At A Glance
Cannes Lions 2026 showed that marketers are moving from AI discussion to AI decisioning. This article explains four themes shaping marketing in the second half of 2026: agentic AI, interoperable identity, curated activation, and outcome-based measurement across a more connected ecosystem.If Cannes Lions 2026 had a bingo card, AI would have filled every square. But the week pointed to a bigger story: marketers are rethinking how identity, interoperability, activation quality, and measurement work together as the ecosystem becomes more connected and AI-driven.
As marketing changes, independence matters more. Brands, agencies, publishers, platforms, commerce media networks, and data providers need the flexibility to adapt without being forced into a single workflow, partner path, or technology stack. That requires trusted identity, interoperable data, strong governance, and infrastructure that supports choice across the ecosystem.
Here are the themes that defined Cannes Lions 2026.
1. Agentic AI shifted the conversation from content creation to how marketing decisions get made
Agentic AI shifted the Cannes conversation from content creation to the way marketing decisions get made. Marketers are now asking how AI systems recommend actions, build plans, optimize spend, and shape which brands appear in AI-influenced environments. That shift puts understanding and managing AI-driven decisions at the center of the AI conversation. Marketers need to know what data an AI system is using, which signals it may prioritize, how those signals are governed, and whether the decision path can be explained, tested, and measured.
Agentic AI will raise the stakes for the data collaboration layer because connected data can influence training, decisioning, optimization, activation, and measurement. That makes governance, transparency, and control more important across every environment where data is used.
- Brands need confidence that AI-informed decisions reflect accurate and unbiased customer understanding.
- Agencies need transparent inputs they can defend across clients.
- Platforms and media owners need high-quality signals that improve performance without creating more fragmentation.
- Publishers need clear ways to protect the value of their content and audiences as discovery becomes more automated.

“Everyone wants to talk about agentic AI, but the differentiator is the quality, governance, and connectivity of the data behind it. The organizations that will get the most value from agentic AI are the ones that have invested in trusted identity, strong governance, and interoperable data foundations that allow them to activate, measure, and maintain control at scale.”
ExperianBudi Tanzi, SVP, Product
Agentic AI needs trusted, permissioned, and well-connected data. It needs identity that can support a consistent view of people and households across environments, and governance that gives marketers confidence in how data is connected, activated, and measured.
2. Interoperability is the foundation for flexibility and trust
Interoperability gives marketers the flexibility to work across partners, platforms, and channels without being locked into one commercial environment. At Cannes, it became clear that trusted infrastructure is now central to how teams collaborate, activate audiences, and measure performance.
Cannes also made clear that flexibility has become a business requirement. Marketers are working across more partners, channels, and collaboration environments. Marketers also need to trust the infrastructure underneath it. That means clear governance, aligned incentives, transparent data use, and the ability to measure performance without being locked into one commercial environment.
As the market becomes more connected, teams need identity and data infrastructure that can move across the ecosystem without limiting choice. Interoperability isn’t enough on its own.
- For brands, this starts with making first-party data more usable and scalable across the marketing ecosystem. Customer data becomes more valuable when it can be resolved, enriched, expanded, activated, and measured in privacy-conscious ways. That flexibility helps brands turn owned signals into scalable audience strategies without losing control over how data is used.
- For agencies, it creates more efficient ways to plan, execute, and measure across clients. For commerce media networks, publishers, platforms, and media owners, it helps valuable signals move into market in more usable, governed, and scalable ways.

“The marketers making the most progress today are the ones building flexibility into their data and identity strategies. Interoperability gives them the freedom to work across partners, adapt to change, and trust how audiences are understood and activated.”
ExperianKevin Dunn, Chief Revenue Officer
An independent identity foundation can help connect these environments without forcing every partner into one workflow. Teams need the ability to work across agencies, platforms, publishers, commerce media networks, clean rooms, and media channels while maintaining a consistent view of their audiences, understanding how data is being used, and measuring performance across partners.
3. Curation is a path to better decisions
Curation gives buyers and sellers a more intentional way to bring data and media together. At Cannes, the strongest conversations focused on how better signals, supply, and decisioning can improve performance at the point of activation.
- For brands and agencies, that means media strategies that are easier to explain, optimize, and measure.
- For publishers, platforms, and media owners, it creates new ways to package differentiated inventory with high-quality data.
- For commerce media networks and data providers, it can extend valuable audiences into more scalable activation environments.

“The future of marketing belongs to organizations that prioritize data and audience activation at the centerpiece of every conversation.”
ExperianChris Meredith, Head of Audience Activation
This is where curation becomes more than a media tactic. It becomes a way to improve decision quality at the point of activation. When trusted data, identity, and supply come together, marketers can reduce waste, improve relevance, and bring more confidence to each activation decision.
4. Measurement has to account for an AI-shaped customer journey
Measurement remained a consistent theme throughout the week, but the conversation was broader than campaign reporting. Measurement now has to account for more decision points, partners, and AI-shaped interactions. Marketers need to understand how investments influence growth, sales, visits, and other meaningful actions across a journey that may not begin with a search, site visit or traditional ad exposure.
- Brands need to understand which investments are driving customer growth, sales, visits, or other meaningful actions.
- Agencies need proof they can defend across clients and channels.
- Publishers, platforms, commerce media networks, media owners, and data providers need clearer ways to show the value they create as attention, discovery, and activation become more fragmented.

“Marketers are under pressure to prove outcomes, not just report performance. As measurement becomes more fragmented, organizations need a stronger foundation built on identity, interoperable data, and outcome-based measurement.”
ExperianAli Mack, VP, AdTech Sales
The measurement challenge now is about building a trusted view of performance across more decision points, partners, and AI-shaped interactions. It also requires confidence that measurement is grounded in consistent identity, governed data, and infrastructure that supports transparency across the ecosystem. That level of proof depends on stronger connection across planning, activation, and measurement. When teams use a consistent identity foundation and responsible data practices across the journey, they can move beyond delivery metrics and start understanding what worked, where it worked, and how to apply those insights to the next decision.
Continue the conversation beyond Cannes Lions 2026
Cannes Lions 2026 may be over, but the conversations that mattered most are just getting started. The week reinforced a clear market need: marketers want flexibility, transparency, and the ability to collaborate across platforms, partners and channels without sacrificing control. That requires an interoperable approach to identity and data that supports choice, enables collaboration, and helps teams activate and measure.
At Experian, we’re continuing those conversations with brands, agencies, publishers, platforms, commerce media networks, and data providers looking to build stronger connections across the marketing ecosystem. Whether your goal is improving audience activation, expanding addressability, strengthening measurement, or creating more seamless collaboration across partners, we’re focused on helping marketers put these Cannes themes into action.
If we connected in Cannes, (or if you’d like to explore how these trends may impact your business), we’d love to continue the conversation. Reach out to learn how we can help you build a more connected, interoperable, and measurable marketing strategy for what’s next.
FAQs
The main marketing themes from Cannes Lions 2026 were agentic AI, interoperability, curation, and outcome-based measurement. Together, these themes point to a marketing ecosystem where identity, governed data, and partner flexibility are becoming central to how teams plan, activate, and measure.
Marketers are talking about agentic AI now because AI is starting to influence more than creative and workflow efficiency. It’s beginning to shape recommendations, planning, spend decisions, consumer actions, and brand visibility in AI-shaped environments.
Identity matters more as AI becomes part of marketing decisioning because AI systems need accurate, permissioned and connected data to guide useful decisions. A consistent identity foundation helps marketers understand people and households across environments, test decision paths, and measure outcomes with more confidence.
Experian helps marketers act on these Cannes Lions 2026 themes through our identity foundation, data capabilities, and measurement approach that help marketers connect planning, activation and measurement across partners. Experian helps brands, agencies, publishers, platforms, commerce media networks and data providers build interoperable strategies that support flexibility, transparency, and control.
After Cannes Lions 2026, marketers should assess how their identity, data, activation, and measurement strategies work together across the partners they use today. The next step is to identify where fragmentation limits decision quality, audience activation, or proof of performance, then build a more connected approach across the ecosystem.
Latest posts
Experian Marketing Services and Data Quality President Genevieve Juillard recently sat down with Zach Rodgers, host of the AdExchanger Talks podcast to discuss the future of identity, the importance of data transparency and privacy, and our recent acquisition of Tapad. Genevieve focused on the opportunity for our industry to reimagine an advertising ecosystem that is resilient and adaptable; one that takes advantage of emerging data and prioritizes data transparency and consumer privacy. She also discussed the importance of advertising strategies that put consumers at the heart of every decision and give them more control over their data. Genevieve shared with AdExchanger that Experian’s acquisition of Tapad, a global leader in digital identity resolution, was a natural fit for our company. Tapad’s approach and role in the ecosystem is very much aligned with Experian’s, which is to develop solutions that are resilient to industry and consumer changes. The combination of our capabilities supports interoperability across all types of identifiers, both online and offline, and will position us to help our clients navigate the post-third-party cookie world. To learn more about Experian’s plans to support an effective advertising ecosystem that will evolve with our dynamic industry, listen to the full podcast Embracing ‘Healthy Fragmentation’ In Ad Tech, With Genevieve Juillard. Get in touch
It’s been over a year since Google announced they’d be deprecating the third-party cookie and in that time there’s been a major focus on two types of cookieless identity solutions. Identity vendors and marketers are strategizing which of these two future solutions best fits their needs so they can achieve privacy-safe scale once third-party cookies are no longer available for use on Chrome. Let’s break down these solutions and the considerations marketers need to take into account when deciding what partners to move forward with in the future of identity resolution. Authenticated Traffic Solutions Authenticated traffic solutions (ATS) are a type of digital identification that asks the end-user to identify themselves via personal information, most commonly email address. Often, you’ll see self-authentication at the point of entry to a website that asks you to create an account or login immediately to access the content you are seeking. E-commerce sites use authentication to keep track of consumer purchases and inform advertising decisions for that customer; and publishers use it to tailor featured content, or, more importantly for this discussion, leverage it within the ad ecosystem for targeting. While authentication can provide very valuable user data for audience segmenting and targeting, it can be limited in scale for a single publisher to leverage and monetize on their own. That’s why some identity vendors have worked to integrate themselves within as many publisher authentication modules as possible, so that they can create an aggregate of scale for the ad ecosystem to tap into. But, even this isn’t going to deliver the reach marketers truly thirst for. Alternatively, Facebook has the scale for authenticated traffic, but they keep their data inside a walled garden, so the utility of those authenticated users is only valuable within the Facebook ecosystem. So how can authenticated traffic solutions increase scale to broaden the scope of identifiers they can collect and leverage? Hint: a few of the biggest players have already figured it out. It’s the single sign-on. Google is probably the largest purveyor of a single-sign on solution that can directly impact advertising capabilities. Can you think of a site you visit that doesn’t offer a sign-in with your existing Google account? It’s a short list. Google has integrated themselves into so many applications and publishers that “Login with Gmail” is just second nature (you pictured the Gmail logo when you read that, didn’t you?). Now, if you’re about to purchase something you found off an Instagram ad, or perhaps a retailer you buy from regularly, you’ve probably noticed options to proceed with your checkout via “Amazon pay” or “Apple pay”. These are also single-sign ons. You’re authenticating yourself through Amazon or Apple to that retailer in exchange for A- the safety and security that Amazon or Apple provide for your financial information and B- skipping the annoying process of manually entering personal information over and over again at point of sale. It’s starting to sound like there’s a lot of authenticated data out there isn’t it? Well, that’s true, but again, Amazon and Apple are walled gardens. Amazon is working diligently to build out their own ecosystem to leverage their content and retail channel data for a holistic offering. And Apple keeps user data very close to the chest, constantly limiting its utility for themselves and advertisers. So what is identity resolution doing about it? The Trade Desk announced their solution; Unified ID 2.0, which promises to leverage email authenticated identity for a truly scaled solution for publishers via Javascript through Prebid. By handing over UID2.0 to an independent unbiased organization like Prebid, The Trade Desk is creating instant scale and trust in their solution. Unauthenticated Traffic Solutions Unlike ATS, unauthenticated traffic solutions do not rely on a log-in to identify a user, but they also don’t rely on third-party cookies. Instead, unauthenticated solutions (UATS) leverage their existing streams of real-time data through Javascript on publisher sites or an SDK (software development kit used by apps). The type of information UATS solutions can collect via Javascript or SDK vary, but it can include IP address, user agent and device level info. But being able to read this information at the point of entry to a website does not make a quality identifier. The best unauthenticated solutions will have the ability to set or ingest this information into a unique ID through an infrastructure with incredibly fast speed that can process trillions of anonymous data signals across multiple channels and devices. And even more so, be able to interpret those signals into a profile using machine learning– all at the moment a user enters a domain. It sounds complicated because it is, but it also has a lot of potential. The identity space cannot rest solely on authenticated traffic solutions, because, as you can see, it could limit ownership and operability to just a few power players/walled gardens. This doesn’t help the larger ecosystem monetize and personalize ad inventory. The right unauthenticated solution, however, can unify cross-device individuals and households at scale, because they’re integrated on the broadest number of publishers/SDKs across platforms, have the best algorithms to build confident connections between identifiers, and are universally transactable across the most common sell and demand side platforms. Think of it as the perfect partner- speaking a common language that everyone in the ecosystem understands and acts on. Today more than twenty cookieless identifiers are available in market for the ad ecosystem, and Google hasn’t even announced a date of deprecation. It’s important to be on the lookout for differentiators like scale and precision. Most importantly, choosing a truly cross-device partner will be key, especially as more digital devices and IDs grow in adoption, like CTV has this past year. Taking advantage of both What we will come to find, once the third-party cookie is obsolete, is that choosing just one of these solution types, or partners, will be a disadvantage. The more the industry comes together to collaborate on solutions, the more apparent it is that both of them have value, and thus employing both solutions will give marketers the best opportunities. Tapad, now part of Experian, recently announced the launch of Switchboard; a module within our identity solution; The Tapad Graph, to create this agnostic interoperability for identifiers of all types, and choice and control for the ad tech vendors and marketers who want them. By instantly creating the ability to partner with multiple solutions, Tapad + Experian is ensuring that all use cases for the third-party cookie live on in our cookieless future. Get in touch
Tapad launches global privacy-safe solution to provide continuity in the absence of third-party cookies
Featured storiesTapad launches global privacy-safe solution to provide continuity in the absence of third-party cookies Switchboard, a module within The Tapad Graph, will connect emerging cookieless identifiers to traditional IDs, creating a more holistic view of the consumer and driving value exchange within the advertising ecosystem Tapad, part of Experian, a global leader in cross-device digital identity resolution, and a part of Experian, announced today the launch of Switchboard, a first-of-its-kind solution to help navigate the evolving cookieless landscape. Switchboard, a module within The Tapad Graph, will operate as a global, privacy-safe solution to provide continuity in the absence of third-party cookies by connecting new cookieless identifiers to traditional digital IDs for a comprehensive view of consumers and their digital touchpoints. Switchboard will enable interoperability across the growing number of these digital identifiers and the value exchange between publishers, content creators and consumers. Leading digital identity solutions partnering with Tapad, part of Experian at the launch of Switchboard include Unified ID 2.0, ID5, Lotame Panorama ID, BritePool, Retargetly IDx and Audigent Halo ID. Tapad, part of Experian plans to expand support to additional identity solutions on an ongoing basis. In addition to these identity solutions, early partners across the ecosystem include The Trade Desk, Amobee, Martin, ShareThis, Eyeota and Catalina. “This diverse group of launch partners and testing customers will prove that Switchboard is an important tenet for the future of identity resolution. We’re excited to be proactive in our approach to give marketers time to adapt new solutions and test their function in tandem with the third-party cookie, while continuing to give our customers flexibility and control,” said Mark Connon, General Manager of Tapad, part of Experian. “Facilitating access and usage of 1st party identifiers is crucial to help marketers prepare for the cookieless future. Thanks to Switchboard, ID5’s cookieless IDs will be available to a wider audience of brands and agencies and enable them to run effective, data-driven campaigns beyond the third-party cookie,” said Mathieu Roche Co-founder & CEO of ID5. Switchboard provides value across the marketing and advertising ecosystem as the need for the ability to support multiple cookieless ID’s across ad tech increases throughout 2021. With a decade of expertise creating digital identity resolution products, Tapad, part of Experian is poised to solve this challenge through innovation and quality, privacy-safe data-driven solutions. “Interoperability is paramount for brand marketers, agencies, publishers and platforms if we want to support an open and free Internet and break free of the stranglehold of walled gardens,” said Pierre Diennet, Global Partnerships at Lotame. ”Lotame Panorama ID’s participation in Switchboard reflects our steadfast commitment to collaborating across and within the industry and providing value to all of its players.” “As advertisers continue to contemplate the future of identity, Amobee is proud to partner with Tapad, part of Experian on this next-generation solution to provide a comprehensive view of consumers,” says Bryan Everett, Senior Vice President of Global Business Development at Amobee. “With the imminent loss of cookies, advertisers must think creatively in order to respectfully engage consumers in a privacy-compliant way and Switchboard can play an important role in addressing their respective identity needs.” Tapad, part of Experian is welcoming identity solutions and Tapad Graph customer participation in Switchboard throughout 2021. Stayed tuned for more updates and information on Switchboard in the coming months. Get in touch