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Digital Marketing Update April 2026

Welcome to The Marketing Den’s digital marketing update for April 2026.

You’ll be pleased to hear there were no big dramas in April. But obviously things haven’t stood still. So here’s your run down of what’s changed…

Social Media Updates from April 2026

Is LinkedIn becoming a search engine for professional content?

LinkedIn has continued to double down on keyword-based discovery (both in how posts are surfaced and how profiles are indexed internally).

This reflects a broader shift towards LinkedIn behaving less like a feed and more like a searchable knowledge base, with creator and brand content increasingly optimised for discoverability rather than just engagement.

Tik Tok leans in to search

There’s a theme emerging here isn’t there!?

TikTok has continued to expand how much content is surfaced through search behaviour (from keyword prompts in the app to more explicit use of captions and on-screen text for discovery). The Drum describes this as an ongoing move from an entertainment feed to a discovery engine.

Which means, how you phrase things (captions, on screen text etc) is starting to matter more, as the platform tries to surface content that users are actively looking for.

Instagram is extending the lifespan of content

Instagram has expanded testing of post-publish carousel editing, allowing creators to reorder content after publishing. Alongside continued experiments with the distribution of Reels, this reinforces a broader change in how Instagram treats content. (Meta has continued testing broader distribution windows for Reels, with older content being resurfaced more frequently).

It seems posts are becoming assets with a lifecycle, not fixed moments in time.

This shows Instagram is moving further away from recency and closer towards relevancy signals.

The practical effect is that posting frequency is becoming less important for performance, whilst the strength of your creative becomes more important. I guess “make each post count” is now a more useful strategy than “post more”.

Pinterest is getting more transactional

Pinterest has expanded product tagging and shopping integrations, making it much easier to go from pin to product page to checkout.

This means fewer steps between inspiration and checkout as Pinterest becomes more of a conversion channel particularly for retail and lifestyle brands.

Search Updates from April 2026

AI overviews are changing the structure of search

I know I’ve talked about this previously, but I’m revisiting it because I’m seeing continued industry coverage about the significance of this change.

Google has continued expanding AI Overviews and AI-organised result formats across more queries, grouping information into themes rather than presenting a linear list of links.

This is increasingly reshaping SEO from ranking-focused optimisation to topic-level inclusion within AI-generated summaries.

We used to compete for a position in a list of search results. But now increasingly, we’re competing to be included in a generated explanation of a topic.

More searches are ending without a click

Again, I’ve talked about this previously at length, but April has seen further rollout across informational searches. So, as AI-generated answers expand across Google results, more queries are being resolved directly within search interfaces, reducing the need for clicks even when visibility remains strong.

The gap between visibility and traffic is widening.

Advertising Updates from April 2026

Performance Max is evolving into Google’s default campaign layer

Google continues to expand Performance Max capabilities, including improved asset-level reporting and more structured controls around creative inputs and brand suitability.

While still controversial among advertisers, the direction is consistent: fewer campaign types built for manual optimisation, and more systems designed for structured inputs into automated delivery.

Tik Tok expands ad formats

TikTok is expanding more advanced ad formats and retail-focused placements, tightening the link between attention and purchase.

It seems advertising is moving closer to the moment of intent.

Retails media absorbing performance budgets

Amazon Ads and other retail media networks are continuing to grow share of spend, particularly in performance-driven categories. The Drum reports that retail media is now competing directly with search for lower-funnel investment.

It seems performance is actually being generated, closer to the point of purchase than the point of discovery.

Working with LinkedIn creators

LinkedIn has expanded its creator partnership and sponsorship infrastructure, making it easier for brands to work with creators across content formats rather than just ads.

Analytics Updates from April 2026

Messy Measurement

A growing share of customer journeys now sit inside environments that don’t pass full tracking data back into traditional analytics systems. Examples include AI search interfaces, retail media platforms, and closed ecosystems like Meta and Tik Tok. This means that data is becoming increasingly disconnected.

Incrementality as a measurement lens

There’s a sense of declining trust in platform-reported performance metrics. As attribution becomes less reliable, more teams are moving towards incrementality testing approaches such as geo experiments, holdout groups and modelling techniques.

View From The Den April 2026

As AI-generated content scales across both organic and paid environments, differentiation is becoming harder. This is not because there is too little content, but because there is too much of the same kind of content.

The challenge is no longer output. It’s distinction.

Marketers seem to have less control inside the systems that they’re relying on, yet more responsibility for what goes into the system in the first place. This means that to stand out, we need a greater focus than ever before on audience understanding, distinctive creative, and continual testing.

That’s it for your digital marketing update April 2026. If you missed last month’s roundup of what happened in Digital Marketing in March, you can check it out here.

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Written by

I’m Ellie, founder of the Marketing Den. We’re a marketing consultancy, offering marketing strategy, audits and training. Personally I’ve got more than 20 years experience, leading digital marketing teams, with my most recent role being Head of Digital Marketing for the National Trust. I've recently been awarded 'Digital Woman for Good', and The Marketing Den has been named 'South West Start-Up of the year'.

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