1. What is ‘trust-by-design’ marketing?
It’s about earning trust throughout the customer experience, not just with campaign slogans. With AI now making decisions on a customer’s behalf, trust is won or lost in the operational details, such as clear consent and visible safeguards.
2. Why are APAC comparisons important for Australian and New Zealand marketers?
The pace of autonomous AI adoption varies across the region. Comparing your audience to nearby APAC markets helps you avoid applying campaign logic designed for highly adopting areas to more cautious audiences, and vice versa.
3. How does AI change what customers expect from marketing?
As AI moves from advice to authority, customers will tolerate less. If a process is unfair or opaque, they are far quicker to question it or report the experience as ‘creepy’. You must be explicit about the system’s limits.
4. What is the fastest way to improve trust in email campaigns?
The fastest path to trust is clarity. Make the ‘why’ obvious when you ask for something. For example, explain why you need certain data under a form field or clearly state the trigger for an automated message.
5. How can I make personalisation feel helpful instead of intrusive?
You must earn that comfort by giving control. Offer topic-level preferences, channel choice, and cadence options, not just a simple on/off switch. Control is a vital compliance feature, but it’s even better for conversions.
6. What should I do if AI is generating my customer-facing content?
Be explicit about what’s automated. Disclose the AI influence in a human way and use a real reply path, not ‘no-reply’. This transparency counters people’s worries about what is real or fake in GenAI content.
7. What does ‘demonstrating accountability’ mean in trust-by-design marketing?
This maps to ‘visible constraints’. State clearly what you won’t do with their data. Crucially, ensure escalation paths are clear and involve humans for high-stakes customer journeys, such as complaints or billing disputes.
















