April 29, 2026

Adobe Summit 2026: What CMOs Actually Need to Know

By Kasper Andersen, Partner at Accrease

If you work in digital marketing, you've sat through about three years of vendor decks that all said the same thing: "We've added AI." Some of it was useful. Most of it was a sidebar. A copilot here, a generator there, a "smart" toggle in a settings panel nobody opened twice.

Adobe Summit 2026 was different, and I don't say that lightly.

This wasn't another release where AI got bolted onto an existing product. Adobe rebuilt the operating model. Agents aren't a feature inside Experience Cloud anymore - they are the workflow. The product names changed, the category structure changed, and the demos on stage were no longer about "look what AI can help you do" but "look what AI is doing while you sign off on it."

I know most CMOs are tired of agentic hype. Fair. But this one is worth your attention, because Adobe is one of the few vendors with enough of the customer data, content supply chain, and execution layer in one place to actually pull it off. Here's what happened and, more importantly, what I think it means for you.

From Experience Cloud to CX Enterprise - what the rebrand actually signals

Adobe Experience Cloud is now CX Enterprise. I rolled my eyes at first too. Renames are usually a tell that nothing real has shifted underneath.

This one is different.

The rename is signalling a bet: that the category is no longer "marketing technology" but customer experience as an enterprise discipline — owned across marketing, service, commerce, and IT. It's also Adobe drawing a line in the sand against the Salesforces and HubSpots of the world, who are coming at the same problem from CRM.

To ground the scale: Adobe says the underlying Experience Platform now powers more than 1 trillion experiences a year, and AEP ARR grew over 30%. That's not a roadmap company. That's a vendor with real production volume making a real platform bet.

The rebrand isn't the story. The reorganisation underneath it is.

The new shape of Adobe's analytics portfolio: meet CX Analytics

The cleanest example of the reorganisation is on the analytics side. Adobe collapsed its analytics products into a new umbrella called CX Analytics. Inside it sits:

- Data Insights Agent - agentic analytics that surfaces insights, explains trends, and recommends next actions

- Proactive Insights - anomaly alerts before you think to ask

- Root cause analysis

- LLM conversation insights - analytics for AI-driven chat experiences (this is new and quietly important)

- Traffic measurements

- Marketing Campaign Analytics (MCA) - significant upgrades, more on this below

- Content Analytics - now with omnichannel insights

Why does this matter? Because the structure is the message. Adobe is signalling that analytics, AI, and action are now one product surface - not three teams shipping three roadmaps that meet in a Slack channel. If you've ever had to manually hand off "the data team found something" to "the campaign team will do something about it," you know exactly the friction this is trying to remove.

Marketing Campaign Analytics (MCA) and the move to causal AI

Now the deeper one.

If the name is new to you, MCA is what Adobe used to call Mix Modeler - now broadened, renamed, and pulled into the CX Analytics umbrella. Same DNA, bigger ambition. We've been hands-on with Mix Modeler since the early days, among a handful of teams in EMEA who have run a full implementation, so this is one of the announcements I have a particular interest in watching play out in production rather than in a keynote.

What's actually new is the causal AI layer. In plain language: instead of attribution based on correlation and a finance team's gut feel, MCA is trying to tell you what actually drove the outcome.

Last-touch attribution has been broken for years. Multi-touch attribution is better, but anyone who has tried to defend a model in front of a CFO knows it's still a polite fiction - every vendor's model conveniently flatters the channels they sell. Causal inference is a different mental model. It asks: if this campaign hadn't run, what would have happened? That's the question your CFO is actually asking. It's also the question marketers have been bad at answering for two decades.

Adobe is positioning MCA at three audiences: Marketing Ops (cleaner decisions), Revenue Ops (budget credibility with finance), and AdTech teams (defensible spend allocation). All three need the same thing: a number they can put in a board deck without asterisks.

I'll be honest. The proof will be in the implementation, not the keynote. Causal inference at the scale Adobe is promising is genuinely hard, and "we have a causal model" has been said before by vendors who shipped a slightly fancier regression. I want to see the methodology, the assumptions, and the customer results. But it's the most interesting analytics announcement of the show.

Brand Concierge: from chatbot to commerce surface

Brand Concierge was a chatbot at last year's Summit. This year it isn't.

It's now a conversational layer that connects product discovery, search, support, and loyalty - and crucially, it now reaches into commerce. Real-time product details, checkout, the whole motion can happen inside a conversation. Adobe announced ecosystem partnerships with [24]7.ai, Algolia, and Netomi, which is what makes this credible: those are the names that handle conversational CX at scale today.

The mental model shift: Brand Concierge isn't a feature on your storefront. It's a surface your customers will increasingly start their journey on, and Adobe wants to own that surface end-to-end with governed agentic AI underneath. 

If you sell anything online and you're still thinking of "chat" as a cost-to-serve support tool, this is your nudge to revisit that assumption.

Agent Orchestrator: the plumbing CMOs should actually care about

Most CMOs will skim past this announcement. Don't.

The Adobe Experience Platform Agent Orchestrator is the most strategically important thing Adobe shipped at Summit 2026, and it's also the least sexy. It's the coordination layer, not a single AI model, but the modular architecture that routes tasks to specialized agents, manages shared memory across them, and connects Adobe with third-party systems through Model Context Protocol (MCP) endpoints.

Translation: this is what lets agents from Microsoft, Google Cloud, OpenAI, Anthropic, AWS, IBM, and NVIDIA actually work together with Adobe agents on a shared task, with shared context, against your data - instead of stepping on each other.

None of this works without a clean data foundation underneath. If your AEP collection layer is still on legacy libraries, you're going to feel that pain quickly - the Adobe Experience Platform Web SDK is the prerequisite most teams underestimate going into agentic projects.

The orchestrator is the technical answer to the easy half of the question. The operating model question - who owns the agents, who governs their actions, how human approval flows - is yours to answer inside your organisation. Nobody is going to ship that for you.

If you take one thing away from Summit, take this: the orchestrator is the reason the rest of the stack composes into something useful instead of a pile of features.

MCP servers for Adobe Analytics, CJA, and Journey Optimizer

This one didn't make most CMO recap posts. It should have made yours.

Adobe announced Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers for Adobe Analytics, Customer Journey Analytics, and Adobe Journey Optimizer. In plain English: any LLM-based agent - Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, or an internal one your team builds - can now talk directly to your Adobe data and trigger actions in Journey Optimizer, with Adobe handling the governance and authentication layer.

That's a quietly massive shift. Today, "asking your data a question" still mostly means opening a Workspace dashboard, exporting to Excel, or DM'ing your analyst on Slack. With MCP servers, that motion collapses into a conversation an agent can run on your behalf - pulling from CJA, validating against Adobe Analytics, then proposing or executing a change in Journey Optimizer.

It's also a hedge by Adobe. They're not pretending you'll only use their agents. By exposing AA, CJA, and AJO as MCP endpoints, Adobe is making sure that whichever agent your organization standardizes on - and there will be a standard - Adobe data and execution stay a first-class citizen rather than a screenshot somebody pasted into a prompt.

For a CMO, the takeaway is short: the question your data team will be asking in the next twelve months is no longer "which BI tool?" but "which agent has access to which surface, and what is it allowed to do?" MCP servers are the answer Adobe is shipping for that question.

CX Enterprise Coworker: the demo that got the room

The headline-grabber was the CX Enterprise Coworker. Goal-driven autonomous agent. The demo: tell it "increase cross-sell performance by 3%." It builds a plan, waits for your sign-off, runs the campaign, and tracks results against the original goal. It pulls from Real-Time CDP, Customer Journey Analytics, and Journey Optimizer to do it.

The room reacted the way Adobe wanted it to.

I'll temper expectations: it's GA "in coming months," which is vendor for "Q3-ish if you're lucky." It's a direction, not a finished product. And "increase cross-sell by 3%" is a clean demo goal - the messy goals real marketers carry don't fit on a slide that nicely. But the direction is right, and the fact that it loops back on the original goal instead of just executing tasks is the part that matters. That's the difference between an agent and a script.

What Adobe Summit 2026 means for CMOs

Here's my honest take. Adobe didn't reinvent marketing at Summit 2026. What they did was make a credible argument that the operating model of marketing is changing, and they're shipping the platform pieces to support that change. That's a more interesting claim than another AI feature reveal, and it's also a more demanding one - because the work of adopting it is yours, not theirs.

If you're a CMO at an Adobe shop, here's what I'd put on your next 90 days:

  1. Map your current attribution model honestly. If you can't defend it to your CFO without flinching, MCA's causal direction is worth a serious pilot conversation.
  2. Pick one workflow to make agent-native. Not the whole stack. One. Campaign QA, audience refinement, content variants - something where a human-in-the-loop agent can earn its keep and you can measure it.
  3. Decide who owns "agent governance" before you need to. It's not IT's job alone, and it's not marketing's alone. Get ahead of it now while the stakes are low.
  4. Revisit your conversational surface strategy. Brand Concierge plus the [24]7/Algolia/Netomi ecosystem changes the calculus on what "chat" is for.
  5. Don't rebrand internally just because Adobe did. "CX Enterprise" is their positioning. Your version of customer experience as an enterprise discipline needs to come from your own org, not a vendor deck.

That's it. No big finale.

If any of this resonates and you want to spar on what it means for your specific stack - especially the orchestration and operating-model side, which is where most of the real work hides - happy to have that conversation. We at Accrease have been thinking hard about this exact transition with our customers, and I'd love to hear what you're seeing on your side. Contact us here 😉

April 7, 2026

Adobe Summit ’26: Our Experts Share Their Must-Watch Sessions

Adobe Summit 2026 is right around the corner, and as always, we've been doing the homework so you don't have to.

This year's agenda is packed. And with so many sessions competing for your attention, knowing where to focus can make all the difference. AI, loyalty, B2B strategy, next-gen search... the themes shaping the industry right now are all over the programme, and the challenge isn't finding relevant content, it's narrowing it down.

So we asked our experts to share the sessions they're most excited about. Here's what's on their radar ahead of Summit:

Sune Christensen

Sune is one of our AJO and AEP specialists, always keeping an eye on where customer experience is heading next.

Session: 
Beyond Earn & Burn: The Future of Loyalty Orchestration [CP21]

Reason: 

This is the one I'm most excited about. Customer expectations around hyper-personalization have never been higher, and loyalty is harder to earn than ever, but also more important. What really draws me to this session is how it tackles the practical side of that: how AJO and AEP are actually helping businesses stay ahead. If you're thinking about where loyalty strategy is heading, don't miss this one.

Balram Khunti

Balram is our Senior Consultant and expert in Adobe Advertising Cloud. Always keeping a close eye on what actually moves the needle, the intersection of data, AI, and performance measurement.

Session: 
Measuring What Matters: Connecting Content to Conversion [L123]

Reason: 
This one stood out to me straight away. Understanding the full customer journey is becoming more critical across the industry. It's just not about clicks anymore, but about how different touchpoints contribute to real business outcomes. That's exactly what this session digs into.

Session: 
Clicks to Visibility: How General Motors Builds Brand Presence in AI Search [S331]

Reason: 
AI is changing how people search and discover brands, and I think it's really important to understand how companies are adapting to that shift. Seeing a company like General Motors tackle it head-on makes this one a must for me

Chiara Coletta

Chiara recently joined the Accrease team and is diving headfirst into the Adobe ecosystem, bringing a fresh perspective and plenty of curiosity.

Session: 
How Adobe AI Drives Speed to Insight [S109]

Reason: 
I'm new to CJA, and want to attend all the sessions on it's usage and tricks. But, this is the session I'm most excited about. I genuinely believe that mastering AI skills is going to be essential going forward and this session feels like exactly the right place to start

Samuel Rajkumar

Marketo specialist, unlike any other. Experienced in building digital strategies using technologies like CDP and combining them with Marketing Automation.

Sessions: 
Adobe on Adobe: The Future of B2B Marketing [S231]

Reason: 
B2B marketing is evolving so fast right now, and this is the session I'm most curious about. I really want to understand how Adobe is framing where it's all heading. It feels like a session that will shape how I think about the next couple of years

Sessions: 
Agentic Web: Design, Automate, Convert with Webflow and Marketo [OS759]

Reason: 
Improving lead quality and attribution directly from the website is something almost every company I work with is wrestling with. This session goes right to the heart of that, which is why it's high on my list.

Sessions: 
Why CDW Chose Adobe Marketo Engage as the Foundation of Its AI Vision [OS215]

Reason: 
I always love a real-world example at scale, and this one looks like a great one. Seeing how CDW is using Marketo as the backbone for AI-driven marketing shows exactly where marketing operations is heading, more connected, more AI-driven, and focused on revenue impact. That's the direction everything is moving, and I can't wait to see how they've done it

Kasper Andersen

Former Manager at Adobe for Proof of Concepts in EMEA & JAPAC. He has been working with Adobe Analytics since it was known as SiteCatalyst; however, his favourite solution is still and always will be Adobe Target.

I'll be honest - I evaluated every session on the agenda the same way I evaluate a new sneaker drop: what am I walking away with? So here are my must-attend sessions for Summit '26, and yes, the swag was a deciding factor.                

Session: 
2026 Adobe Analytics Rockstars — Top Tips and Tricks [S101]

Reason:
Look, I would have gone to this one anyway. But the fact that they're handing out a legendary tee and a collectible pin just confirms what I already knew: this is the most important session at Summit. The Analytics community puts on a show every year, and this year is no different. If you only go to one session, make it this one - and get there early.        

Session: 
Insights Beyond the Stars: Galactic Customer Journey Analytics Tips & Tricks [S103]

Reason:
A 70s space-inspired tee? That's not swag, that's a lifestyle. This session had me at the aesthetic alone, but honestly, a session bold enough to commit to that kind of theme is probably bold enough to deliver something worth hearing. Plus, the pin rounds out the fit nicely.  

Session: 
The Unified Intelligence Engine: A Single Insights Platform for the NFL [S110]

Reason:
Adobe and NFL. Foam football. Collectable pin. I don't know what else you need me to say. This is the crossover nobody asked for, but everybody needed, and I will be at the front of that swag queue.  

Summit week will be here before you know it. We'll be watching closely, and once the dust settles, we'll be back with a full roundup of the biggest takeaways and what they mean for your business. Stay tuned.

November 19, 2025

The Future of Marketing Isn’t Campaigns. It’s Journeys.

Most marketing still runs on campaigns. But your customers? They move fast. They expect more.

They want you to meet them where they are, every time.

In this Masterclass, Jason Hickey, Director Product Marketing @Adobe will share how Adobe Journey Optimizer differentiates from traditional campaigns and how it can help move brands from siloed campaigns to connected customer journeys.

What you’ll learn

How AJO differs from traditional MA: Understand how AJO works and how it connects with Adobe Experience Platform to power real-time personalization.

Why journeys beat campaigns: Understand how moving away from one-off campaigns improves engagement and customer loyalty.

Features that matter: Learn about the tools that help unify experiences, improve timing, and support smarter decisions using customer data.

What leading brands are doing: Hear how global companies are using AJO to streamline marketing and drive results.

What’s coming next: Get a first look at upcoming features like WhatsApp for Business, RCS messaging, and new decisioning tools.

This is for you if you're:

  • Re-thinking how you engage customers
  • Working in marketing, product, CX, or digital strategy
  • Using (or planning to use) Adobe Experience Cloud
  • Tired of outdated processes and looking for smarter ways to work

Sign up and watch it on-demand

This session will give you ideas you can use to evolve your customer approach. Join and see how to make the shift from campaigns to journeys.

Check out the on-demand mini masterclas👇

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NO: +47 75 98 71 01

 

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