Rich media content is now in every digital channel we own — in product launches, customer onboarding, support experiences, partner enablement. It’s everywhere. That’s why so many teams are taking a fresh look at digital asset management (DAM) in 2026. The use cases have outgrown the “creative team library” era, AI is reshaping both the value and the complexity, and the cost model is changing. The Q1 2026 DAM Wave arrives at the perfect moment for buyers who want to make smart decisions about where their DAM solution fits next. 

Here are the three takeaways that matter most as you revisit your strategy:

Enterprise-wide content use will become the DAM default. 

Organizations create and use far more rich media than they did even a few years ago. It’s no longer sustainable to keep that content locked exclusively inside a creative team’s toolset. Modern DAM capabilities finally make broader access safe and scalable. Automated tagging and metadata enrichment reduce the burden on creative teams, while embedded brand guidelines help more people create and distribute brand content without requiring deep design expertise. As revenue teams rely more on personalization and local content variation to drive growth, a shared DAM foundation ensures everyone is working from the same, consistent asset pool. If you’re still relying on filesharing tools or keeping DAM participation limited to a handful of specialists, 2026 is the year to rethink that model. 

Your DAM solution choices must align with your broader AI strategy — but trust still comes first. 

AI has become a defining variable in how modern DAM solutions operate, especially as more vendors embed automation and agents into standard workflows. But before teams focus on AI, they need confidence that their DAM solution will scale reliably, deliver content consistently, and perform under real world load. Reliability isn’t just about uptime or access — it’s about ensuring assets flow into every system that needs them. That’s why integration with adjacent technologies is critical: it’s what transforms DAM from a static repository into a true system of action for content. At the same time, centralized AI governance means business leaders will need to justify DAM-embedded agents to their IT department or the CIO’s office and determine how to manage overlapping agent capabilities across the content stack. Organizations must balance AI ambitions with the operational trust their DAM solution must deliver every single day. 

AI is changing cost curves — and environmental impact — in ways buyers can’t ignore. 

Most DAM vendors are keeping AI feature pricing intentionally low to accelerate adoption, but the real long-term costs sit underneath the surface. AI driven enrichment, generation, and transformation require significantly more compute power, and that demand grows as teams scale usage. Add to that the ripple effect of larger and more numerous files — plus the metadata that AI produces — and organizations will see storage costs rise as well. These aren’t just budget considerations; they carry environmental implications, from increased electricity use to a larger carbon footprint. Any DAM strategy built today needs to account for these realities upfront rather than experiencing them as downstream surprises. 

What This Means For Vendors 

As buyers look across this new landscape, vendors will need to demonstrate clarity and transparency: how their AI capabilities work, how they fit into enterprise governance models, what long term compute and storage implications to expect, and how reliably their DAM solution performs in content heavy, multisystem environments. Vendors that can articulate these realities clearly — and support them with evidence — will be well positioned in a world where DAM is recognized as a mission critical system. 

Where To Go From Here 

If you’re rethinking DAM in 2026, start by stepping back: How central is rich-media to your business today — and how much will that grow? How will your AI governance model shape what you can adopt and from whom? And what cost and environmental impacts do you need to prepare for as AI accelerates content creation? 

The Forrester Wave, Digital Asset Management Systems, Q1 2026 can help you sort through vendor approaches, understand emerging differentiators, and narrow in on the platforms best aligned with your enterprise-wide future. If you’re a Forrester client in the market for DAM and would like to chat, please reach out!