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Remember that time you talked about buying a new couch, and suddenly every ad on your phone was for sofas? You never searched for it. You never typed it out. Yet, somehow, brands knew exactly what you were thinking. That’s not marketing magic, it’s surveillance disguised as personalisation.
Hyper-personalised advertising is one of the biggest trends in marketing, driven by AI, data tracking, and algorithms that know more about you than your best friend. But here’s the question: when does personalised marketing stop being helpful and start becoming a privacy nightmare?
Many brands argue that hyper-personalisation enhances customer experience, making ads more relevant and reducing noise. But privacy advocates, and increasingly, everyday consumers see it differently. They see it as a manipulative tool that turns consumers into data points, tracking their every move.
A 2024 survey by Pew Research found that 76% of consumers feel ‘creeped out’ by hyper-personalised ads, yet only 19% take action to stop them. Why? Because opting out is almost impossible. Companies bury privacy settings, making it difficult for consumers to reclaim control over their data.
On LinkedIn, marketers debate whether hyper-personalisation helps or hurts brand trust. Meanwhile, Twitter/X users often expose brands for over-targeting – like when women receive pregnancy ads before, they’ve even told their families. Is that helpful, or horrifying?
If hyper-personalisation continues unchecked, AI may soon predict what we want before we know it ourselves. Imagine:
Sound far-fetched? It’s already happening. AI-driven sentiment analysis and behavioral tracking are making predictive advertising a reality.
So, where’s the line? At what point does “helpful” become “manipulative”? If hyper-personalisation isn’t unethical, would you be okay with ads knowing your medical history? Your relationship struggles? Your financial insecurities?
Let’s debate. How much personal data should brands really have access to?