Strategic communications has long played a pivotal role in B2B organizations — shaping brand reputation, building credibility and earning trust in crowded, complex markets.
What’s changing in 2026 isn’t the importance of communications, but the clarity around its impact. As discovery moves into AI-driven channels and scrutiny from buyers, investors and employees intensifies, communications is emerging as a visible driver of growth and enterprise value.
That shift is showing up in org charts, with communications leaders increasingly reporting into CEOs, Chief Growth Officers and emerging Chief Communications Officer (CCO) roles.
Here’s where we see strategic communications heading in 2026, and how leaders can stay visible, credible and competitive.
Key Takeaways
- Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) becomes a core growth priority. As buyers, investors and analysts turn to AI-driven answers, PR-led credibility will help shape how brands show up or disappear in generative search.
- Earned media still anchors communications, but the media mix keeps evolving. Video, podcasts, Substack-style publications and paid amplification are reshaping how influence is built and the content people choose to engage with.
- Measurement moves decisively toward business outcomes. With comms reporting higher in the org, teams must prove impact on growth, trust and business value.
- M&A, IPO readiness and capital access raise the stakes. Communications plays a critical role in shaping narratives during high-value moments.
1. GEO Puts Strategic Communications at the Center of Growth
Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) is the most urgent question communications leaders are fielding right now.
Buyers, customers and investors are increasingly relying on generative AI tools to understand markets, evaluate vendors and shortlist partners.
According to Muck Rack’s Generative Pulse report, 82% of links cited in AI-generated answers come from earned media, reinforcing that visibility in generative environments is driven by third-party credibility, not owned content alone. Just under 25% of all citations come from journalistic sources, underscoring the continued importance of high-quality earned coverage in trusted outlets.
Freshness and authority matter, too. More than half of all AI citations are from content published in the last year, with the highest citation rate occurring in the first seven days after publication. That reality raises the stakes for sustained, timely communications efforts over sporadic, one-off moments.
At the same time, AI models weigh outlet authority heavily, favoring high-credibility publications and industry-specific sources when answering category-level questions.
This is where PR moves decisively from awareness to growth. Strong communications programs help:
- Establish authority that generative AI engines recognize and prioritize
- Increase a brand’s visibility and the likelihood that AI engines reference a company’s POV, data or experts
- Protect visibility and shape positioning as organic search behavior shifts
As discovery shifts deeper into generative AI environments, even the strongest products risk going unnoticed if the brand lacks credible, consistent visibility. In 2026, communications teams will support and help define GEO strategies.

2. Earned Media Evolves in a More Crowded, Fragmented Landscape
Earned media remains the foundation of effective communications programs. But the media environment around it continues to shift.
In 2026, we expect communications strategies to reflect:
- Video as a dominant format. Short-form video, video interviews and streamed conversations are becoming core ways audiences consume insight.
- New media maturity. Substacks, podcasts and creator-led publications continue to proliferate, offering deep, high-quality content for niche audiences.
- Smarter use of paid amplification. Brands are increasingly comfortable complementing earned media with paid tactics to ensure the right buyers see their content.
This expansion creates opportunity while also creating more fatigue. As new channels multiply, audiences are more selective about what they trust. That creates space for traditional media to regain influence by doubling down on credibility, rigor and signal over noise.
The strongest communications programs in 2026 won’t chase every channel. They’ll focus on where their audiences are, then integrate earned media, emerging platforms and paid support with intentionality.
3. Measurement Becomes a Business Conversation
As communications reports higher in the organization, expectations change.
In 2026, impressions won’t be enough to satisfy CROs, CEOs or boards. Communications teams will be expected to connect visibility to growth, trust and long-term business value.
We’re already seeing:
- 56% of communications leaders now report directly to the CEO
- The emergence of dedicated CCO roles, with an 88% increase since 2019
- Increased scrutiny around how comms influences pipeline, retention and reputation
Measurement frameworks are evolving accordingly. While traditional metrics still matter, they’re increasingly supplemented with indicators tied to:
- AI discoverability and narrative pull-through
- Executive visibility and authority
- Trust and credibility with buyers, customers and influencers who shape purchase decisions
This evolution reflects a broader truth. Communications has become a critical function for navigating today’s fragmented, high-stakes environment.
4. Communications Plays a Bigger Role in Capital Moments
2026 is widely expected to be a more active year for M&A and a hopeful reopening of the IPO window.
In these moments, communications becomes mission-critical. Companies rely on strong narratives to establish credibility, manage perception and signal readiness to investors, partners and employees.
Effective programs in 2026 will support:
- Clear, consistent positioning ahead of M&A activity
- Early brand and narrative building to establish awareness and positioning well before listing day or deal activity begins
- Executive thought leadership that demonstrates operational maturity
- Earned and owned visibility that reinforces momentum and stability
Whether preparing for a transaction or signaling long-term value creation, strategic communications helps shape how capital markets assess a brand long before formal processes begin.
What This Means for Communications Leaders in 2026
As strategic communications moves closer to the center of growth, the function itself must evolve. This means:
- Designing programs with GEO and discovery in mind
- Extending earned credibility across an expanding mix of channels
- Measuring what matters to growth and leadership teams
- Treating communications as a driver of enterprise value, not just awareness
In 2026, the strongest communications programs will not only build visibility but help companies stay discoverable, credible and competitive when it matters most. Let’s talk outcomes.


