Singapore – Brands across Asia-Pacific are being urged to prioritise bold creativity, build trust, and harness technological transformation to navigate unprecedented cultural shifts, market disruptions, and evolving consumer expectations, according to a report by Havas Red.
The report highlights trends expected to redefine communications across the region.
One key trend is the growing importance of crisis readiness, which is becoming a core competency for communicators as geopolitical tensions, climate volatility, and economic uncertainty continue to impact APAC markets.
Synthetic research is also emerging as a standard practice, with AI-driven audience simulations accelerating campaign planning and stress-testing, allowing brands to respond quickly to APAC’s fragmented consumer landscape.
In markets where trust is fragile and misinformation is widespread, transparency and authenticity have become critical brand values. Brands that demonstrate these qualities are more likely to win consumer loyalty.
Boldness has also become a new benchmark. From experiential activations in Australia to influencer-led campaigns across Southeast Asia, brands are increasingly pushing creative boundaries to cut through content fatigue.
Another notable trend is the shift of consumers toward private digital spaces, such as WeChat groups, Discord, and Telegram. This demonstrates the rising importance of closed communities, where brands can focus on authentic engagement within niche groups rather than broad public feeds.
The report cites APAC examples of boldness and innovation, including Wise’s “Fleece Free FX” activation at Bondi Beach in Australia. The surreal pop-up featured live sheep and theatrical stunts to dramatise hidden bank fees, showing how bold ideas can turn brand truths into cultural conversation.
Havas Red also highlights dialect-first content trends in Southeast Asia. From Cebuano hashtags in the Philippines to regional dialect humour on TikTok in Indonesia, brands are embracing lo-fi, creator-led storytelling to resonate authentically with local audiences.
The use of closed community strategies is gaining traction, with brands investing in WeChat and Telegram micro-groups to foster intimacy and loyalty within fandoms, moving beyond mass posting to meaningful participation.
Finally, the report points to a major shift in discoverability. Brands are moving from traditional SEO to Generative Engine Optimisation (GEO) to remain visible in AI-driven environments. At the same time, raw, creator-led storytelling and intentional influence from niche voices are challenging legacy media dominance across APAC.
Steve Fontanot, commercial managing director APAC at HAVAS Red, said, “The Asia-Pacific region is wonderfully diverse, with a lot of contrasts – hyper-connected yet privacy-conscious, tech-driven yet deeply human.”
He continued, “Our 2026 predictions show that success will come to brands that embrace bold creativity, invest in trust and adapt to technologies like generative AI without losing cultural nuance and human intelligence. Now in its ninth year, this report from Havas Red brings together the brightest minds in our global network, and we’re pleased to share it once again with the world.”
