✅ The pressure’s on: value, not volume, will define the next era of communications
The Onclusive 2026 Outlook reports on a sector finally confronting uncomfortable truths - from ROI-shaped leadership expectations and an AI-fuelled evolution.
The next 12 months will be a cultural reckoning and period of transformation for the public relations industry, according to The Onclusive 2026 Outlook.
I’m quoted upfront in the report, suggesting that our industry must aim for the high ground and align with management to thrive. It’s the quote that’ll be on my gravestone.
Half of practitioners still can’t demonstrate return beyond vanity metrics. That statistic should make every communications practitioner deeply uncomfortable. If your work can’t show a link to organisational outcomes such as revenue, reputation or risk mitigation, it’s simply not credible.
I wrote about this issue in a recent edition of the newsletter.
The smart money? It’s on correlation modelling, joined-up attribution, and executive fluency. The takeaway: learn to speak the language of the boardroom, or you’ll be left outside.
Brand building is back, but it must be measured
Brand is the one thing that communications and marketing can agree on. More than half across both camps identify it as the top priority to cut through media, tackle misinformation, and show up in AI. But agreeing it’s important isn’t the same as proving its impact.
Here, the report does well to translate brand-building into commercial terms. Again, if you can’t connect brand metrics (trust, awareness, sentiment) to business metrics (leads, loyalty, conversion), you’re not building anything. You’re decorating.
Misinformation and media burnout
Agencies in the report flag fake news and AI-generated content as leading threats. In-house teams, oddly, don’t. That divide suggests many client organisations underestimate the speed and scale of information decay online.
Similarly, the shrinking journalism pool means traditional media relations is no longer a numbers game. This, combined with AI spam, influencer creep, and declining trust, means the quality of your stories will be the difference.
AI is bedding in
The biggest myth that the Onclusive report quietly challenges is that AI will “transform everything.” Two in five say it’ll just complement rather than transform the communications role. Agencies are more bullish about moving up the value chain, with a pivot to advisory work, but the AI revolution some predicted is shaping up to be more evolution than radical disruption.
Onclusive flags Generative Engine Optimisation (GEO) as a fundamental shift. Visibility in AI depends on being cited, credible, and consistent across every touchpoint. This reframes media entirely and is an assertive opportunity for our industry. It is also highly contested. You have been warned.
Five provocations for practitioners
Stop reporting reach and start reporting outcomes. If your management still sees sentiment charts, you’re failing them.
Rebuild brand strategy around attribution. Make sure your “awareness” can be tracked to something that shifts behaviour.
Prepare for misinformation like it’s a pandemic. Prevention, detection and rapid response should be baked into your plan.
Invest in relationships. Shrinking newsrooms mean the old volume game is gone. Quality counts.
Don’t fear AI, out-think it. Use the time you save to think more creatively and act more strategically.
The report is a useful piece of empirical research. Onclusive balances numbers with narrative, and isn’t afraid to call out fault lines within practice.
Have a good week ahead.
Artificial intelligence
🧠 BROWSER BATTLE: OpenAI has launched Atlas, a new AI-powered web browser, directly challenging Google Chrome by turning its ChatGPT chatbot into a search-like gateway. Promising automation and personalisation through features such as “agent mode”, Atlas could reshape how users navigate the internet, but raises fresh concerns over data use, ad influence and the future of journalism. Source: The Associated Press.
🧨 AI FALLOUT: A BBC and European Broadcasting Union investigation has found that AI platforms such as ChatGPT and Gemini are not only misrepresenting news content but also eroding public trust by spreading inaccuracies while siphoning traffic from publishers. With 76% of Gemini’s news responses showing significant issues, the report warns that AI’s polished delivery masks a lack of editorial rigour. Source: Press Gazette.
Social media
🗳️ DEMOCRACY DILEMMA: Cambridge University philosopher
argues that social media hasn’t broken democracy, but rather has delivered it in a raw and unfiltered form. Platforms have exposed popular but previously suppressed ideas by dismantling elite gatekeeping, revealing that populist sentiment may not be a glitch in the system but an inevitable outcome. Source: Substack.🤖 AI SIDE-HUSTLE: LinkedIn is inviting members to become paid AI trainers, helping build datasets for machine learning by completing expert-labelled tasks. By verifying identity and sharing domain expertise through an AI-powered chat, users may be matched with flexible, skill-based projects. Source: LinkedIn.
Media
📺 BROADCAST BREAKOUT: New data published by Be Broadcast shows the Green Party is the only UK political force to grow its broadcast presence this autumn, with a 44% rise in airtime. The Greens are tapping into public discontent and outperforming bigger rivals on the airwaves under the leadership of Zach Polanski with message clarity and a tonal shift from protest to prosperity. Source: Be Broadcast.
🏆 JOURNALISM HONOURS: The British Journalism Awards 2025 shortlist has been revealed, spotlighting outstanding public-interest reporting across UK media - from local exposés to global investigations. With over 600 entries judged, finalists span traditional powerhouses and new digital players, ahead of the 11 December ceremony hosted by Jeremy Vine. Source: Press Gazette.
Be Broadcast is a Wadds Inc. client.
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This article comes at such an oportune time, building directly on your previous newsletter post. Your insistence on measurable impact over vanity metrics is spot on. It reminds me of the crucial success metrics in system design. The call for executive fluency is particularly incisive for the industry's credibility going forward.