Happy Thursday.
Everyday, a marketer somewhere on this planet will wake up and start calling “revolutionary” something that absolutely isn’t “revolutionary”.
You know what works though? The psychology effect we got for you today.
Reading time: 4 minutes, 33 seconds
We surveyed 150+ marketers. Here’s what they expect from 2026
The results paint a complex picture.
Budgets are frozen—53% expect flat spending next year. Freelancers are polarizing fast into premium experts or getting squeezed out. Email is crushing every other channel for ROI at nearly 90%.
Meanwhile, AI adoption hit 52% daily usage, but there’s a catch: 39% say the output quality is often lower than human work.
Tracking confidence collapsed to just 32%. Teams are stretched thin. And brand building is making a surprising comeback after years of cuts.
The State of Advertising 2026 Report gives you the data-backed insights you need to navigate what’s next—from channel budgets to salary trends to the skills that actually matter.
This isn’t guesswork. It’s the pulse of the industry heading into the efficiency era.
Mimicry Effect

Ever notice yourself crossing your arms right after someone else does?
That’s your mirror neurons firing.
These specialized brain cells make you recognize, internalize, and copy behaviors automatically.
Babies as young as one month old already mimic facial expressions. By their first birthday, they’re imitating complex emotions like joy and anger.
Research by Van Baaren confirms mimicry creates instant rapport. A waitress who verbally repeated customers’ orders received significantly larger tips than when she didn’t.
Another study found that mimicking during negotiations increased deal success from 12.5% to 67%. That’s more than a fivefold jump.
So if mimicry builds trust and drives action, how can we weaponize it?
Three ways to leverage the Mimicry Effect
1) Show people using your product
We mimic those we relate to or admire.
Featuring real customers or niche-relevant creators actively using what you sell will boost your conversion rate.
You should do it in your product pages, ads, checkout pages and whenever it makes sense.
Glossier floods Instagram with user-generated content showing real people applying their products. They repost customer selfies, routines, and reviews across all channels.

The result? 70% of their online sales come from peer recommendations. Viewers see themselves in those posts and subconsciously rehearse doing the same.
2) Mirror your audience’s language
When you speak like your customers, they feel instantly understood. Familiarity breeds trust and trust drives conversions.
Fitness app Freeletics uses gym bro slang like “gains” and “beast mode” across their copy. It feels like a friend is texting you and not a brand trying to sell you stuff.
Slack’s brand guidelines explicitly state they “use language your readers use” — professional enough for experts, straightforward enough for newcomers.

Mine forums, reviews, and support tickets. Steal their exact phrases.
3) Mimic prospects on calls
Maddux research shows mimicking a counterpart’s behavior during negotiations dramatically boosts success rates.
Importantly, none of the participants noticed they were being mimicked. It happens completely below conscious awareness.
Subtly matching someone’s tone, posture, and phrasing makes them feel heard. And that feeling of connection opens wallets.
Match their energy. Mirror their language. Repeat key phrases back.
Your closing rate will thank you.
Stop drowning in AI information overload
Your inbox is flooded with newsletters. Your feed is chaos. Somewhere in that noise are the insights that could transform your work—but who has time to find them?
Replace hours of scattered reading with five focused minutes. While others scramble to keep up, you’ll stay ahead of developments that matter. 500,000+ professionals at top companies have already made this switch.
TIKTOK: The EU is coming for TikTok’s design, saying features like infinite scroll and addictive algorithms break digital safety rules. Regulators may force product changes and could fine TikTok up to 6% of revenue, around $2.1B, if it doesn’t rein in compulsive behavior.
ADVERTISING: Everyone’s talking about Bad Bunny’s performance, but do you know who also delivered a great Super Bowl performance? Ads. Despite the AI era we’re in, the most catchy spots proved that creativity still reigns supreme. This article lists their favorites from this year.
SEARCH: Guess what? People are skipping Google entirely and heading straight to Reddit. They’d rather trust a stranger’s unfiltered review than wade through AI summaries and SEO spam. 80M high-intent users are searching there, so you might want your brand to be there, too.
SOCIAL MEDIA: Big brands are paying creators big bucks to advertise them on social media. John Deere’s Chief Tractor Officer racked up 100M views in his first year because he switched corporate lingo with a TikTok voice. Algorithms want you to talk their language.
INFLUENCER MARKETING: We might never see another Mr Beast level creator. Super personalized platform algorithms have killed the megastar pipeline. The top creator lists have stayed virtually unchanged for years and it’s all about niche creators with small, loyal audiences.
*This is a sponsored post.
ICYMI, last time we looked at the False Uniqueness Effect.
The “Chameleon” Crew
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