Skip to main content

ChatGPT explores ads as it works toward 1 billion users

A person typing on a laptop that is showing the ChatGPT generative AI website.
Matheus Bertelli / Pexels

More users and more profit — that’s the aim for ChatGPT going into 2025.

ChatGPT has broken into the top 10 websites on the internet according to some statistics, and a new report says it’s pursuing the lofty 1 billion user milestone in the coming year. The company plans to do this primarily by investing in its own data centers, in addition to deploying several advertising strategies, according to the Financial Times.

Recommended Videos

While OpenAI has become accustomed to lots of attention, the brand is looking to compete with contemporary companies, such as Instagram and TikTok, that have already amassed and maintained large audiences with stand-out products, Business Insider noted. Instagram hit a lofty 2 billion monthly user milestone in April 2024, with 500 million daily active users. Meanwhile, TikTok sustains over 1 billion monthly active users globally and 150 monthly active users in the U.S., according to Statista.

ChatGPT became an industry darling when it garnered approximately 100 million users in two months upon going public two years ago. Now, it maintains over 250 million weekly active users, the Financial Times noted.

But when it comes to profits, the upward trajectory looks like it’ll require some rethinking. Ads may be on the horizon, according to the Financial Times report. OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar, who previously worked in advertising at Nextdoor, Square, and Salesforce, is heading up the project. She told the Financial Times that OpenAI was weighing up an ads model, and that it planned to be “thoughtful about when and where we implement them [ads].”

While it appears to be in the early stages of construction, Friar says that there are “no active plans to pursue advertising.”

Back in 2023, researchers were already estimating that ChatGPT cost approximately $700,000 per day, or 36 cents per query to operate. The expense has likely not gotten any cheaper as OpenAI advances its technologies and offerings.

What originally began as a research-based service quickly shifted into a product primarily funded by its paid ChatGPT Plus tier, and third-party developers who pay to use the company’s enterprise API. Though OpenAI is expected to bring in a solid $3.7 billion in sales in 2024, the cost of supporting ChatGPT servers, as well as the salaries of employees, may set the company back by up to $5 billion, the publication noted.

OpenAI’s data center projects are set to support all of its future aspirations, with the company looking at the Midwest and southwestern U.S. as the locations for campuses, OpenAI vice president of global affairs Chris Lehane told Financial Times. Prior reports have also claimed the company has been in talks with the White House about its plans for building out data center clusters and the energy they will require.

The company recently went through a round of funding in October, led by venture capital firm Thrive Capital, where it raised $6.6 billion at a $157 billion valuation. While the funding may be a stopgap, with long-reaching plans OpenAI is preparing to shift from a private organization to a for-profit company.

To catch up with its competitors, OpenAI has already begun exploring and researching services in the search engine and browser sector. The publication also added OpenAI has recruited several advertising pros, from notable tech companies, including Meta and Google.

Fionna Agomuoh
Fionna Agomuoh is a Computing Writer at Digital Trends. She covers a range of topics in the computing space, including…
It’s not your imagination — ChatGPT models actually do hallucinate more now
Deep Research option for ChatGPT.

OpenAI released a paper last week detailing various internal tests and findings about its o3 and o4-mini models. The main differences between these newer models and the first versions of ChatGPT we saw in 2023 are their advanced reasoning and multimodal capabilities. o3 and o4-mini can generate images, search the web, automate tasks, remember old conversations, and solve complex problems. However, it seems these improvements have also brought unexpected side effects.

What do the tests say?

Read more
ChatGPT’s awesome Deep Research gets a light version and goes free for all
Deep Research option for ChatGPT.

There’s a lot of AI hype floating around, and it seems every brand wants to cram it into their products. But there are a few remarkably useful tools, as well, though they are pretty expensive. ChatGPT’s Deep Research is one such feature, and it seems OpenAI is finally feeling a bit generous about it. 

The company has created a lightweight version of Deep Research that is powered by its new o4-mini language model. OpenAI says this variant is “more cost-efficient while preserving high quality.” More importantly, it is available to use for free without any subscription caveat. 

Read more
The original AI model behind ChatGPT will live on in your favorite apps
OpenAI press image

OpenAI has released its GPT‑3.5 Turbo API to developers as of Monday, bringing back to life the base model that powered the ChatGPT chatbot that took the world by storm in 2022. It will now be available for use in several well-known apps and services. The AI brand has indicated that the model comes with several optimizations and will be cheaper for developers to build upon, making the model a more efficient option for features on popular applications, including Snapchat and Instacart. 

Apps supporting GPT‑3.5 Turbo API

Read more