CANNES, FranceâAd veteran David Droga is one of the few people with the keys to OpenAIâs text-to-video tool, Sora, and itâs already reshaping how he thinks about creativity.
âNot all creativity is worth saving,â said the CEO of Accenture Song in a conversation at the Cannes Lions Festival with OpenAI chief technology officer Mira Murati.
âThe majority of advertising is not creative. Itâs written by something far more dangerous than AI: research,â he continued, observing how tools like Sora could eradicate the âmessy middleâ of the creative process without displacing jobs at the top.
Drogaâs session offered the industry a glimpse at how Sora could be used to create and test ads in the future, opening with a film-noir-style video of Cannes showing vignettes of people walking up and down the Croisette.
The twist? It wasnât archive footage, but a video made by Droga and his team. He also debuted a surreal music video created with help from Accenture Song creative technologist Howard Boland for artist 2Ton.
On the ground at Cannes Lions, the festival has been dominated by conversations around how generative AI will transform content creation and data practices. However, questions linger about trust, ethics and safety.
Murati said OpenAI is working with creatives, policymakers and educators to understand how its technology will impact society and to put guardrails in place to mitigate misuse.
Man vs. machine
Droga suggested that ad executives in the audience were likely caught between âexcitement, enthusiasm and terrorâ about gen AIâs ability to devour creativity.
âThe way that we design it, develop it and bring it into the world really matters,â said Murati. âItâs not a predetermined outcome. When we think about job displacement or how it will elevate certain skills, roles, thatâs quite dependent on how we shape the technology, and the way that we shape it will then shape our society.â
While every client Droga works with is excited by the opportunities AI presents to outdo competitors, move at speed and find efficiencies, âthey are also paranoid that the competition is going to wipe them out because of that,â he said.
Most, however, donât know how to best implement the tech. âThey just look at it and think, âOh, Iâll never have to pay a copywriter again,â or, âIâll never have to pay a photographer again,’â he said.
Job displacement is not the issue for Droga: Itâs whether marketers can evolve at the same pace as the technology disrupting them. âThe necessity to create things that connect us and are meaningfulâthat will never go out of style,â he said.
This chimes with what sources have told ADWEEK: Tools like Sora arenât necessarily job-killers, but instead prompt a shift in the skillsets required to maximize their effectiveness.
Agencies jostle to invest in AI
OpenAI debuted Soraâwhich uses machine learning to generate original, realistic videos up to one minute longâfour months ago.
External beta testing has been limited to a group of OpenAI âred teamersâ (experts handpicked by the ChatGPT owner).
Accenture Songâwhich works with brands including Facebook, NRMA Insurance and Peugeotârecently committed to spend $3 billion over three years on AI tools and talent to help drive clientsâ bottom line.
The business joins a crowd of ad networks investing in the tech, with WPP and Havas each committing $400 million over the next three years.