However, as the stacks of statistics grow higher, Thando Mxosa, Strategy Director at brand and communication agency Penquin, believes that a critical gap is widening: the industry is drowning in data, yet individuals are starving for humanness. As marketers, this can be lethal. The real revolution isn't in the algorithms; it's in reclaiming the human truths they obscure, says the agency.

Mxosa explains that for marketers to succeed in 2026, they must move past the data and reconnect with the human stories hidden beneath the spreadsheets. This comes as Mxosa identifies a growing trend of marketers leading with metrics rather than insights, a practice he describes as a "backwards bad habit", adds the agency.

"In 2026, South Africa's consumer patterns stare back at us with a haunting familiarity, but we seldom investigate the why," says Mxosa. "Numbers are excellent at telling you what is happening. They track clicks and carts with surgical precision. But only people can tell you why those things happened. If we continue to lead with measurement, we are essentially trying to read a book by only looking at the page numbers."

According to Penquin, the shift ahead for 2026 is not technological, but a return to a disciplined marketing sequence.

Mxosa advocates for a four-step approach that prioritises observation over immediate measurement:

  • observe
  • understand
  • describe, and
  • measure.

Asking the Raw Questions 

Mxosa challenges brands to move away from dashboard metrics and instead ask "raw human questions" that reflect the current South African lived experience, says the agency.

"The edge in 2026 will belong to brands that ask the difficult questions," says Mxosa. "We need to ask: Who is bleeding time or dignity for our stuff? Where do we gift back hours to a tired consumer? What ritual earns trust in the darkness of a blackout? What is our handoff when the national mood lifts or drops? These aren't data questions; they are human questions, and they will matter more than ever this year."

The 2026 Mandate

As the industry prepares for more technologically-driven predictions, Penquin says it believes that the magic of marketing remains its ability to connect one human need to one human solution.

"The real shift ahead is not technological, it is a cognitive one," concludes Mxosa. "If your 2026 plan is built solely on 'what' the data says, you aren't marketing; you're just accounting. To truly move the needle, we have to find the pulse beneath the percentage."

For more information, visit www.penquin.co.za. You can also follow Penquin on Facebook, LinkedIn, X, or on Instagram.

*Image courtesy of contributor