ChatGPT Is Bringing Ads Into the Conversation. What Canadian Marketers Should Know
OpenAI says ads are coming to ChatGPT, and while they are not live yet, the announcement alone is worth paying attention to. ChatGPT has quickly become a daily tool for marketers, founders, students, and teams across Canada. Adding advertising changes how people will experience it and how brands may eventually show up inside it.
This is not about another ad format to test. It is about how marketing fits into moments where people are already asking for help, often because they want clarity, not noise.
What OpenAI Is Planning
Ads are expected to appear for users on free and lower cost versions of ChatGPT. They will be clearly labeled and shown separately from responses, usually below an answer when there is a clear commercial connection. OpenAI has said ads will not influence how ChatGPT responds and that personal conversations will not be shared with advertisers.
Paid users will continue to have an ad free experience, and certain categories such as politics, health, and content aimed at minors will be excluded.
The company’s message is straightforward. Ads are meant to support access, not fundamentally change how the product works.
Why This Feels Different
Much of today’s marketing still interrupts something. A scroll, a video, a search result. ChatGPT is different because people arrive with intent. They are trying to solve a problem, make a decision, or think something through.
If ads appear here, they show up after someone has already explained what they need. That makes the context more personal and more sensitive. In an environment where audiences are already feeling overwhelmed by AI generated content, anything that feels generic or overly promotional will stand out quickly.
This puts real pressure on relevance and tone. Quiet usefulness will matter more than volume or polish.
Trust Matters More Here
ChatGPT works because people trust it enough to ask honest questions. That trust is fragile. As fatigue with automated content grows, audiences are quicker to spot anything that feels forced or inauthentic.
Showing up in ChatGPT should feel closer to a thoughtful suggestion than a sales pitch. The goal is to support the moment, not hijack it.
What This Means in Practice
Do not expect ChatGPT ads to behave like Google or Meta, at least at first. Measurement will likely be lighter, and targeting more limited. That does not make the channel irrelevant, but it does change how success should be defined.
This is a good moment to be honest about value. Does your product or service genuinely help someone do their job better, save time, or make a clearer decision. If that is not obvious, it will be difficult to earn attention in a conversational environment.
What to Be Thinking About Now
Start by listening. Pay attention to how people talk about your category when they are not being marketed to. What questions come up repeatedly. What frustrations do they share. What trade offs do they struggle with.
Next, consider how this fits alongside search, social, and content. ChatGPT is not replacing those channels, but it may influence how discovery and evaluation happen, especially earlier in the process.
Finally, keep privacy and regulation in mind. Transparency and responsible data use will matter as advertising inside AI tools evolves.
The Bigger Takeaway
ChatGPT introducing ads is not about turning a chatbot into a billboard. It is about marketing showing up in places where people are already thinking, planning, and deciding, at a time when patience for empty messaging is wearing thin.
The opportunity is not to be first. It is to be useful, respectful, and human. The brands that get that right will be the ones people remember, with or without an ad.