As companies like Meta prepare to roll out AI-enabled advertising tools , one startup is making the case that political campaigns need their own.
BattlegroundAI, a Denver-based startup that caters to progressive campaigns and organizations, is launching a new tool that can instantly generate platform-compliance programmatic ads with just a few clicks. The idea, according to the company’s top executive, is to give campaigns and organizations access to an easy-to-use system built specifically for politics.
“A lot of companies try to go really broad and really wide with their tools and I think especially when it comes to campaigns and nonprofits, that doesn’t always work. It doesn’t always address their needs,” Maya Hutchinson, BattlegroundAI’s founder and CEO, told Campaigns and Elections.
“I think we’re very intentional about it,” she added. “That’s who we’re building it for and why we’re building it.”
A growing number of political consultants have moved to integrate AI into their work in recent years. But even some of the most devoted political technologists have warned that many existing AI platforms aren’t yet user-friendly enough for industry professionals to take full advantage of.
At the same time, there are lingering concerns over AI’s ability to produce and disseminate misinformation – something that could have major legal and reputational repercussions in the political world.
According to Hutchinson, BattlegroundAI’s tool – dubbed Programmagic – is intended to address those concerns.
Users are simply prompted to fill out a few bits of information, like their desired headline and the names of any sponsors, that the tool can use to generate a set of pre-sized programmatic ads. There’s also the option to upload headshots, change color palettes and customize fonts. Programmagic then spits out six fully compliant display ad variations.
Settling on a final product, Hutchinson said, still requires a “human element.” Rather, Programmagic is designed to get advertisers to “the 80-yard line,” while still maintaining the need for users to personalize the end product to fit their particular cause or candidate.