APAC retailers are hitting a ceiling in retail media as discovery shifts toward AI-driven recommendations and advertisers demand clearer measurement across online-offline journeys.
Over the past two years, traditional retailers in Asia Pacific (APAC) have undergone a profound digital transformation. Many turned to retail media as a new revenue stream, embracing ad networks, sponsored listings, and on-site promotions as incremental profit drivers.
As industry influencer Eric Seufert noted back in 2021, the mantra “everything is an ad network” captured the mindset of retailers racing to monetise every digital surface.
For a time, this worked. Retailers built out their media networks, launched sponsored listings, and embedded ads across websites and apps. But today, many are hitting a ceiling.
APAC companies tell a familiar story: ad revenue is flattening, and legacy ad tech stacks are struggling to deliver the precision, relevance, and scale that advertisers now expect.
This plateau is not a failure of retail media – it is a signal that the next phase requires a different playbook.
According to IDC, retailers are entering a period defined by economic volatility, shifting customer expectations, and rising demands for trust and transparency. Against this backdrop, growth will increasingly depend on how well organisations collect and use customer data while connecting online and offline behaviour with far greater accuracy.
In other words, growth is no longer about how much inventory retailers have, but about how intelligently that inventory performs.
So what shifts must marketers consider in 2026 to remain competitive?
Discovery is being disrupted
One of the biggest changes redefining retail media is the way shoppers discover products. For decades, search dominated discovery. Shoppers typed queries into search boxes, and retailers competed to match the right results to those keywords.
But AI is quietly rewriting this playbook – AI-driven discovery from natural language processing and semantic understanding are moving the shopper journey upstream, surfacing products before the customer actively searches.
In 2026, many purchases will begin as suggestions rather than responses to searches. Agentic AI assistants embedded in apps, messaging platforms, and ecommerce ecosystems will anticipate needs, recommend products, and guide shoppers through curated options.
Retailers who understand this shift will ensure product data, first-party signals, and content are legible to these AI models. Those who do not risk being absent from the new discovery moments where influence now happens.
For marketers, relevance is no longer about keyword optimisation or filling ad inventory. It is about being present at the exact moment a shopper is open to suggestion. Retail media that succeeds will be integrated into the shopping experience, not layered on top of it.
Measurement across channels becomes critical
Discovery alone is not enough. APAC’s hybrid retail environment – where shoppers browse online, compare prices via mobile, and complete purchases in-store – means most retailers today struggle to trace influence across these touchpoints.
This year, attribution will become the defining competitive advantage. Retailers who unify point-of-sale data, loyalty programs, mobile interactions, and exposure signals into a single view will be able to prove exactly which campaigns drive real-world outcomes.
Incrementality testing, rapid experimentation, and transparent reporting will define credibility in the eyes of advertisers. Retailers that cannot deliver measurable, verifiable results will see marketing spend migrate toward those who can.
In 2026, expect in-store media to accelerate sharply as retailers prove they can measure it with the same rigour as digital. Some advanced retailers are already piloting in-store video networks with camera technology that creates “face hashes” – tracking exposure without identifying individuals – and mapping it back to purchase behaviour with minimal infrastructure.
AI goes from pilot to requirement in 2026
For the past few years, AI in retail media has lived in pilot mode – experimented with, talked about, rarely central to operations. In 2026, AI will move to a competitive necessity rather than a nice-to-have.
This is where machine learning will be applied where it matters most: predicting outcomes, personalising recommendations, clustering shoppable content, optimising pages in real time, and improving relevance in both paid and organic placements. The traditional divide between paid and organic will narrow as AI optimises them together.
This is not about AI replacing human creativity. It is about enabling retailers to deliver relevance and precision at a scale that manual processes simply cannot manage. Human teams will shift out of tactical operations and focus on creative differentiation, retail partnerships, and business impact. The brands that embrace this balance will win.
Trust and collaboration become the new currency
But as AI becomes more central to retail media, so do its risks. Fraud, generated by AI that mimics human behaviour with startling accuracy, threatens to distort measurement and erode advertiser confidence.
No retailer can solve this problem alone. The next frontier requires collaboration between retailers, measurement partners, and ad platforms to establish shared verification standards and real-time safeguards. Trust will become a form of competitive advantage. The networks that can prove transparency, validate performance, and protect data integrity will win advertiser loyalty.
This also means retailers must activate predictive modelling responsibly – turning browsing, buying, saving, and repeating into meaningful signals processed within milliseconds.
Retailers who can activate this data will unlock superior measurement, higher ROAS (return on ad spend), and deeper shopper loyalty. Those who cannot will struggle to stay competitive against platforms with AI maturity.
2026 promises to be a reset moment. The retailers who rise to the occasion will be those who view media as part of the retail core, integrate it across touchpoints, and build lasting value through smarter, more human-centric approaches to technology and marketing.




