recommendations can appear right after a need is confirmed, not before the user has context.
  3. Dialogue depth
    A follow-up can handle objections, compare options, or offer a trial without bouncing the user off to five separate web pages.

Handled well, a sponsored suggestion can feel like part of a useful answer. Handled poorly, it will feel like a sales pitch that breaks trust. The difference sits in relevancy, labelling, and the language you use.

 

 

Likely ad formats and how they might work

Early inventory will probably stay close to the core chat interface. Expect simple, well labelled treatments that prioritise usefulness.

  • Sponsored response at the top of an answer
    A concise, clearly marked entry that appears before the organic explanation.
  • Native brand mention inside a paragraph
    A sentence that includes a sponsor where a tool or product would reasonably be recommended.
  • Contextual recommendation cards
    Small cards below an answer with titles, pricing, or ratings that match the user’s goal.
  • Utility actions inside chat
    Buttons to start a trial, fetch a quote, or add a product to a cart without leaving the conversation.
  • Rewarded session or sponsored feature unlock
    Engage with a brand to gain extra usage on the free tier. Expect this to be opt-in and limited.

A quick comparison to help planning:

Format Where it appears Best for UX risks Early KPI to watch
Sponsored response Top of the assistant reply High-intent queries with clear choices Perceived bias if too frequent Conversational CTR
Native brand mention Inside a paragraph Complex advice with product tie-ins Confusion if label is unclear Engagement depth
Recommendation cards Below the answer E-commerce and SaaS with multiple SKUs Banner blindness if poorly targeted Card expand rate
Utility action buttons Inline with the reply Trials, quotes, bookings Friction if login or permissions are clunky Assisted conversion rate
Rewarded session Preface or interstitial Brand storytelling and education Irritation if it interrupts the task Completion rate and satisfaction

 

 

Targeting signals and privacy guardrails

Targeting will likely centre on:

  • The user’s current question and wording
  • Conversation history in the active thread
  • Hints of preferences or constraints stated by the user
  • In some contexts, high-level account signals the user has chosen to share

Privacy laws will shape what is allowed. Expect strong adherence to the EU’s GDPR and the Californian CCPA, along with the New Zealand Privacy Act 2020. Sensitive topics like health or finance will face tighter limits. Clear controls for consent, data use, and ad personalisation will be table stakes. For marketers, assume contextual and intent-based targeting will be primary, with limited or no use of third-party cookies and careful handling of any personal data.

 

 

Intent on ChatGPT vs search and social

  • Search intent is often compressed to a few words. It is powerful, yet ambiguous.
  • Social attention is usually casual and entertainment-led. People are not always looking for a tool or a fix.
  • ChatGPT prompts read like a brief. Users explain the problem, constraints, and desired outcome in one go. They also accept clarifying questions.

That difference matters. Your ad copy should match spoken language, not a headline. Offers should feel like help, not a hard sell. Calls to action work better when they offer to continue the task instead of pushing a landing page immediately.

Examples of better fits for chat:

  • “I can compare three CRMs that match your team size. Want me to shortlist them and show price ranges?”
  • “If you’re renovating a bathroom, I can calculate the tile quantity and suggest products that fit your budget.”

 

 

Impact on Google, Meta and the rest

Budgets follow performance. If ChatGPT can deliver conversions from mid to lower funnel queries, marketers will test and then rebalance. Search platforms are already blending AI answers with ads. Social platforms are pushing AI assistants into messaging and feeds. Expect a period of rapid experimentation across the industry.

For most brands in Aotearoa and beyond, this will not be a simple either-or. The practical play is multi-channel:

  • Use search to capture broad demand and protect brand terms.
  • Use social for reach, creative testing, and upper-funnel narrative.
  • Use conversational ads to support comparison, configuration, and trial at the point of need.

 

 

Who stands to gain first

  • SaaS and B2B tech
    Decision makers often ask explicit “what’s the best tool for X” questions. Sponsored suggestions here can lift trials and demos.
  • E-commerce with considered purchases
    Electronics, fitness gear, home improvement, and specialty retail where buyers seek specs and fit.
  • Education and professional development
    Certifications, short courses, and tutoring that tie directly to skills the user is asking about.
  • Professional services
    Accounting, law, marketing, and healthcare-adjacent services that can offer a free consult or a resource inside the answer. Extra care is needed on sensitive topics.
  • National and regional service brands
    Travel bookings, insurance, and utilities that can execute a quote or booking inside chat.

What might struggle at first

  • Low-cost impulse buys with little research
  • Ultra-niche offers where digital demand is thin

Local businesses in New Zealand will benefit as location features mature. In the meantime, keep your profiles current on major directories and review platforms and prepare structured content that can be referenced when users include a place name in their question.

 

 

How to get ready now

There is a lot you can do before a single ad goes live.

  • Map the questions your customers actually ask
    Pull from support tickets, sales calls, site search, People Also Ask panels, and community forums. Group them by stage of the buying cycle.
  • Write in a conversational style
    Convert your most important topics into Q&A pages. Answer with clear steps, options, and trade-offs. Avoid fluff.
  • Build authority signals
    Guest articles, industry citations, awards, case studies, and independent reviews. These lift trust for both search engines and AI systems.
  • Structure your data
    Add FAQ, HowTo, Product, and Organisation schema. Mark up pricing, ratings, and availability. Clean product feeds for future integrations.
  • Create a knowledge base that AI can read
    Publish documentation, comparison guides, and troubleshooting steps. Keep it crawlable and up to date.
  • Design conversational offers
    Draft short scripts that move from problem to recommendation to action. Replace “Buy now” with “Would you like a 14 day trial so you can test this configuration?”
  • Prepare measurement foundations
    Plan for assisted conversions, view-through attribution, and longer consideration windows. Tag your site to capture chat-driven traffic once referral parameters exist.
  • Train your team
    Copywriters on dialogue design, analysts on new KPIs, engineers on APIs and privacy requirements.

 

 

Improving organic mentions before ads

You can influence how often your brand appears in answers without paying.

  • Cover long-tail questions deeply and accurately
  • Publish original research and data that others cite
  • Earn links from reputable publications and industry directories
  • Maintain accurate profiles on Wikipedia and knowledge bases where appropriate
  • Monitor brand mentions with alerts and keep facts consistent across the web

 

 

Pricing and auction mechanics to expect

Plan for familiar models adapted to conversation.

  • CPC
    Pay when a user clicks a sponsored link or expands a recommendation.
  • CPE
    Pay when a user engages with a suggestion in chat, for example requesting a quote or asking for a trial link.
  • CPA
    Pay on a qualified lead or sale if end-to-end is measurable.
  • Package or subscription placements
    Monthly sponsorships that guarantee presence in defined categories or query clusters.

Auctions will reward relevance and quality. An ad that matches the question, earns positive engagement, and respects user intent should win even at a modest bid. Your creative and landing experience will count towards that quality. Expect policies that cap ad frequency in a single thread to protect user experience.

Forecasting ROI will take testing. Start by benchmarking against your search campaigns on similar intents. Build a simple model:

  • Estimated impression share on targeted prompts
  • Conversational CTR
  • Click-to-lead rate or action acceptance rate
  • Cost by pricing model
  • Assisted conversion rate within a 7 to 30 day window

Adjust budgets as data arrives. Keep a reserve for rapid iteration when new formats appear.

 

 

Measurement and attribution in a chat-led flow

New channel, new metrics. Add these to your dashboard plans.

  • Engagement depth
    Number of turns with your suggestion present, scroll or expand behaviour, and time spent on related content inside chat.
  • Conversational CTR
    Rate of clicks or expansions on sponsored elements within the response.
  • Satisfaction signal
    Thumbs up or equivalent feedback on sponsored replies if the platform exposes it.
  • Share of recommendation
    How often your brand appears among recommended options in your category.
  • Assisted conversions and brand search lift
    Uplift in branded queries and direct traffic after exposure to chat suggestions.
  • Safety and trust indicators
    Complaint rate, opt-out rate, and any signals that labelling or frequency is causing friction.

Expect stricter creative reviews for sensitive categories, strict labels on paid content, and priority on post-answer placements that do not interrupt the user mid-thought. Brands that respect the conversation will earn better performance and less pushback.

 

 

A 60 day readiness checklist

  • Audit top 200 customer questions and map to content
  • Publish or refresh 30 Q&A pages with clear schema
  • Produce two comparison guides with transparent pros and cons
  • Secure five new high-authority citations or reviews
  • Draft 10 conversational ad scripts tailored to intent clusters
  • Define privacy stance and prepare consent messaging for any data sharing
  • Set up measurement for assisted conversions and longer attribution windows
  • Train copy, media, and analytics teams on conversation-first best practice

 

 

FAQs

Does ChatGPT have ads today
No. ChatGPT is ad-free at the moment. OpenAI has said advertising is under consideration for non-paying users.

Will recommendations be sponsored
Not at this time. When ads launch, expect clear labels. Until then, any recommendations reflect training data and available sources.

Should I move budget from Google Ads now
No need to shift today. Keep performance steady on proven channels. When ChatGPT ads launch, test with a small budget and expand based on results.

What might the first formats look like
Sponsored responses, native mentions, and recommendation cards inside or below the assistant’s answer. All will need clear labels and strong relevance.

Can I get cited in ChatGPT answers without paying
Yes. Publish accurate, useful content in Q&A formats, earn reputable citations, and structure your data. These steps already increase organic mentions.

How will privacy work for conversational ads
Plan for strict consent, limited use of personal data, and strong controls. Assume contextual targeting first, with sensitive categories limited or excluded in many regions.

How should CTAs differ in chat
Use low-friction, helpful offers. Examples include “Start a 14 day trial”, “Calculate your cost”, or “Show three options under $500”. Keep users in flow and avoid hard sells.

Where does this leave small New Zealand businesses
Start with content that answers common questions in plain language, keep your directory listings current, and watch for local features. When ads arrive, test modest budgets on high-intent topics that match your services.

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Book a call if you want a hands-on plan for conversational ads and AI visibility.