RAMADAN AND THE ART OF CONVERSATIONAL ADVERTISING

Ramadan has always been a season powered by connection, creativity, and celebration. But today, it is also a season of conversations that begin early, carry emotional weight, and influence decisions in ways traditional advertising never could. Preparation for the key cultural moment often begins months in advance. During this time, people seek interaction, not interruption. Private messaging has become a daily habit for most of the world, with nine in ten customers preferring to contact businesses that way. The lesson for advertisers is clear: the most effective promotions are moving into conversations.

As consumers become increasingly selective with their attention, they gravitate toward experiences that seamlessly integrate into their digital routines. During Ramadan, brands that meet people in their trusted spaces can earn attention through relevance and personalisation, rather than volume or frequency. Conversational advertising transforms the chat thread into the stage for engagement. The message is visual, direct, and easy to act on, but the key difference is control.

The user decides whether to open it, reply, or ignore it, turning every interaction into a choice rather than an interruption. Success is measured by usefulness, not just reach, reinforcing that real impact comes from interaction, not intrusion.

All about being genuine

People are more receptive to brand messages when they feel a sense of belonging to the context and do not interrupt private moments. When it feels more like a message from a brand, not a billboard, this creates space for a genuine value exchange. When advertising provides something useful, entertaining, or timely, it becomes part of the conversation, not an interruption to it.

This utility extends across the funnel. In one placement, a brand can reach broadly in the inbox, spark consideration when someone chooses to view, and enable action with an in-message call-to-action. A product drop, a store locator, a limited offer, a reminder to finish a purchase, or a customer service reply can all live in the same conversational flow. Fewer steps mean less friction and clearer outcomes.

As technology evolves, AI will take this even further. Advances in large language models (LLMs) will automate real-time interactions, turning one-way ads into instant, two-way exchanges. Imagine asking a retailer if an item is available in your size, receiving a live stock update, seeing nearby store options, and completing a purchase, all without leaving the chat.

Brands will be able to adapt messages dynamically based on intent and context, keeping the experience simple and relevant. A streaming service, for example, could have one of its most popular characters start a conversation with audiences to promote a new season, and even reply in character. Technology enables the exchange, but the principle remains the same: respect the person’s control and keep the interaction genuinely helpful.

A cultural fit

Utility depends on cultural fit, and in MENA, that means adapting language, tone, and timing to each community. Conversational formats make this easy, allowing for precise localisation without heavy production. A message can reflect local holidays, dialects, or traditions while using the same simple framework.

When messages feel personal and respectful, they build trust over time, which is the ultimate currency in advertising.

The shift to conversation is not about chasing new buzzwords. It is about recognising that Ramadan is social, visual, and collaborative by nature. When those basics are right, meaningful results follow. The future of advertising is not louder; it is more helpful. Put the message where people already talk. Make it clear, make it optional, and let the conversation do the work.

The writer is the head of Vertical LCS at Snap MENA. 

2026-02-17T09:09:40Z