For years, Canva’s advantage was accessibility. It made design easier, faster, and available to more people. At its recent Canva Create 2026, the big story was a deliberate repositioning: Canva aims to evolve from a design platform with AI tools into an AI platform with design tools.

That changes how buyers should evaluate Canva. For marketing leaders under pressure to produce more content with leaner teams and stronger governance, the near-term value is faster creation. The bigger question is whether Canva becomes the broader system for creating, coordinating, and scaling work across the enterprise.

Three areas stood out most for enterprise marketing decision-makers: conversational design, iterative agentic editing, and brand intelligence.

Conversational Design Makes AI The Starting Point

Canva built its reputation by making creation easier through templates. That model helped millions of users get started quickly, but it still assumed people knew what format they needed and how to shape it. Canva AI 2.0 introduces a more natural starting point: intent. Users describe a goal, audience, rough concept, or desired output in natural language, and Canva generates a structured, editable asset inside the platform where teams can continue refining the work together.

  • Why enterprises should care: Many employees are blocked by time, confidence, and tool complexity. A conversational interface lowers the barrier to creating quality first drafts without waiting on content or creative professionals.
  • What to watch and do: The easier content creation becomes, the more important permissions, review workflows, and brand controls become. Identify where domain experts are already creating content outside formal processes. Build governance for these moments: brand templates, review triggers, and clear guidance on what teams can self-serve versus when specialists should step in.

Iterative Editing Brings AI Into Real Workflows

One of the biggest frustrations I hear from marketers about genAI tools is that first drafts can be fast but review cycles are still painful. Canva’s orchestration and object-based intelligence announcements aim for a more practical model. Users can request targeted changes while preserving the rest of the asset. Swap an image, refine a headline, or adjust a section without rebuilding everything around it.

  • Why enterprises should care: Real marketing work is iterative. Teams review, localize, resize, adapt, and refresh content constantly. AI becomes more valuable when it supports repeatable workflows such as adapting content for different channels, localization, making launch updates, executive reviews, and refreshing existing assets. The goal is less rework, faster cycles, and smoother collaboration.
  • What to watch and do: Enterprise teams still need reliability, version control, approvals, and confidence that targeted edits won’t create downstream issues. Map the highest-friction review loops in your current process. Start with one use case, such as resizing and reformatting campaign assets or making executive review changes. Measure cycle time, handoffs, and rework before and after introducing AI-assisted editing.

Brand Intelligence Is Canva’s Trust Play

The most relevant announcement for CMOs, heads of brand, and creative leaders was brand intelligence. Canva positions this as the ability to automatically apply brand standards, visual identity, and style choices across new and existing work. This plays a strategic role in Canva’s repositioning: If more employees can create through an AI interface, the system needs to carry brand standards automatically.

  • Why enterprises should care: Different vendors talk about brand intelligence, so it’s important to make distinctions. One comparison is Canva and Adobe: Each is solving related problems from different starting points. Canva starts from broad employee participation in self-service creation and faster adoption. Adobe starts from scaled production, deeper enterprise workflows, sophisticated governance, and full campaign operations.
  • What to watch and do: Brand intelligence claims across the market will sound similar. The real difference comes from data sources, workflow depth, governance controls, and how easily employees can use the system. Ask vendors what data trains the experience, how brand updates are governed, where approvals sit, what systems connect, and how performance improves over time.

The Bigger Shift Is Distributed Creation

The shift to distributed content creation is already underway, with more work happening closer to the teams that need it. Canva’s platform ambition is to become one of the systems that powers that model. For marketing leaders, the practical move is to rethink how content gets created, governed, and scaled across the business. Prioritize the use cases that matter most today, then assess which platforms align with the future operating model you want to build. If you’re a Forrester client evaluating content creation and optimization solutions, workflows, or readiness for this next phase of change, connect with your account team or schedule a guidance session today.