January 2026 in Marketing
This article is a curated industry update, summarising publicly reported developments across the UK marketing and technology landscape.
🛡️ UK tightens rules on AI misuse and online harms
According to reports from the Financial Times, the UK government has moved to criminalise the creation of non-consensual intimate images, including those generated or manipulated using AI. This change comes in response to public outcry over misuse of X’s Grok chatbot to create harmful deepfake content, underlining how seriously UK regulators are treating AI-enabled abuse.
Ofcom has opened a formal investigation into X’s compliance with online safety laws, with potential fines up to 10% of global revenue if it does not protect users under the Online Safety Act.
Complementing this shift, new UK rules now require tech platforms to block unsolicited nude images proactively, a move that extends strong content moderation duties to the largest social and online platforms in the UK, including TikTok, Facebook, YouTube, and X. This will mean platforms are not allowed to rely only on user reporting anymore.
Why it matters:
Marketers will need to align social campaigns with stricter safety obligations, especially around AI-generated content, brand-safe placements, and platform compliance.
🛍️ JD Sports bets big on AI-driven commerce
The Guardian has reported that JD Sports has announced plans to let shoppers buy directly through AI platforms such as ChatGPT and Microsoft Copilot in the US, aiming to streamline conversions without consumers ever leaving the chat interface. The initiative reflects a broader industry shift toward AI shopping assistants and seamless commerce experiences, particularly among younger consumers.
Why it matters:
It will not be long until this integration comes to the UK and it will likely cause a shift in the way people (especially the younger generation) shop. Take a look at your acquisition funnels and attribution models and start thinking about how LLM shopping could affect them.
📊 New technology and insights spotlight ethical AI & sustainability
A growing number of UK tech and marketing reports released this month highlight a shift in how AI is being positioned, away from pure innovation and towards ethics, governance and sustainability.
UK and EU regulators are no longer asking if AI is being used, but:
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how it is trained
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how decisions are made
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who is accountable when it goes wrong
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how do you mitigate bias
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how energy-intensive is the tech
For marketers, this affects personalisation, audience modelling, automated decision-making and AI-generated creative.
Ethical AI is becoming a risk management issue, not just a values discussion.
Why it matters:
As regulation tightens and procurement scrutiny increases, ethical AI is becoming a practical consideration for marketers selecting tools, partners and platforms in 2026.
📈 Mergers & Acquisition activity is heating up within the Creator Economy
The Business Insider reported that the creator and talent economy is seeing a renewed wave of mergers and acquisitions, with specialist agencies, influencer platforms, and creator tools in buyers’ crosshairs, signalling that creator-centric offerings may become even more integrated into marketing ecosystems.
For example, PMG (global independent marketing + tech company) announced the acquisition of Digital Voices, an influencer marketing agency with a major base in London and New York. The deal is positioned around scaling creator-led campaigns with stronger data + measurement capability.
Why it matters:
Brands should watch for consolidation and enhanced creator tools that offer deeper engagement and ROI measurement capabilities.
🍻Campaign of Note: Heineken 0.0 x TfL
Heineken marked Dry January by partnering with Transport for London to temporarily rebrand elements of the Bakerloo line as the “Bakerl0.0” line, promoting its alcohol-free beer. Station signage and OOH placements playfully swapped “oo” for “0.0”, turning the Tube network itself into a brand moment.
The campaign stood out for its use of a real-world, high-traffic environment and its dry January cultural timing. By embedding the idea directly into commuters’ daily routines, Heineken generated significant earned media and public conversation creating a buzz and excitement around the brand.
However, the activation also drew criticism, particularly from accessibility advocates, who raised concerns that altering familiar transport signage could cause confusion for some passengers. The debate highlighted an important watch-out for large-scale experiential campaigns: when brands intervene in essential public infrastructure, accessibility, clarity and inclusivity must be considered from the outset, not treated as secondary to creative impact.
Why it matters for marketers:
The campaign shows how ambitious brand stunts can deliver attention, but also how quickly sentiment can turn if practical user needs aren’t fully understood or considered. In 2026, innovation in physical and experiential marketing increasingly requires accessibility-by-design alongside creativity.
📚 Industry insights & trends shaping 2026
Beyond breaking headlines, several reports and trend forecasts are landing this month:
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WPP’s UK Trends 2026 report outlines key media and marketing shifts to inform strategy. wppmedia.com
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Censuswide’s Voice of a CMO report highlights UK CMOs’ focus on AI, brand building, and strategic pivots despite budget pressures. Brandnation
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Local marketing trend predictions show increased reliance on AI for personalisation, automation, and SEO adaptation. LOCALiQ
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Digital & regulatory outlooks emphasise need for privacy-first practices, consumer trust and compliance with new data legislation. Wikipedia
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