The age of artificial intelligence is here, and marketers in 2026 face a new landscape where the technology is woven into nearly every aspect of the advertising industry. AI is changing how campaigns are created, deployed and measured, and could help marketers finally deliver on holy grails like personalization at scale and closed-loop measurement as emerging channels, from connected TV to retail media, become performance driven.

But there’s still a lot of work that needs to be done to bring those promises to fruition. As stakeholders jockey for position, often promising one-stop shops and turnkey solutions powered by AI, the savviest marketers will need to navigate the changed ecosystem by separating reality from hype — especially around emerging areas like agentic AI.

When it comes to AI in 2026 and beyond, marketers would do well to embrace a version of the serenity prayer: accepting what they cannot change, courageously changing what they can and wisely knowing the difference between the two.

“You look at some of these structures, and you start to say, when everything works, it truly is like magic,” said Jacob Davis, executive director and global head of performance at Crossmedia. “It very infrequently works perfectly.”

In the last few years, major agencies, ad platforms, media conglomerates and ad-tech companies have rolled out AI-powered solutions that seek to automate much, if not all, of the advertising process. When launching campaigns, advertisers can pick and choose from Meta’s Advantage+ suite, Google’s Performance Max and Amazon’s full-funnel campaign offering; WPP Open, Publicis’ CoreAI and Omnicom’s Omni; and publisher offerings from giants NBCUniversal and Disney. 

While they have different capabilities and components, these solutions look to decrease costs and increase performance, often at the cost of transparency into their machinations. In that way, AI supercharges pre-existing machine-driven automation systems — “the algorithm on steroids” said Mathieu Roche, co-founder and CEO at ID5. 

“It’s still very much a black box, which works if you’re just interested in outcomes, however they define outcomes,” Roche said. “I don’t think it works for the top-end of the pyramid of advertisers, but for small- to long-tail advertisers who are looking for traffic to websites or app downloads… there is a sliver of the market that really welcomes that.”

Platform, agency challenges

Over the last few years, AI has been integrated into marketing workflows around creative, planning, targeting and optimization. Each area represents a different challenge for AI and a level of tolerance for outsourcing by marketers. For example, brands are likely to retain control over their creative but more likely to hand over audience planning to AI, Roche claimed. The way media planners and buyers work could change the most as platforms roll out plain-language chatbots that assist in generating media plans.

However, these AI-powered platforms are usually mass-market solutions, not purpose-built for individual marketers. The question remains whether they can truly address brand needs. 

“Do they work the way they are supposed to work? Because these platforms are so big, they’re not really changing things based on what a brand wants, even if they’re willing to spend money,” said Unni Kurup, director of client consulting and strategy at Theorem.

As brands look to navigate this new AI-powered landscape, the role of agencies could evolve, turning the adland players into a layer of connectivity and enablement for environments like Meta and Amazon — walled gardens that have used the AI moment to strengthen their positions, explained Nicole Greene, vice president and analyst at Gartner.

“Every one of these platforms is going to have their own data. They’re going to own the experience, and now they’re going to own the creative, optimization and measurement. … You’re playing by their rules,” Greene said. “Agencies might be a great way for brands that otherwise don’t have the capacity to do it on their own to have visibility across those platforms.” 

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