WPP Media’s annual This Year Next Year (TYNY) Report 2026 has revealed how India’s advertising industry has entered a new era of transformation. It has shown that brands have embraced AI-driven platforms, adapted to evolving search behaviours, and shifted media strategies from sheer presence to precision and relevance.
Campaigns have become increasingly adaptive, responding to consumer intent and market signals in real time, while content creation has evolved to combine human purpose with agentic scale.
The report has also highlighted how these shifts are reshaping growth and impact. Marketers have placed trust, data ethics, and credibility at the centre of their strategies, moving beyond broad visibility. From live events that now act as long-term engagement platforms to micro-influencers building community-level trust, the industry has shifted decisively towards strategic ownership, integration, and measurable outcomes.
The next cycle of growth will favour brands that connect systems, measure intent accurately, and build credibility, rather than those chasing scale without structure. Below, we explore the 10 trends reshaping the industry.
1. From AI Agents That Assist to Agentic Ecosystems That Scale
Marketers are moving beyond simple automation tools. Leading brands are now using connected platforms to manage campaigns across planning, media, and creative in a coordinated and dynamic way. Campaigns respond in real time to audience behaviour and market shifts, creating a new rhythm in marketing where speed and adaptability are critical.
Trend: The industry is shifting from isolated AI tasks to integrated ecosystems, allowing brands to maintain consistent messaging while rapidly adjusting campaigns across channels.
Implication: Human roles are evolving. Marketers focus on strategy and oversight, guiding campaigns instead of performing repetitive tasks. Brands that can orchestrate these systems gain agility and performance advantages.
Preparation: Companies should invest in integrated data systems and specialist leadership roles to manage these ecosystems. Teams need training to coordinate campaigns effectively and ensure alignment with brand objectives.
2. The Evolution of Search – From ‘Keywords’ to ‘Answer Ownership’
Search is no longer about ranking pages. AI-powered interfaces provide direct answers, changing how consumers interact with information. Brands must now ensure their expertise is cited and trusted rather than merely visible on a website.
Trend: From traditional SEO to answer ownership, where brands are measured by their inclusion in AI-generated responses rather than clicks or rankings.
Implication: Being recognised as a credible source in AI-led search determines visibility. Brands that fail to adapt risk losing influence even if their websites remain highly trafficked.
Preparation: Strengthen experience, expertise, authoritativeness, and trustworthiness (E-E-A-T). Develop content strategies that feed AI systems reliably to secure mentions and citations.
3. Content Creation: Human Purpose, Agentic Scale
The volume of content required across platforms is growing faster than manual production can manage. Brands are defining the creative and cultural direction, while AI scales execution across regions and formats, allowing for both relevance and reach.
Trend: From manual content creation to agentic content systems, where humans define vision and AI handles adaptation.
Implication: Creative teams move from producing final assets to guiding narrative and ethical guardrails, ensuring campaigns remain consistent, culturally relevant, and engaging
Preparation: Develop Creative Toolkits, modular sets of assets and guidelines, that AI can assemble into campaigns. This ensures efficiency while retaining brand voice.
4. Influencers – From Chasing ‘Mega Reach’ to Building ‘Micro Trust’
Influencer marketing is shifting from chasing follower numbers to building trust within niche communities. Regional language content, authentic voices, and long-term collaborations are now driving engagement.
Trend: From broad visibility to micro-influencer credibility, where smaller creators deliver meaningful connections with audiences.
Implication: Brands achieve better engagement and measurable impact through long-term partnerships, moving away from one-off campaigns.
Preparation: Track Social SEO, scale micro-partner collaborations, co-create regional content, and maintain ASCI compliance to ensure transparency and trust.
5. Live Events – From ‘Sponsorships’ to Architecting ‘Social First Experiences’
Live events are no longer evaluated solely on attendance. They are now engagement ecosystems, with social amplification and first-party data extending the brand impact beyond the event itself.
Trend: From one-off cultural visibility to audience farming engines, where events drive long-term engagement and brand ownership.
Implication: The value of live events lies in data and social reach, not just physical presence. Brands can maintain relevance through sustained interaction and content sharing.
Preparation: Treat events as strategic platforms, integrating digital amplification and data capture from the outset to convert engagement into insight and loyalty.
6. The Changing Role of ‘Quick Commerce’ in the Consumer Journey
Quick commerce is becoming an integral touchpoint within the consumer journey. Platforms are blending marketing and sales, enabling immediate purchase while also generating insights about consumer behaviour.
Trend: From marketplaces to converging quick commerce ecosystems, where transactions and brand exposure coexist.
Implication: Brands can use quick commerce to drive demand, convert sales, or collect insights, creating a seamless connection between awareness and purchase.
Preparation: Clearly define objectives for quick commerce, structure investments accordingly, and integrate platforms into both marketing and sales strategies.
7. Micro-Dramas: The Rise of a Parallel, Habit-Driven Entertainment Economy
Short-form storytelling formats are creating habitual viewing patterns. Micro-dramas are designed for recurring engagement, often linked to commerce or transactions, rather than one-off content consumption.
Trend: From long-form narratives to bite-sized, habit-forming content, where brands can integrate storytelling with commerce opportunities.
Implication: Brands must move beyond buying attention and take a showrunner approach, orchestrating stories that keep audiences returning while subtly driving business outcomes.
Preparation: Develop narrative loops, integrate frictionless commerce, and treat storytelling as a recurring platform rather than isolated campaigns.
8. The Commercial Coming of Age of Women’s Sports
Women’s sports are gaining cultural and commercial significance. Unlike men’s cricket, which focuses on performance, women’s events emphasise aspiration, resilience, and community, giving brands a way to connect meaningfully with audiences.
Trend: From niche interest to strategic cultural ownership, offering early movers a chance to establish leadership in a growing segment.
Implication: Brands entering early can secure premium placements at better value, strengthen audience connections, and generate business outcomes through talent partnerships and commerce integration.
Preparation: Focus on first-mover advantage, diversify storytelling beyond performance, and integrate commerce-led initiatives to convert engagement into measurable ROI.
9. From ‘Presence’ to ‘Precision’
High reach alone no longer guarantees results. Brands are now targeting high-intent moments and using data signals to optimise timing and context. This ensures campaigns are relevant and effective, rather than just widely visible.
Trend: From broad visibility to signal-based, synchronised engagement, where marketing decisions are guided by context and real-time consumer behaviour.
Implication: Brands reduce wasted spend and improve impact by focusing on moments that drive consideration and action, not just impressions.
Preparation: Invest in closed-loop media systems that monitor signals across search, commerce, and context, and refine campaigns in real time to improve outcomes.
10. Privacy as a ‘Core Marketing Responsibility’
Privacy is no longer a regulatory tick-box. Consumers expect brands to handle data responsibly, and breaches can cause lasting reputational damage. Marketing now must embed trust and ethical data practices at its core.
Trend: From building data clean rooms to trust-first growth, making privacy a differentiator rather than a constraint.
Implication: Brands that handle data ethically build long-term consumer trust, which directly influences engagement, loyalty, and brand perception.
Preparation: Consolidate data in secure, privacy-safe environments, comply with India’s DPDP Act, and make data ethics a central part of marketing strategy.
Conclusion
The TYNY report shows that Indian advertising is maturing rather than shrinking. AI is streamlining workflows, search is redefining visibility, media precision is eliminating waste, and privacy is increasing the stakes for brand trust.
What ties these trends together is control. Brands that integrate systems, act on insights, and govern campaigns and data responsibly will gain the competitive edge. In a market that rewards discipline over noise, a well-structured approach will outperform scale alone.














