Experiment with AI tools: start small (e.g. content creation, chatbots) to gain experience with GPT-like models, generative AI for visuals. Monitor risks (bias, inconsistencies) and learn from them.
Transparency and explainability : build in ‘explanation mechanisms’: how and why does your AI make certain recommendations to the customer? Communicate this openly.
Ensuring the human touch : Don’t overdo AI automation. Keep human communication as an option (for example, a live chat with a real person or a community with stories from real people).
This is important for maintaining trust with certain target groups
Are you ready for this shift? How do you see your role evolving in an AI-driven gambling database communications environment? Let’s start the conversation in the comments!
These scenarios were developed based on literature, intensive discussions with various AI tools and experts in the field.
As mentioned more often in the article, this may differ from your situation. Do you want to make a forecast based on your data? Then you can do this by following the steps below:
Export all data using the Google Search Console API. This can be done with a Python script for example .
Set the keyword, device, clicks, impressions, CTR and position columns when exporting.
Open the collected data in Excel, add an extra column and use the ROUND function in betting email list Excel to round the average position.
Use the AVERAGEIF function to calculate the average CTR of a position.
In our research, the following conditions were used: position 1, more than 50 impressions and more than 5 clicks.
What is the future of CTR on position 1?
That AI overviews have an impact on both paid and organic CTR, became purchases via whatsapp using digital marketing clear from a recent study . The moment this comes to the Benelux, this will undoubtedly have an impact on the way of searching and the CTR on position 1.Protecting the Environment in Non-International Armed Conflicts: Are We There Yet?
Written by Viktorija Jakjimovska and Ezéchiel Amani
The International Law Commission (ILC) during its current 71st session has provisionally adopted, on first reading, the Draft principles on the protection of the environment in relation to armed conflict. The first-reading text had taken five years to prepare, under the successive leaderships of Special Rapporteurs Ms. Marie G. Jacobsson (2013 – 2016), and Ms Marja Letho (2017-2019). The last report of Special Rapporteur Letho (2019) completed the work on this topic, focusing in particular on the question of environmental stresses related to non-international armed conflicts (NIACs). This blog post deals first with certain general issues as to the scope and form of the draft principles, and then discusses whether the draft principles are sufficiently responsive in the context of NIACs.