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Publicis Groupe acquires AdgeAI to boost creative performance

Publicis Groupe has acquired AdgeAI, an artificial intelligence-powered creative measurement and analytics startup, as the global advertising conglomerate deepens its bet on AI-driven marketing performance. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.

The acquisition brings AdgeAI’s predictive technology into Publicis’ global production platform, giving the group the ability to help clients forecast which creative and video assets are likely to perform well — and to do so earlier in the campaign lifecycle rather than after the fact. The move is a direct response to a growing tension in the marketing industry: the generative AI boom has made it easier than ever to produce content at scale, while the pressure on chief marketing officers to demonstrate measurable returns has never been heavier.

AdgeAI’s platform analyses creative elements to assess their potential impact on audience engagement and conversion, offering marketers a more granular and forward-looking window into campaign performance. Its client roster has included Procter & Gamble, Meta, and Tula Skincare. Publicis is positioning the deal as an expansion of its real-time predictive measurement capabilities from the media space into creative and content — a distinction the group sees as increasingly critical.

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“In the AI era, brands don’t simply need more content,” said Publicis CEO Arthur Sadoun. “They need to know what works, and crucially, why — in order to immediately scale their creative messaging across audiences, markets and platforms.” Sadoun described the acquisition as bridging the gap between instinct and proven performance, turning creative measurement from a retrospective exercise into a forward-looking capability.

The deal fits a broader pattern at Publicis, which has been using acquisitions to strengthen its AI capabilities. The group acquired identity solutions firm Lotame last year as part of its data-driven marketing strategy, and has stated its ambition to become what executives call the “most valuable partner” for clients navigating the AI transition. Publicis reported organic revenue growth of 5.9 percent year-on-year to 3.87 billion euros in the fourth quarter of 2025, beating analyst expectations.

Sadoun has nonetheless been candid about the limitations of AI adoption in marketing, noting on a recent earnings call that the technology is “difficult to scale, expensive to put in place and fails to deliver measurable value in 95% of cases.” The AdgeAI acquisition is in part an acknowledgment of that gap — and an attempt to close it.

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