The 2026 marketing landscape, decoded weekly.
For UAE and GCC operators.
SEO, AEO, GEO, paid search, social, and AI-search updates — tracked, contextualised, and published as they break. Not "X best tips for 2026" listicles. Real shifts in Google's algorithm, AI Overview citations, ad platform betas, and Meta/TikTok rule changes — written by people running campaigns through them.
E-E-A-T signals reweighted after March 2026 update
AI Overview citations: getting cited in 2026
Google Ads Performance Max — what changed in Q2
Threads + LinkedIn algorithm shift in GCC markets
Four feeds. Updated as the platforms change them.
We split coverage into the four areas where 2026 marketing changes hit hardest. Each feed updates whenever something materially changes — algorithm rollouts, AI Overview behaviour shifts, ad platform betas, social algorithm changes. No timed cadence. No "10 best tips" filler.
Search & AI-engine updates
Google algorithm updates, AI Overview behaviour, ChatGPT citations, Perplexity sources. What changed, who got hit, what to do about it — for English and Arabic SERPs.
Ad platform changes
Google Ads, Meta, TikTok, LinkedIn, Snapchat — feature launches, attribution shifts, policy changes, and what's actually working in GCC.
Social media organic growth
Algorithm shifts on LinkedIn, Threads, Instagram, X, TikTok — and what's still earning reach when paid budgets aren't.
Tools, analytics & AI workflows
New tools we're testing, AI workflows that are actually saving time, and the attribution stack changes we're making in 2026.
The six shifts that will define marketing in 2026.
What we're watching closely this year. Each signal here gets its own deep-dive whenever the data justifies one — we'd rather publish well when there's something to say than fill a content calendar.
AI Overviews now handle 30%+ of high-intent queries
Google's AI Overview answers commercial questions before users click — and the citation behaviour is not the same as ranking behaviour. AEO is a distinct discipline now, not a sub-skill of SEO.
Tracking · WeeklyChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity citations becoming a real traffic source
Direct traffic from AI assistants is now measurable in GA4. Citation behaviour differs per engine — ChatGPT rewards structure, Perplexity rewards recency, Claude rewards verifiability.
Tracking · MonthlyBrowser-side tracking is now 30–45% lossy
ITP, ATT, and Firefox's enhanced tracking protection are now defaults. Server-side tracking isn't optional anymore — without it, half your conversion data is missing.
Tracking · OngoingArabic-language SERPs are diverging from English
Local pack composition, featured snippet behaviour, and AI Overview triggering are all different in Arabic queries. Translating English content doesn't rank in Arabic anymore — it never really did, but now Google's started enforcing it.
Tracking · Bi-weeklyPMax is finally giving up campaign-level data
Asset-level reporting, audience signals UI rebuild, search-term visibility — Google is reluctantly making PMax accountable. Worth re-evaluating accounts you turned off in 2024.
Tracking · Monthly"Last-click" attribution is officially dead — what replaces it
Cross-channel modeled attribution, view-through windows, and data-driven attribution in GA4. Most companies are still reporting last-click numbers. The gap between what's reported and what actually drove revenue is widening.
Tracking · OngoingNo content calendars. No "10 best tips for 2026."
Most marketing blogs publish on a schedule. We publish when the landscape changes — and only when we have something defensible to say. Here's how that works.
We don't run a content calendar. We run a watch-list — algorithm dashboards, platform release notes, our own client portfolio data — and write when something material shifts.
That means slow weeks happen. And then a March Core Update lands and we publish three pieces in 48 hours because there are real things to say. The rhythm follows the platforms, not a posting schedule.
Every post we publish has to clear three bars: it has to be true (verified with first-party data or named sources), it has to be useful (gives the reader something to do), and it has to be timely (lands while the change still matters).
Get the updates before they're a problem.
One email when a platform changes the rules. Nothing else. No weekly digests, no "thought leadership," no automation sequences. You'll know about a Core Update before your traffic drops.
If the updates apply to your business, they're probably costing or earning you money right now.
Reading is one thing. Knowing what to do about it is another. Book a free 30-minute call and we'll tell you which of the 2026 shifts is actually relevant for your business — and what (if anything) you should do this quarter.