Interviews, insight & analysis on digital media & marketing

2026: the year digital advertising stops pretending

By the Digital Leading Ladies

Every year, the industry declares that “this will be the year everything changes,” but reading through this year’s Digital Leading Ladies predictions, something feels different. The tone is sharper. The optimism is more grounded. And the themes, privacy, AI, retail media, creators, data quality, programmatic, are no longer treated as trends, but as fault lines.

What emerges is a collective message: 2026 is the year digital advertising stops pretending.

For a decade, the industry has survived on narratives that no longer hold. That consent is meaningful. That AI will save us. That programmatic is efficient. That creators are optional. That retail media is simple.  The women shaping this industry are calling time on all of it.

AI stops being the story and becomes the infrastructure

Lisa Goodchild, Chief Trouble Maker at Digilearning Foundation, offers the antidote to AI hysteria. “AI absolutely has a place in the mix, but it’s not here to replace what makes us human,” she says. The winners won’t be the ones who automate the most, but the ones who invest in people who know how to wield AI intelligently.

Her prediction is a necessary correction: AI becomes the multiplier, not the main event.

Convergence replaces siloed thinking

Julia Linehan, CEO of The Digital Voice™, sees 2026 as the year the industry finally realises that no single trend will save it. “The real winners will be the brands that smartly weave all these trends together,” she explains.  CTV, retail media, GEO, creators, AI, none of these work in isolation. The power is in the mix.

This is the year orchestration becomes a strategy, not a buzzword.

Data quality becomes the new battleground

Sarah Robertson, Chief Product Officer at Experian Marketing Services, cuts to the heart of the AI conversation: “In an AI‑driven world, data quality will be the ultimate performance differentiator.”  Accuracy is no longer enough. Freshness, interoperability and transparency will determine whether AI enhances performance, or automates bad decisions faster.

The industry has talked about “garbage in, garbage out” for years. In 2026, it finally matters.

Privacy grows up and becomes a quality signal

Maria Cadbury, Chief Revenue Officer at Wult, captures the shift with a clarity the industry has avoided for too long. “Privacy compliance isn’t just a checkbox,  it’s a currency of trust,” she says. And she’s right. The supply chain is still leaking data, consent UX is still poor, and publishers still don’t know what fires on their pages.

But the narrative is changing. Privacy is no longer a legal burden; it’s becoming a performance metric. As Cadbury puts it, “The future of media isn’t just addressable,  it’s accountable.”
In 2026, compliance becomes a competitive edge.

Retail media expands and matures

Retail media’s evolution is accelerating, and Camilla Ray, Planning Director at Nectar360, sees the shift clearly. “Retail media will be recognised as truly full‑funnel,” she says. And it won’t be confined to retail. Auto, travel, finance,  every sector with first‑party data is becoming a media business.

Measurement and incrementality move from “nice to have” to non‑negotiable.

AI moves to the sell side and changes the rules

Cadi Jones, SVP EMEA at Index Exchange, highlights a shift that will reshape the ecosystem: “Running decisioning closer to the inventory allows algorithms to learn from outcomes in real time.” Sell‑side AI will outperform buy‑side guesswork. By the end of 2026, custom algorithms will be the norm.

This is the year the open web fights back.

Programmatic isn’t dead but the old model is

Fern Potter, Chief Strategy & Growth Officer at Multilocal, delivers the most provocative line of the year: “Is programmatic dead? No. Should it be? Yes.” Traditional programmatic is too complex, too opaque and too inefficient. Agentic advertising, natural‑language, interoperable, expansive, dynamic, will replace it.

The black box era is ending.

Creators become the heartbeat of brand identity

In a world drowning in AI‑generated content, authenticity becomes priceless. Tara Hughes, VP Client Management at Jellyfish, puts it simply: “The creator is no longer a distribution channel — they are a fundamental part of building brand identity.”

Long‑term partnerships replace one‑off posts.
Creators become the new brand code.

GEO becomes the new SEO

Veronica Norcross, Global Client Lead at Jellyfish, sees a seismic shift in discovery. As LLMs become the first stop for product recommendations, brands must optimise for generative engines, not just search engines.  “Brands need a GEO strategy to ensure they aren’t left behind,” she warns.

This is the new battleground for visibility.

The verdict: a reset and a reckoning

Across every prediction, one message is unmistakable, 2026 is the year digital advertising grows up, across all channels.

AI becomes infrastructure.
Retail media becomes full‑funnel.
Privacy becomes a quality signal.
Creators become brand identity.
Data quality becomes performance.
Agentic advertising becomes the new programmatic.
GEO becomes the new SEO.

The industry is moving toward transparency, accountability and human‑centred innovation and the companies that embrace this shift will define the next decade.