Meta Set To Revolutionise Advertising With Full AI Automation By 2026.
Meta Platforms, the parent company of Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, has unveiled ambitious plans to fully automate its advertising process using artificial intelligence (AI) by the end of 2026. According to a Wall Street Journal report, the initiative will allow brands to create and target advertisements entirely through AI, streamlining the process and potentially reshaping the digital marketing landscape.
With a global user base of 3.43 billion unique active users across its platforms, Meta’s AI-driven tools will enable advertisers to submit a product image and budget, after which the system will generate complete advertisements—including images, videos, and text—while optimising audience targeting on Instagram and Facebook. The technology will also personalise ads in real time based on factors like geolocation, ensuring users see tailored versions of campaigns, such as holiday ads reflecting local weather or destinations.
Mark Zuckerberg, Meta’s CEO, described the move as a “redefinition of the category of advertising,” emphasising the need for AI tools that deliver “measurable results at scale.” He envisions an AI-powered “one-stop shop” where businesses set goals and budgets, leaving the platform to handle creative and logistical aspects. Meta’s first-quarter 2025 earnings reported a 16% year-on-year revenue increase to $42.31 billion, with ad impressions up 5% and a 30% rise in AI-tool usage for ad creation, underscoring the company’s growing reliance on AI to drive its $160 billion advertising revenue, which accounts for over 97% of its income.
The announcement has sent ripples through the advertising industry, with shares of major agencies like WPP, Publicis Groupe, and Omnicom Group falling between 2.2% and 3.8% on Monday, reflecting concerns about AI disrupting traditional roles in creative, planning, and media buying. Smaller businesses, however, stand to benefit, as the tools could democratise advertising by eliminating the need for costly agency services. Alex Schultz, Meta’s Chief Marketing Officer, reassured agencies, stating, “AI will enable agencies and advertisers to focus on creativity that matters,” while highlighting the potential for small and medium-sized businesses to grow using Meta’s platform.
Despite the optimism, industry scepticism persists. Some brands worry about losing creative control and the authenticity of AI-generated ads, while past issues with Meta’s automated systems, such as budget overspending in its Advantage Plus platform, have fuelled concerns about reliability.
Meta’s $64–72 billion investment in AI infrastructure for 2025 signals its commitment to leading the industry’s AI transformation, amid competition from Snap, Pinterest, Reddit, Google, and OpenAI, all of whom are advancing their own AI advertising tools. As Meta pushes towards full automation, the move could redefine digital advertising, offering unprecedented efficiency while raising questions about the future role of human creativity in the industry.

