All writing

Martech Is a River, Not a Lake

Discover the evolving landscape of marketing technology in 2026, highlighting key trends, emerging products, and the significance of context in strategy.

The marketing technology market is a river, not a lake, in 2026. That's the takeaway from the new "State of Martech 2026" report from Scott Brinker and Frans Riemersma. And yes, they've done it again — worked their way through the now 15,505 products they've analyzed in this market.

Although the total product count grew just 0.79% compared to 2025, it would be a mistake to read the market as "flat." Beneath the surface, a revolution is clearly underway: 1,488 new products have entered, while a full 1,367 products have been removed.

This level of churn reveals a market adapting at pace. The clear winners and losers across categories tell a compelling story:

On the rise:

  • CMS & Web Experience Management (+21.4%) is booming as websites now have to speak to AI search assistants and agent browsers.
  • E-commerce Platforms & Carts (+19.9%) are being pushed by AI-mediated discovery, which raises the bar for real-time personalization.
  • iPaaS/Data Integration & Tag Management (+8.0%) is critical for orchestrating AI agents across systems.
  • Marketing Automation is staging a quiet comeback, transforming from rule-based to agentic.

In retreat (or restructuring):

  • Content Marketing is the big loser (-37 net products) after AI models commoditized core functionality, and large platforms like HubSpot rapidly embedded GenAI.
  • Sales Automation Enablement & Intelligence (-23 net products) is correcting after a period of explosive growth.
  • CRM, however, is approaching equilibrium (+2 net products), signaling a mature category finding its footing.

Brinker and Riemersma's "Head, torso, tail" theory is particularly interesting: The large platforms (Head) are consolidating by embedding AI. Mid-sized players (Torso) are being squeezed from both sides. And new, AI-powered niche solutions (Tail) are sprouting up as AI lowers the cost of building. Their view is that 2026 is just a pause, not the peak of this cycle.

"Content was king. Context is the Monarch." This punchline from the report sums it up perfectly. It's about the ability to connect Company Context, Customer Context, and Systems Context to create "Golden Context." To me, that means a well-built infrastructure — with HubSpot as the nerve center, for example — is absolutely critical.

Have you experienced this "metabolism" in your own tech stack, and how are you navigating this landscape?

Next step

Thirty minutes to see if we're a fit.

Bring the messy version. We'll sketch what a good engagement looks like, or not — either way you leave with something useful.