We've all been there. An avalanche of push notifications, an inbox flooded with promotional emails and ads that seem to scream into the digital void. Marketing, in its quest to capture our attention, has often become a source of noise, interruptions and frustration. Generic messages ignore the unique and dynamic preferences of each user. You're offered a promotion for a product you've just bought. You're sent a notification in the middle of the night. As well as being ineffective, these strategies can be counter-productive, damaging the relationship between a brand and its customers.
Modern marketing, particularly customer relationship management (CRM), still relies heavily on manual systems and pre-established rules. Marketing teams, for all their talent and dedication, spend a considerable amount of time crudely segmenting their audience and manually orchestrating campaigns, severely limiting their ability to personalize the experience on an individual scale.
The result? Generic messages that ignore each user's unique and dynamic preferences. You're offered a promotion for a product you've just bought. You're sent a notification in the middle of the night. In addition to being ineffective, these strategies can be counter-productive, damaging the relationship between a brand and its customers. The challenge is immense: how to deliver the right message, on the right channel, at the right time, to millions of people simultaneously?
Source: https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.16429
This is where the "agentic" approach proposed by the "Agentic Personalisation of Cross-Channel Marketing Experiences" report comes in. The term may sound technical, but the idea is powerful: delegate decision-making to intelligent, autonomous agents. Imagine an army of personal advisors, one for each user, learning and adapting in real time to create the most relevant experience possible.Howcausalinferencerevolutionizes marketing impact measurement
Their methodology rests on three ingenious pillars:
The theory is seductive, but the empirical results presented in the report are nothing short of astounding. The team conducted a large-scale controlled experiment on a multi-service application (combining, for example, VTC and meal delivery) with 6.4 million users over a three-week period.
The statistics are clear-cut. For four key functionalities of the application, the group of users benefiting from agentic personalization showed significant improvements over the control group.
Here are a few concrete examples from their results:
These percentages may seem modest at first glance, but on the scale of a 150-million-user base, where the system is now fully deployed, they represent colossal business impact and value creation.
This report is much more than an academic publication. It's a manifesto for the future of marketing and, more broadly, for the future of digital interactions. We are at the dawn of a paradigm shift, from marketing that shouts to marketing that listens.
This technology isn't about sending more messages, it's about sending the right message. It respects the user's time and attention by presenting only what's relevant to them, at that precise moment. It's the promise of a calmer, more useful and, ultimately, more human digital experience.
Far from the alarmist rhetoric about AI replacing jobs, this project perfectly illustrates the model of human-machine collaboration. By automating repetitive and complex tasks, AI frees up human potential. Tomorrow's marketers won't be campaign operators, but experience architects, strategists and creatives whose intuition and empathy will be amplified, not replaced, by the machine.
Of course, such personalizing power raises essential ethical questions about privacy and manipulation. However, the "human-in-the-loop" approach described here offers an indispensable safeguard, ensuring that technology remains at the service of humans and respects predefined rules.
In conclusion, this report shows us a future where technology creates relevance, not distance. A future where every interaction is an opportunity to delight rather than interrupt the user. A future where marketing, at last, becomes a service. And it's a future that's not just inspiring, it's already here.