Home Resources AI is great, but when it comes to marketing, trust is better AI is great, but when it comes to marketing, trust is betterRecent uses of AI to create models and creators have led everyday consumers to question whether they can believe anything they see any more. Here Dr Sage Kelly, ADMA’s Regulatory & Policy Manager, who has researched consumer relationships with chatbots, asks whether the AI juice is worth the squeeze if you risk losing hard-won trust. Mia Zelu has got a life most people would envy. Traveling the world with friends and family dressed in the latest fashions and snagging VIP seats at Wimbledon and heavyweight boxing matches. But there’s a twist. Because it’s all made up. It’s not that she’s staged the photos to fool us like some creators before her - it’s that she doesn’t actually exist at all. Her entire existence is in bits - she’s an AI creation.It was a revelation that left some of her 166,000 followers in bits too - wondering who they could actually trust.AI creations are also appearing in the pages of high fashion magazines. Just a few weeks ago, another AI creation hit one of the most premium and traditional media channels when Guess made headlines by featuring two hyper-real AI models in Vogue’s August issue. The AI models were created by Seraphinne Vallora, an AI marketing agency which “create editorial-level campaigns using AI”.The disclosure issued by Vogue - buried in fine print - did little to stem the backlash. Readers accused the brands of deception, undermining human creativity and diversity.These moments are more than isolated controversies. They mark a turning point in how technology, psychology and commerce collide. They raise a fundamental question for every marketer: how do we use AI to engage without eroding trust?AI influencers are not new. In 2016 Lil Miquela, a teenage pop singer from California, hit the headlines after gaining tens of thousands of followers and having her account hacked by a rival. It turned out to be two AI avatars controlled by the same studio. In some ways, Lil Miquela’s faux-existence has become normalised as the storyline of her life has continued to play out (in 2020 she broke up with her human boyfriend). She also has her own Wikipedia page which switches between treating her as a fictional and real character. What has changed since 2016 is the realism, speed of creation and the ease with which anyone with a smartphone can deploy AI influencers. Consequently, people are now hyper aware of AI and the abilities it has, resulting in heightened scepticism in what we see. When AI is clearly artificial - like a talking animal mascot - audiences treat it as playful branding, as they do Mickey Mouse or the Jolly Green Giant. But when synthetic personas are presented as human without disclosure, it becomes deception. Followers can form parasocial relationships - one-way emotional bonds - with a figure they believe is real. When the illusion is broken, trust collapses.In Australia, consumer trust in AI is already among the lowest globally with a recent report from KPMG finding only 30% of Australians believe the benefits of AI outweigh the risks - the lowest of any other country. This gap between expectation and reality can be potentially reputationally catastrophic.The psychology of “creepy”Recent Australian research confirms this tension. A UTS study found audiences were more comfortable engaging with less human-like AI influencers, such as stylised 2D avatars, than with hyper-realistic models, which many found unsettling and “creepy”. This is the uncanny valley effect: when something looks almost human, but not quite, discomfort spikes.Yet paradoxically, other studies show anthropomorphism - the more human qualities AI exhibits - the more likely people are to adopt it. The bridge between these findings is clear: trust is the key variable. If people know what they are dealing with, they are more open. If not, they recoil.Legally there is nothing stopping people creating these fictional AI characters (note that using the likeness of a real person such as a celebrity is a potentially fraud area). Australia has no AI-specific legislation. Instead, marketers must fall back on the Australian Consumer Law for some guidance:Section 18: prohibits misleading or deceptive conduct in trade or commerce; Sections 29 and 33: prohibit false or misleading representations about goods or services.In other words: if a consumer believes they’re dealing with a person when they are not, and the brand has not disclosed this, the brand could be at legal risk.At a minimum, they are in breach of consumer trust, which for many businesses is just as catastrophic given how long that takes to earn and regain.Why this matters for brandsAI promises cost savings, scale and infinite creative flexibility. But without transparency, it invites:Authenticity erosion - undermining brand heritage and community trust; Privacy backlash - when consumers realise they’ve shared personal data with a machine; Credibility collapse - endorsements from AI lack genuine lived experience; Labour displacement outrage - empathy for “jobs lost” to AI, amplified by cases like the Guess/Vogue scenario.These aren’t speculative risks - they are visible in the backlash we’ve already seen.Context is everything. In high fashion, audiences expect artifice. Videos and articles about how photoshopped most of the images in fashion mags have been doing the rounds for over 25 years, yet there was still a large backlash to the Vogue/Guess ads. For community-driven brands replacing real people with synthetic ones would undercut decades of credibility. Imagine how you’d feel about those Bunnings ads with their worker testimonials if you found out they were all actually AI avatars, not someone you could find stocking the paint at your local store?The safe middle ground? Make AI use explicit, intentional and even stylised. Consumers are more accepting of clearly artificial personas than of hidden mimicry. Five guardrails for responsible AI in marketingAs part of my PhD I studied the relationships people have with AI chatbots. The findings can be extrapolated to inform some best practice guidelines when using AI in a business context:. Disclose early and often - clearly label AI use in every interaction; Design with intent - use stylistic cues so consumers recognise synthetic content; Use AI to augment, not replace - preserve human voices where authenticity is core; Respect likeness rights - avoid near-replicas of real individuals without consent; Audit the trust equation - weigh financial savings against long-term brand equity.Australians already approach digital content with scepticism. If we don’t build industry-led disclosure standards, every synthetic campaign risks widening the trust deficit.AI can enrich creativity, scale and connection - but only if brands commit to honesty. Deception is the real enemy, not the technology. The brands that embrace transparency now won’t just avoid backlash; they’ll set the standard for trust in the synthetic age. 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Article 02nd Jun 2025 5 mins ADMA Global Forum returns for 2025 with global futurist Tom Goodwin and Holly Ransom announced as first speakers MEDIA RELEASE - AUSTRALIA: June 2, 2024: The Association for Data-Driven Marketing and Advertising (ADMA) today announces the return of its flagship ADMA Global Forum for 2025. The one-day event takes place on Tuesday, August 5 at Sofitel Wentworth Sydney. Press-release 12th May 2025 Marcus Evans Announces the 17th CMO ANZ Summit: A Premier Gathering for Marketing Leaders The CMO ANZ Summit 2025, set to take place from July 28-29, 2025, at The Star Gold Coast, Broadbeach, Queensland. This invitation-only event will bring together top marketing executives, innovative agencies, and solution providers to explore the latest trends and strategies in the marketing industry. Press-release 01st Apr 2025 ADMA names experienced marketing leader David Morgan as Chair of the Advisory Board The Association for Data-Driven Marketing and Advertising (ADMA) has appointed seasoned global marketing leader David Morgan as the new Chair of its Advisory Committee. Steve Brennen, Co-founder and CEO of Archie, who has held the position for over a decade, will move to the role of Vice Chair. Press-release 19th Nov 2024 CMO ANZ Summit 2025 The prestigious CMO ANZ Summit 2025 will take place at The Star Gold Coast from February 27 to February 28, 2025! This invitation-only event will gather leading marketing executives, innovative agencies, and solution providers to address key marketing challenges and share progressive strategies. Enquire now! Press-release 03rd Jul 2024 10 mins CMO Summit 8-9 August 2024 We are excited to announce that ADMA is partnering once again with marcusevans Summits for the upcoming CMO Summit 2024! The Summit takes place at The Star Gold Coast, Queensland on August 8-9. Don’t miss out this opportunity to learn more about the future landscape of Privacy and AI. Enquire now. Load More
Press-release 30th Jun 2025 5 minutes ADMA reveals renowned futurist Tom Goodwin as first international member of its Advisory Committee ADMA has named futurist and global marketing provocateur, Tom Goodwin, as the first ever internationally-based member of its Advisory Committee, reinforcing its bold commitment to shaping what’s next for marketers.The appointment marks a key milestone in ADMA’s strategy to broaden the perspectives and specialisms within its Advisory Committee to better support its key focus areas: future-focused capability building, progressive regulatory reform and leadership that actively shapes the future of marketing.
Article 02nd Jun 2025 5 mins ADMA Global Forum returns for 2025 with global futurist Tom Goodwin and Holly Ransom announced as first speakers MEDIA RELEASE - AUSTRALIA: June 2, 2024: The Association for Data-Driven Marketing and Advertising (ADMA) today announces the return of its flagship ADMA Global Forum for 2025. The one-day event takes place on Tuesday, August 5 at Sofitel Wentworth Sydney.
Press-release 12th May 2025 Marcus Evans Announces the 17th CMO ANZ Summit: A Premier Gathering for Marketing Leaders The CMO ANZ Summit 2025, set to take place from July 28-29, 2025, at The Star Gold Coast, Broadbeach, Queensland. This invitation-only event will bring together top marketing executives, innovative agencies, and solution providers to explore the latest trends and strategies in the marketing industry.
Press-release 01st Apr 2025 ADMA names experienced marketing leader David Morgan as Chair of the Advisory Board The Association for Data-Driven Marketing and Advertising (ADMA) has appointed seasoned global marketing leader David Morgan as the new Chair of its Advisory Committee. Steve Brennen, Co-founder and CEO of Archie, who has held the position for over a decade, will move to the role of Vice Chair.
Press-release 19th Nov 2024 CMO ANZ Summit 2025 The prestigious CMO ANZ Summit 2025 will take place at The Star Gold Coast from February 27 to February 28, 2025! This invitation-only event will gather leading marketing executives, innovative agencies, and solution providers to address key marketing challenges and share progressive strategies. Enquire now!
Press-release 03rd Jul 2024 10 mins CMO Summit 8-9 August 2024 We are excited to announce that ADMA is partnering once again with marcusevans Summits for the upcoming CMO Summit 2024! The Summit takes place at The Star Gold Coast, Queensland on August 8-9. Don’t miss out this opportunity to learn more about the future landscape of Privacy and AI. Enquire now.