Pr Is Entering A New Era And 2026 Will Separate The Reactive From The Ready

Written by: Madi Secareanu

If you work in PR, you probably feel it too: the ground is shifting under our feet. This year brought wave after wave of media layoffs, new AI tools seemed to launch every other week, and brands suddenly had to navigate political moments they never imagined would touch their industries.

But here’s the twist: I’ve never been more optimistic about where PR is headed. The role of communications is expanding, not shrinking and 2026 will be the year the smartest practitioners pull ahead.

The Political Reality Is Here To Stay

Whether we like it or not, the line between brand conversation and political conversation has blurred. Companies that once saw politics as “not our lane” are now finding themselves pulled into national debates, trending topics, and policy conversations without warning. 

This doesn’t mean every brand needs to react to everything. But it does mean they need a point of view and a plan. Silence won’t always protect you, and speaking up without intention can cause its own problems. The brands that do best will be the ones that ground their communications in their values.

Substack Is Becoming A Powerhouse Channel

If you still think of Substack as a niche corner of the internet, it’s time to adjust. It has become one of the most influential discovery channels for product recommendations, trend commentary, and cultural perspectives.

It’s not about audience size, it’s about trust. And trust is the only currency that matters in an oversaturated, algorithm-mediated world. Landing coverage in a newsletter that readers consistently open feels more impactful than being buried halfway down a traditional outlet’s product round-up.

PR teams who treat Substack as a primary channel, not an afterthought, will see the difference quickly.

The Press Release Is Making A Comeback

For years, people loved declaring the press release “dead.” But as AI tools pull from authoritative, structured information, the humble press release suddenly matters again.

Brands need a clear, factual source of truth, especially when misinformation and hallucinated narratives can spread quickly. Press releases won’t replace storytelling or human relationships, but they will once again become a critical anchor for shaping a brand’s public record in an AI-first environment.

PR Will Get Comfortable With The Uncomfortable

Audiences are tuning out overly polished brand messaging. They crave realness. The rise of creators, user-generated content, and unfiltered storytelling is forcing PR teams to redefine what “authentic” really means. The brands that win will be transparent and a little polarizing - think American Eagle’s “Good Jeans” ad or Shay Mitchell’s new skincare line for kids. Expect to see more behind-the-scenes moments, real voices, and tactics that spark conversation, and sometimes controversy, rather than control. In 2026, PR isn't about playing it safe; it’s about showing up with conviction and consistency, even if it makes a few people uncomfortable.

Custom Ai Tools Will Define The Next Wave Of PR Workflows

Many PR pros already use AI tools for brainstorming or drafting content, but that’s just the beginning. The agencies that will stand out in 2026 are the ones building their own custom models, trained on their strongest work, best pitches, case studies, and brand frameworks.

This doesn’t replace PR talent; it amplifies it. By automating the tedious parts, teams can pour their energy into the type of work machines can’t replicate: influencing and setting strategy, earning trust, crafting narratives, and building relationships.

The Bottom Line

2026 is shaping up to be a year where PR becomes more technical, more political, more risk-tolerant and somehow more human, too. The practitioners who embrace this mix will be the ones who lead the industry forward.


Madi Secareanu is the Founder and CEO of The Spox Agency, a boutique PR and digital communications agency with clients in the tech, entertainment, lifestyle and consumer industries across North America. 

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