Healthcare organizations are implementing commercial AI solutions at more than twice the rate (2.2x) of the broader US economy, according to a recent report from Menlo Ventures. Hospitals and health systems dominate AI adoption in healthcare, accounting for 75% of the spending total. The greatest current demand for AI in healthcare is among provider organizations that must improve doctors’ workflows and cut admin waste. AI startups and incumbents will compete by delivering revenue-driving tools that go beyond note transcription and earning physician trust through models that enhance diagnostic accuracy.
Nearly three-quarters (73%) of nurse practitioners and physician assistants prefer email to receive pharma communications, but other channels are gaining ground, per a new HealthLink Dimensions study. As more NPs and PAs step up to fill physician shortage gaps, pharma marketers need to tailor communications specifically to them. That entails reaching them on their preferred social media platforms, while blending in-person and digital outreach.
CVS Health posted a $5.7 billion goodwill impairment charge in Q3, primarily attributed to Oak Street Health, its primary care clinic chain for seniors. CVS will also close 16 underperforming Oak Street locations, or about 7% of Oak Street’s clinic footprint, and won’t open any new centers in 2026. Companies looking to enter the primary care market—or larger healthcare players seeing a reset—should focus on strategies that don’t require massive upfront investments. That could include partnering with incumbents or leaning into direct-to-consumer telehealth, where disruptors have had some success.
NBCUniversal’s Peacock reduced losses to $217 million in Q3 compared with $436 million in 2024, but struggled to boost revenues and attract new subscribers—raising questions about the platform’s advertising value. Peacock shows potential for the future as it works to build its portfolio and partnerships beyond live sports—but stagnant subscriber growth for two quarters means brands should remain cautious.
Fraudulent streaming is siphoning royalties from human artists, complicating ad targeting for marketers, and leading consumers to listen to AI-generated music without their knowledge. Fraudulent genAI content can degrade users’ streaming experience and make it harder for advertisers to accurately plan campaigns since they may not know what user data is legitimate, Inna Vasilyeva said. With data quality and trust serving as major elements of campaign deployment and optimization, brands must demand transparency from streaming platforms and prioritize verified ad inventory.
Netflix is reportedly exploring an acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD)’s studio and streaming operations—its boldest move yet to consolidate the streaming market. The deal would include HBO, Warner Bros. Pictures, and HBO Max but exclude cable properties. For Netflix, the acquisition would supercharge its ad-supported tier with premium, long-tail content, expanding both viewership and inventory. The potential combination of HBO’s prestige programming and Netflix’s data-driven ad platform could redefine connected TV advertising, pressuring rivals like Disney+ and Peacock. If successful, the merger would mark streaming’s biggest consolidation since Amazon’s MGM purchase—and a new era for premium video.
Ad-supported and free ad-supported streaming TV (FAST) are surging in popularity—what started as low-cost, complementary streaming options are becoming primary destinations for discovery. Total US hours spent watching FAST services reached 1.8 billion in August, per Comscore’s 2025 State of Streaming report, up 43% YoY. Advertisers should view FAST and ad-supported streaming options as a crucial part of the CTV media mix, tapping into rising demand for budget viewing options and the services’ wealth of user engagement data for campaign optimization.
Sell-side company Magnite announced a private marketplace in collaboration with ITN on Thursday that will enable programmatic access to local linear TV, representing a new milestone in linear. The private marketplace represents a new opportunity in linear that helps reignite its relevance for brands. Automation helps modernize linear programmatic advertising, delivering the same efficiency capabilities that are standard in digital.
58% of retail professionals strongly agree that sharing customer location data with partners positively impacts revenue, according to a June Retail Systems Research (RSR) survey.
At the Marketecture conference, MiQ’s global VP of strategy and partnerships, Moe Chughtai, said advertisers are finally connecting platforms like Meta, YouTube, and TV through clean room technologies that enable unified measurement. Traditional marketing mix models are being replaced by one- to three-month measurement cycles that allow for real-time optimization and smarter KPI alignment. The result: advertisers can move beyond isolated reporting and toward integrated, cross-platform performance strategies that strengthen confidence in ROI.
Meta posted $51.24 billion in Q3 revenue, up 24% YoY, with Instagram driving the bulk of growth as Reels, AI discovery, and cross-device formats redefine engagement. Reels now account for half of all Instagram time spent, while Meta’s upcoming CTV app positions it to compete directly with YouTube. Facebook’s US user base remains stable near 181 million, but Instagram’s will climb to nearly 170 million by 2029. For advertisers, Meta’s evolution marks a shift from scale to yield—emphasizing creative iteration, storytelling, and AI-powered optimization across its maturing social and video platforms.
Successful retail execution requires making products more available, visible, and relevant to shoppers; it's a challenge that's grown increasingly complex in today's retail environment. For many retailers, leveraging image recognition technology has transformed how they approach in-store execution and display compliance.
The Trump administration claimed Thursday that China has greenlit a US TikTok transfer agreement, just over a month after President Trump signed an executive order to keep the short-form video leader operational in the US. China’s commerce ministry simultaneously announced that it will collaborate with the US to solve “issues related to TikTok,” but similarly did not elaborate. Tentative talks around TikTok’s future offer short-term stability for advertisers but don’t resolve issues TikTok will face in the long-term.
Western Union will launch a stablecoin to power crypto remittances in the first half of 2026, per a press release. The stablecoin will be called the U.S. Dollar Payment Token (USDPT) and will run on Solana’s Bitcoin infrastructure. As more remittance players pivot toward crypto, they face a bind of a customer base that is more likely to trust in-store cash transactions than novel digital methods, which makes a strong retail presence necessary for success. Targeted advertising campaigns educating remittance senders about the benefits of digital transfers with incentives for new customers could help convert more users to crypto.
Target’s plan to win holiday sales relies heavily on in-store activations and a steady stream of deals throughout the last two months of the year. All of Target’s nearly 2,000 stores will be transformed into “nostalgic Alpine villages,” complete with festive décor and weekend events throughout the season. The retailer will also offer weeklong deals and host an earlier Black Friday sale to accommodate consumers' price sensitivities. Target is hoping that an emphasis on joy and whimsy—and discounts—will help it recapture some much-needed spending.
JPMorgan Chase will launch a digital-only retail bank in Germany in 2026. And Santander revealed that its US digital-only retail bank, Openbank, attracted over $6 billion in deposits in its first year. For a traditional bank, running a digital-only bank is a strategic choice rather than the side project it may seem. Rebuilding the technology stack and experience from the ground up fosters necessary digital transformation and enables business growth in new markets. To break out of a mold, bankers should think big about their options: A small subsidiary built from scratch can reshape the business.
The branch is key to consumers’ choice of primary bank, but banks overall fall short of a compelling customer experience, according to a recent study from Adrenaline. Delivering a seamless, modern branch experience means breaking down silos between teams across digital, ATM, call center, and in-person channels. With customers expecting frictionless interactions, the old compartmentalized approach won’t work anymore. Branches need to offer pared down, basic services that are traditionally expected combined with consistent, high-touch interactions that dovetail with digital services.
Wealthtech funding for 2025 is set to double last year’s figure and has already hit $4.2 billion as of September, according to a CB Insights report. And based on year-over-year hiring, three of the top five fastest-growing fintech segments fall under wealthtech. In our September 2025 report “Winning the Great Wealth Transfer in Wealth Management,” we noted that banks face three key considerations in competing against wealth techs: How to blend self-service and human connection, how to personalize services, and what investment vehicles to offer.
Amazon is continuing to see success with its maturing ad offerings. Q3 advertising services reached $17.7 billion, up 24% YoY, while net sales increased 13% to $180.2 billion. Q4 guidance points to continued confidence, with Amazon expecting growth between 10% and 13% YoY. Amazon’s ad success indicates that it will continue to be a promising opportunity for marketers that offers a unique proposition combining data-driven targeting, commerce integration, innovative ad formats, and the ability to reach consumers both onsite and offsite.