The market for creative advertising technologies should have boomed by now. Despite waves of innovation, it has struggled to translate technological promise into business outcomes. Its potential remains highly significant but constrained by cultural disconnects between creative and media SMEs and intransigent bottlenecks in creative and media processes.

The market appeared poised to break out in 2021 following iOS 14’s restrictions on audience targeting. Data deprecation demanded advertisers target broad audiences with weak intent, necessitating more compelling creative to lift ROAS. Vendors of that vintage, including the likes of Adacado, RevJet, Jivox, and Flashtalking, pitched dynamic creative optimization (DCO). In practice, DCO demands complex, meticulous planning and ample creative assets, limiting its popularity and vendors’ valuations.

Generative AI reignited expectations, unlocking seemingly limitless creative velocity and variety. New providers surged into the market, ranging from specialists like AdCreative.ai, Typeface, ad-machina, Pixis, and Pencil to behemoths like Adobe, Canva, and Figma. They all remain focused on helping marketers go from zero to several hero assets and plug into DCO vendors who “personalize at scale.” Simultaneously, creative adtech became increasingly embedded within the walled gardens of Amazon Ads, Google Ads, and Meta Ads, for whom creative automation and intelligence is increasingly integral to their broader omnichannel ad platforms.

Despite all that dynamism, the market for creative adtech remains limited by structural disconnects between creative and media teams, between the beginning and end of the creative process, and between point solutions and end-to-end platforms. It hasn’t matured at the pace or scale of adjacent  markets like contextual targeting, CTV, or commerce media.

That is beginning to change. Creative adtech is entering a more consequential phase of maturation, shaped by three trends:

  • Momentum is moving from productivity tools to performance multipliers. Creative adtech gained traction by promising efficiency: faster production, lower costs, and more scalable workflows. That value remains significant, but the bar has risen. Now, creative adtech must not only produce more assets but produce measurably more effective ones. That underscores a broad truth: creative quality is the greatest determinant of media’s performance, outweighing ads’ targeting or placement. Marketers need creative adtech to help them connect creative decision-making to media outcomes, enabling more purposeful experimentation, less waste, and higher returns on marketing investments.
  • The market is moving from fragmentation to functional integration. In 2024, the creative adtech market was highly fragmented, characterized by point solutions addressing discrete parts of the creative process. Today, marketers encounter more integrated platforms that bridge creative production, testing, and optimization. With AI, the role of creative adtech is expanding beyond asset generation to orchestration, connecting creative, media, and measurement into more cohesive systems. That reflects AI’s ability to unify workflows previously siloed across teams and tools.
  • Marketers are moving from creative assets to systems. GenAI collapses the distance between idea and execution, enabling marketers to generate, test, and refine creative in near-real time. As production becomes commodified, value shifts upstream towards creative strategy, orchestration, and decisioning. Brands and agencies are investing less in individual assets and more in systems that continuously produce and optimize creative based on leading indicators of intent. What began as a landscape of creative tools is becoming a foundation for creative intelligence that can make every asset measurable, every decision informed, and every campaign continuously improving.

Our Creative Advertising Technologies Landscape, Q2 2026 helps B2C marketers select from an array of vendors that vary by size, type of offering, geography, and use case. It clarifies the dynamics of the creative adtech market, highlights notable vendors, and explains where the market is going next.

Stay tuned for The Forrester Wave™: Creative Advertising Technologies, Q4 2026, which will evaluate the providers that matter most, as well as non-evaluative research about the future of creative automation. As always, feel free to request a guidance session to discuss.