Digital
Leveraging AI in digital advertising: Targeting consumers through sentiment analysis
AI has revolutionised the ways in which brands connect with their target audiences through targeting precision and hyper-personalisation. AI has also found applicability in ‘sentiment analysis’ which helps brands comprehend the emotions, opinions and attitudes of consumers by analysing their past online behaviour and interactions.
Dubbed ‘opinion mining’, sentiment analysis incorporates NLP (natural language processing) and machine learning algorithms to churn and analyse huge chunks of text data and determine whether the underlying sentiment is positive, negative or neutral. The data utilised to gauge public sentiments about a brand’s products or services are derived from social media posts, reviews, blogs, and other user-generated content.
AI-powered models backed by deep learning, have the ability to understand the nuances of language including sarcasm, context, and complex expressions thereby offering an accurate picture of consumer sentiment. The correct and real-time interpretation of these subtleties helps brands make more informed marketing strategies.
Harnessing AI-based sentiment analysis
In this user-centric world, customer feedback is crucial to understand what resonates with the target audience and what needs to be improved. Technological advancements like big data have enabled organisations to get an accurate understanding of customer opinions, seamlessly. Monitoring and understanding brand perception will help organisations fine-tune their strategies to align with market trends and consumer preferences.
1. Real-time customer insights – Sentiment analysis helps brands delve deep into the opinions and emotions of their customers by actively monitoring social media platforms, review sites and online channels. This helps businesses craft communication strategies that resonate best with consumers.
2. Personalised marketing campaigns – Personalised advertising based on the emotional state of the consumer can be helpful in improving customer experience. For example, ads offering solutions to a consumer who is frustrated about a product or service can improve brand perception.
3. Product analysis and development – AI-based sentiment analysis is very helpful in the early stages of developing a new product as it provides valuable insights into people’s opinions about its performance, features, user experience, etc. This enables brands to make data-driven improvements and foster innovation that aligns with consumer needs and preferences.
4. Reputation management – Real-time sentiment analysis helps businesses identify negative trends and potential PR crises in the early stages which facilitates timely intervention.
5. Higher ROI on Ad spend – Gauging consumer sentiments accurately helps marketers craft ads that are more relevant to the user. This improves engagement and reduces wasted ad spend.
What does the future look like?
With the evolution of AI, sentiment analysis will find greater applicability in the digital realm with more sophisticated emotion detection capabilities. Analysis of non-textual data such as images and videos may also be plausible with AI advancements which would help brands form deeper connections with their audiences.
The article has been authored by AdCounty Media co-founder and chief revenue officer Delphin Varghese.
Digital
Adani Enterprises plans $100 billion AI data centre push by 2035
Renewable-powered facilities plus $150 billion ripple effect to build $250 billion ecosystem.
MUMBAI: Adani Enterprises is plugging straight into the AI power grid and it’s bringing enough juice to light up a continent. On Tuesday, the ports-to-power conglomerate announced a staggering $100 billion investment to build renewable-energy-backed, AI-ready data centres across India by 2035, aiming to catapult the country from the sidelines into a serious contender in the global AI arena.
The plan doesn’t stop at bricks and servers. Adani estimates the move will spark an additional $150 billion in related industries, think server manufacturing, sovereign cloud platforms and more creating a $250 billion AI infrastructure ecosystem over the next decade. Shares of Adani Enterprises (ADEL.NS) responded with enthusiasm, closing 2.7 per cent higher and topping the Nifty 50 gainers list.
Adani Enterprises chairman Gautam Adani captured the ambition in a post on X, “For decades, we imported technology. Now we are building the backbone. India will not follow the AI century. India will shape it.”
The strategy hinges on a tightly integrated model: renewable power generation, grid resilience and massive computing capacity. Adani will scale its existing 2 GW data centre footprint to 5 GW, targeting what it calls the world’s largest integrated platform (timeline not specified). Alongside, $55 billion goes into expanding renewables, including one of the planet’s biggest battery energy storage systems.
The company already has skin in the game, a partnership with Google, which committed $15 billion over five years for AI data centres, its largest-ever India investment. Adani also plans to deepen ties with Walmart-backed Flipkart for a second AI facility and is in talks with other major players for large-scale campuses nationwide.
India’s sudden AI infrastructure gold rush isn’t happening in isolation. Global giants Google, Amazon, Meta and Microsoft are pouring money in, while home-grown heavyweights Reliance and TCS race to grab their slice. Data centres, the report notes, offer India its clearest shot at relevance in a chip-making world it has largely missed.
In a landscape where AI is the new electricity, Adani’s mega-bet is less about keeping the lights on and more about powering tomorrow’s digital empire, one renewable watt at a time. Whether the grid (and the stock market) can handle the load remains the real test.







