For most of its short life, ChatGPT has been conspicuously free of the thing that funds almost every other consumer platform on the internet: advertising. That is now changing. OpenAI has begun quietly testing ads inside its flagship chatbot, and according to a report by industry publication AdNews, Australian marketers are among the early observers trying to work out what an ad unit inside an AI assistant actually looks like — and whether it will work.
The development matters because ChatGPT is no longer a niche product. With hundreds of millions of weekly users worldwide and deep penetration among Australian knowledge workers, students and small-business owners, any move to monetise the assistant through advertising instantly becomes one of the most significant shifts in the digital media landscape since the rise of paid search.
From ad-free promise to ad-supported reality
OpenAI spent its early years positioning ChatGPT as a clean, subscription-and-API business rather than an attention-harvesting ad platform. Company leadership had repeatedly signalled discomfort with the idea, framing ads as a last resort rather than a core strategy. Over the past year, however, that posture has softened noticeably. The company has hired advertising and commerce executives, expanded its shopping and product-recommendation features, and begun building the technical scaffolding — user context, intent signals and conversational history — that any modern ad system relies on.
The logic is straightforward. Running frontier AI models is extraordinarily expensive. Subscriptions and enterprise contracts cover part of the bill, but a vast base of free users generates cost without direct revenue. Advertising is the obvious way to make those users pay their way, just as it did for Google, Meta and the rest of the consumer web. The AdNews report frames the current beta as the first serious test of whether OpenAI can introduce commercial messages without breaking the trust that made ChatGPT so sticky in the first place.
What the early tests appear to reveal
The interest for advertisers is not simply that ChatGPT will carry ads, but how those ads might behave. Traditional search advertising works by matching a short keyword to a bid. A conversational assistant, by contrast, already holds a rich picture of what a user is trying to do — planning a trip, comparing insurance policies, researching a purchase — and can weave a recommendation into a natural-language answer rather than parking it in a sidebar.
That promises a new kind of ad: contextual, intent-rich and delivered at the exact moment a decision is being made. It also raises hard questions. If a chatbot recommends a product, is the user seeing genuine assistance or paid placement dressed up as advice? How is a sponsored answer labelled? Can advertisers even measure performance in a medium where there is often no obvious “click”? These are the questions the early Australian tests are reportedly probing, and the answers are far from settled.
Two camps form among marketers
Among the local marketing community, two broad views are emerging. The optimists see ChatGPT advertising as the next great channel — a chance to reach consumers with unprecedented relevance and to get in early before costs balloon, exactly as savvy buyers did in the first years of Google AdWords and Facebook. For performance marketers starved of new inventory as the open web fragments and cookies disappear, an AI assistant with genuine purchase intent is an enticing prospect.
The sceptics counter that the risks are underpriced. Blending ads into conversational answers threatens the very trust that gives ChatGPT its authority; if users come to suspect the assistant is steering them toward whoever paid the most, engagement could erode quickly. There are also brand-safety and transparency concerns that regulators are unlikely to ignore, and a measurement problem that could make it very hard for advertisers to justify spend. For this camp, the beta is a moment to experiment cautiously rather than to reallocate budgets.
What it means for Australia
For the Australian market specifically, the stakes are sharpened by regulation and market structure. The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has spent years scrutinising the dominance of Google and Meta in digital advertising through its long-running Digital Platforms inquiry, and any new AI-driven ad ecosystem will land in that already-charged environment. Questions of disclosure, misleading conduct under Australian Consumer Law, and whether sponsored AI answers are clearly distinguishable from organic ones will be front of mind for local regulators.
There is also a competitive dimension. Australia’s digital advertising spend runs into the tens of billions of dollars annually, and the local industry is heavily reliant on a small number of overseas platforms. A viable ChatGPT ad product would give OpenAI a seat at that table, potentially drawing budget away from incumbent search and social channels. For Australian agencies, that means new skills to build, new measurement frameworks to negotiate and new supplier relationships to manage — all while the rules are still being written offshore.
Local publishers and content producers, already squeezed by AI tools that answer questions without sending traffic their way, will watch nervously too. If ChatGPT becomes both the place people get answers and the place brands buy attention, the traditional flow of referral traffic and ad revenue to Australian media could weaken further.
What’s next
OpenAI has not confirmed a full commercial rollout, and a beta is by definition provisional — formats, labelling and even the basic decision to proceed could all change. But the direction of travel is clear. Advertising inside AI assistants is coming, and the design choices made in these early tests will shape norms for the whole industry.
For Australian marketers, the sensible posture is neither hype nor dismissal but preparation: understanding how conversational ad units work, insisting on transparency and measurement standards, and keeping a close eye on how the ACCC and consumer advocates respond. The organisations that learn the medium now — while it is cheap, experimental and unfamiliar — are likely to be the ones best placed when AI advertising becomes mainstream. As with every previous platform shift, the winners will be those who understood the new rules before everyone else did.
Sources: AdNews



















































