Marketing Trends for 2026: What’s Changing and How to Prepare

In this article, we’ll break down what changes to expect in marketing next year—and how to prepare for them.
The Role of AI Keeps Growing
In marketing, AI has become one of the core tools. Since 2025, its use has been expanding for hyper-personalization, content creation, and predictive analytics.
Search Powered by AI
AI-generated answer for the query “marketing automation”
This means SEO isn’t going away—but it is changing. A new direction is emerging: AIO, or optimization for AI-generated answers. The goal of content is shifting: it’s no longer just about ranking at the top of search results, but about structuring your material so AI systems choose it as a source to quote.
AI search can also be used on your own website
Give clear, specific answers to common questions.
Structure your content—use subheadings, lists, and easy-to-scan sections.
Add schema markup.
Write the way people actually phrase their searches.
Expand content with FAQs, how-to guides, and tables.
Keep your site technically sound and pages loading fast.
Refresh content regularly to keep it current.
Cite research and credible sources.
Mix in video, visuals, and infographics.
Chatbots for user support
Chatbots have been used in marketing for a long time, but by 2026 AI assistants will become noticeably more human in the way they communicate. This will reduce response times and make it easier to handle common user requests.
At the same time, it’s not a good idea to hand over all key marketing communication to AI. Assistants are better suited for standard questions and simple scenarios.
- Keep a clear option to quickly switch to a human specialist when a question is complex.
- Regularly update chatbot flows and check responses against real user queries.
- Place chatbots in the channels your audience uses most often—your website, messaging apps, or social media.
- Be transparent and clearly state that the conversation is with a bot.
Voice and Visual Search
— Write answers the way people ask questions out loud. Instead of “buy pizza New York,” they’re more likely to say “where can I get pizza nearby tonight.” Voice assistants rely on natural language and direct answers. — Add sections with short, straightforward answers to common questions. — Include up-to-date local details: address, business hours, and services. — Use structured data so search engines can better understand your content. — Optimize images with clear file names and descriptive alt text.
Authenticity in Content
With the flood of AI-generated content and overly polished visuals, audiences are starting to feel fatigued. People increasingly value honesty and a sense of real life, which makes authentic content especially important right now. Photos and videos don’t need to look perfect—what matters more are the emotions and meaning behind them.
Instead of a video with a flying AI teapot, a simple product video might have worked better
That doesn’t mean you should completely abandon AI. A thoughtful balance and mix of formats works best. For example, you can use an AI character but have it voiced by a real employee.
- Storytelling and behind-the-scenes content that shows how the company actually works—real people, real processes.
- UGC, or user-generated content. This isn’t glossy influencer advertising, but personal experiences and real stories. This format feels more like a recommendation from another person, which makes it more trustworthy. Read more here.
Marketing Management in a Single Platform
In this environment, a unified marketing management system becomes critical. It keeps data from getting lost between channels, cuts spending on inefficient tools, and speeds up decision-making. The result is faster team workflows and a higher return on marketing investment.
Seamless Purchasing
By 2026, the line between online and in-store shopping is becoming increasingly blurred. A purchase is no longer just “see it, buy it,” but an interactive customer experience. Examples include trying on clothes in a virtual fitting room or placing furniture from a store into your home through a smartphone screen. Interactive storefronts fall into this category as well. This approach is often called phygital—a blend of physical and digital.
The next step is deeper automation at the point of sale. After self-checkout kiosks, AI assistants are starting to take on part of the sales associate’s role—suggesting sizes, checking in-store availability, and handling payments.
Another fast-growing format is shoppable video: video content where purchasing is built directly into the viewing experience, with “Buy” buttons, product cards, links, embedded catalogs, and a frictionless path to checkout.
Very Short Videos
Vertical short-form video has been one of the most popular formats for several years. By 2026, however, the biggest growth will come from ultra-short stories. Because of information overload and the habit of younger audiences to scroll quickly, viewers are increasingly unwilling to spend time on longer narratives.
Videos in the 6–10 second range are becoming the norm, with the first 1–1.5 seconds being critical. In that moment, a user either stops or scrolls past. That means the opening has to grab attention instantly, and the story itself needs to deliver the idea as clearly and concisely as possible.
Nostalgia
That said, nostalgia isn’t about copying the past. What works better are references reimagined for today’s context. This can include recognizable cultural cues—movies, TV shows, music, books, objects, or visual styles from a specific era. It can also draw on the brand’s own history: remaking an old ad, bringing back an iconic design, or re-releasing a product that was once a hit.
Summary
In 2026, marketing will be changing in several directions at once. AI is becoming deeply embedded in search, content, and analytics, which means older approaches to SEO and text optimization no longer deliver the same results. People increasingly get ready-made AI answers instead of a list of links. They also search by voice and by image. Content that communicates the point quickly and is easy to consume has a clear advantage.
At the same time, audiences are tired of identical visuals and templated messaging. Real stories, customer experiences, and honest content build more trust than polished advertising. Businesses are forced to bring order to their data and channels—otherwise the customer journey falls apart. The buying process is changing too, becoming faster and simpler through interactive formats, shoppable video, and ultra-short clips.
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