March was a big month for social media platform updates. Here are the most notable and what they mean for brands.
1. YouTube upgrades creator partnerships with AI-powered discovery
YouTube introduced Creator Partnerships, an updated version of BrandConnect, which is now integrated into YouTube Studio and Google Ads. Powered by Gemini, it helps brands find and activate creators using audience data, brand mentions, and growth signals, with built-in tools to turn creator content into paid media.
What this means for brands:
- Creator discovery just got smarter and more centralized. With Gemini handling matching across 3 million creators, finding the right voice for a campaign is faster and more data-driven than before. Brands should explore the platform early before competition for top creators heats up.
- Creator content now works harder as paid media. The partnership's boost format lets brands amplify organic creator content across Shorts and in-stream, with early data showing a 30% average increase in conversion lift for Shorts campaigns.
- YouTube's long-tail view window is a real advantage. 40% of a video's views happen more than a month after it goes live, meaning creator partnerships on YouTube keep delivering well after a campaign ends. Factor that into your ROI measurement.
2. YouTube Launches Top Sports Podcast Lineup for Advertisers
YouTube is making it easier for brands to advertise alongside sports podcast content with the launch of the Top Sports Podcast Lineup. The curated lineup helps brands align with YouTube Select sports podcasters, such as New Heights and The Rich Eisen Show.
What this means for brands:
- Sports conversation on YouTube is massive and growing. With 8.5 billion views of sports podcasts in a year, this is a scaled channel. If your audience follows sports, this lineup gives you a direct, brand-safe entry point.
- The post-game conversation is where young fans live. Over half of 14 through 24-year-olds watch athlete content weekly. For brands trying to reach younger sports audiences, podcast adjacency is increasingly more relevant than in-game placements alone.
- Curated lineups reduce brand safety risk. YouTube Select placements are vetted inventory, making this a lower-risk entry point for brands cautious about podcast advertising broadly.
3. TikTok rolls out new high-impact ad formats
TikTok used the IAB NewFronts to roll out four new high-impact ad formats to give brands more prominent, culturally aligned placements.
Logo Takeover gives brands exclusive placement at app launch. Prime Time delivers up to three sequential ads within a 15-minute window during key moments. TopReach combines TopView and TopFeed for maximum one-day reach. The Pulse suite adds Pulse Mentions, which place ads next to relevant conversations, and Pulse Tastemakers, which align brands with selected creators.
What this means for brands:
- First impressions just got more premium. Logo Takeover is as high-visibility as it gets on TikTok. It's best suited for major launches, tentpole campaigns, or moments where brand association with the platform itself carries weight.
- Sequential storytelling is now possible at scale. Prime Time lets brands run a narrative arc within a single session, not just a single ad. It’s like a mini commercial break you control.
- TopReach simplifies big reach buys. Bundling TopView and TopFeed into a single purchase simplifies the process for brands looking to dominate visibility on a specific day.
- Pulse gets more precise. Pulse Mentions and Pulse Tastemakers give brands two new ways to show up contextually, either next to relevant conversations or alongside handpicked creator content.
4. TikTok introduces “Watch it. Love it. Want it.”
TikTok for Business has introduced a new global positioning designed to capture how the platform moves users from entertainment to action in a single session. The tagline signals that discovery, consideration, and purchase are happening in the same place.
What this means for brands:
- TikTok is making a direct case against split-platform strategies. The pitch is that awareness and conversion no longer need to live on separate channels. Brands still treating TikTok as a top-of-funnel-only play should revisit that assumption.
- Search on TikTok deserves a real strategy. With billions of daily searches and 40%+ year-over-year growth, TikTok search is no longer a secondary behavior. Optimize content for discovery, not only the For You feed.
- Community drives repurchase, not just awareness. TikTok users are 1.6x more likely to buy again from brands they can interact with through comments or co-creation. Engagement isn't a vanity metric here. It’s a retention tool.
5. TikTok expands into radio and podcasts with iHeartMedia
TikTok and iHeartMedia have launched TikTok Radio. It’s now live on the iHeartRadio app and 28 U.S. stations, blending TikTok trends, creators, and music into an audio format.
They also introduced the TikTok Podcast Network, featuring creator-hosted shows across culture, fashion, and sports, with GEICO as the exclusive launch partner.
What this means for brands:
- TikTok is moving into audio: Radio and podcasts extend TikTok’s reach beyond the feed. If you invest in audio, track how creator-led inventory develops here.
- Creator-led podcast inventory is opening up: The network is new with a built-in audience. Early sponsors will face less competition and stronger positioning.
- Campaigns can span multiple channels: Content now flows across TikTok, radio, and podcasts. Plan activations that run across all three at once.
- GEICO's early move is a signal. Exclusive launch partnerships on emerging creator networks tend to set the tone for who "owns" that space culturally. If your brand plays in lifestyle, music, or entertainment, it's worth tracking what this network looks like in six months.
6. LinkedIn Live Drops Spontaneous Streaming Starting June 22
LinkedIn is updating its Live product to require all live events to be scheduled in advance, effective June 22, 2026. Spontaneous livestreams will no longer be supported, though creators can still schedule events minutes before going live. The platform also requires a third-party streaming tool, with partners including Restream, Socialive, StreamYard, and Switcher Studio.
What this means for brands:
- Spontaneous LinkedIn Lives are going away. If your team has used LinkedIn Live for reactive or impromptu moments, that workflow needs to change before June 22. Build scheduling into your process now.
- The bar for production is quietly rising. Requiring advance scheduling and third-party tools signals LinkedIn is pushing Live toward more polished, intentional content. Treat LinkedIn Live more like a webinar than a casual stream.
- Planning ahead creates a promotional window. Scheduled events can be promoted on and off LinkedIn before they go live, which is an opportunity to build anticipation and drive registrations that spontaneous streams never allow.
7. Instagram Makes Reels Shoppable with New Product Tagging for Creators
Instagram is rolling out a new "Add Products" feature that lets creators tag up to 30 items in Reels before posting. Creators can paste a product URL or tag items from a brand’s Meta Commerce catalog. Viewers can tap to purchase directly, and eligible creators earn affiliate commissions. Tagged content also appears in the Partnership Ads Hub, increasing visibility to brands. The feature is live in select markets, with broader rollout underway.
What this means for brands:
- Reels are becoming a direct sales channel. With product tagging now built into the share flow, creator content can drive purchase intent and conversion in one seamless step. Make sure your catalog is current and accessible on Meta.
- Your organic creator content now has a commerce layer. Any creator tagging your products will have that content automatically surfaced in the Partnership Ads Hub, giving you a ready-made pipeline of shoppable UGC to boost as paid ads.
- Affiliate programs just became more attractive to creators. With Amazon and Shopee integrations coming soon directly inside Instagram, creators have more earning potential, which means more incentive to tag your products organically.
8. Meta Unveils AI-Powered Ad Tools for Reels, Creator Partnerships, and Video at Scale
Meta announced AI-powered advertising tools designed to help brands show up faster and tap into creator culture more effectively.
Updates include expanded Reels Trending Ads tied to major moments, a redesigned Partnership Ads Hub with improved creator discovery, and new generative video tools like avatar-based UGC, AI voiceover, and catalog-to-video automation.
A new reserve buying option also lets brands capture a high share of attention during key events.
What this means for brands:
- Speed is now a competitive advantage: Reels Trending Ads tie placements to moments like F1 and Black Friday, and reserve buying locks in high-visibility inventory for up to 24 hours. Plan around key events and move early.
- Creator partnerships are easier to scale: A redesigned Partnership Ads Hub and improved marketplace filtering make it faster to find and activate creators. Campaigns running across Facebook and Instagram are seeing stronger conversion results.
- AI video is no longer optional. From catalog-to-video automation to avatar-led UGC-style ads, Meta is building a full creative production suite inside Ads Manager. Brands that feed the system diverse video assets will benefit most, with early testing showing a 10% CTR lift and 8% CVR increase for AI-generated video campaigns.
- Localization at scale is finally within reach. AI voiceover translation and single-step creative translation in Ads Manager remove one of the biggest barriers to global campaigns. If you're not already thinking in terms of the multiverse, now is the time.
9. Meta Introduces AI Shopping Tools, One-Tap Checkout, and Expanded Creator Affiliate Programs
Meta announced new commerce features to shorten the path from discovery to purchase. Creators can tag products in Facebook posts and Instagram Reels and earn commissions through expanded affiliate partnerships with Amazon, eBay, Temu, and more.
Meta is also testing an AI layer that surfaces reviews, brand details, and recommendations after an ad click, along with one-tap checkout powered by PayPal and Stripe, with Adyen and Shopify coming next.
What this means for brands:
- Creator content is becoming a direct sales channel. Give creators access to your product catalog and treat their content like a storefront.
- The path to purchase is getting shorter. One-tap checkout removes a major drop-off point. Brands using PayPal or Stripe should prioritize setting up this integration early.
- AI is doing more of the selling for you. Meta's new post-click AI surfaces the product details that typically live on your website. Make sure your catalog data, reviews, and pricing are up to date.
- Retail media advertisers get more control. Product set optimization lets RMNs specify exactly which products are promoted, with early results showing a 17% lower cost per purchase than in standard campaigns.
10. Meta Brings Manus AI Agent to Ads Manager, Instagram, and WhatsApp Business
Meta is testing Manus, an autonomous AI agent that connects across Ads Manager, Instagram, Creator Marketplace, and WhatsApp Business to automate workflows and reduce manual work.
What this means for brands:
- Reporting is less manual. Manus can automatically turn your Ads Manager data into presentation-ready outputs. This means less time in spreadsheets and more time acting on insights.
- Creator discovery gets a speed boost. With Manus evaluating audience alignment across 2 million creators, what used to take hours of research could become a quick, guided workflow.
- Instagram content management is more unified. Brands juggling multiple tools for creation, scheduling, and analytics can now run the entire loop through a single connector.
- Small businesses get a powerful WhatsApp copilot. For lean teams, having an AI agent handle client responses and project planning inside WhatsApp is a meaningful operational upgrade.
11. Meta Overhauls Ad Attribution to Better Reflect How Social Ads Actually Work
Meta is updating how it measures ad performance. Click-through attribution will now count only link clicks, removing likes, saves, and shares to better align with tools like Google Analytics. Those actions are shifting to a newly named “engage-through attribution.” Meta is also shortening the engaged-view window for video ads from 10 to 5 seconds, based on data showing that many conversions occur within the first few seconds.
What this means for brands:
- Your numbers will look different, not worse. Reported click conversions may drop once link clicks are the only thing counted. Understand the change before flagging it as a performance issue internally.
- Engage-through attribution is now worth paying attention to. Saves, shares, and likes are moving into their own measurement bucket. If you've been ignoring view-based attribution, now is the time to start tracking it.
- Third-party tools are catching up. Meta is partnering with Northbeam and Triple Whale to incorporate both clicks and views into their models, which should improve cross-platform reporting consistency.
- Reels measurement is getting tighter. The 5-second engaged-view window better reflects actual viewer behavior. Prioritize strong hooks in the first two seconds of every video ad.
12. Threads Now Supports App Ads and Reply Moderation Through the Marketing API
Threads, now at over 400 million monthly users, is expanding its ad stack. App Ads are available globally via the Marketing API, supporting installs and conversions with existing image, video, or carousel assets. Brands also get reply moderation tools to view, hide, and respond to top-level ad replies directly through the API.
What this means for brands:
- Threads is now a viable app growth channel. With APP_INSTALLS and conversion objectives now supported, mobile-first brands can extend existing app campaigns to Threads without building new creative from scratch.
- Comment management on ads is no longer a blind spot. Reply moderation gives brands visibility and control over the conversation on their Threads ads, a gap that has existed since the platform launched ads.
- Low barrier to entry. Existing image, video, and carousel assets work in the Threads feed, so there's no reason to delay testing the channel while waiting on new creative.
13. Pinterest Launches "Promote a Pin" to Make Boosting Content Simple for Anyone
Pinterest is launching Promote a Pin, a self-serve tool that lets anyone boost content without ad experience. Powered by its Taste Graph AI, it automatically targets users likely to engage or convert, with flexible budgets and a simple setup. It’s rolling out in the US over the next few weeks. Pinterest is also testing a pre-built Performance+ catalog campaign for Shopify merchants in Ads Manager.
What this means for brands:
- The barrier to paid Pinterest is lower. Promote a Pin is designed for users with no media buying experience, which means more competition for eyeballs from creators and small businesses. Established brands should make sure their Pinterest presence and creative are strong enough to stand out.
- Pinterest's commercial intent is a real differentiator. With over 80 billion monthly searches and half of them commercial in nature, promoted content here reaches people who are already in a shopping mindset.
- Shopify merchants have a fast path to paid campaigns. The pre-built Performance+ catalog setup removes another layer of friction for e-commerce brands already on Shopify. If that's you, it's worth testing before inventory costs rise.
14. Pinterest Launches Its First Shoppable Streaming Series on Roku
Pinterest has launched Bring My Pinterest to Life, a six-episode lifestyle series streaming free on The Roku Channel across North America and the UK. The show pairs real users with creator-hosts to turn Pinterest boards into real-world makeovers across home, style, and small business. Each episode includes QR codes that link to shoppable boards featuring partners like Wayfair, eos, and Michaels.
What this means for brands:
- Pinterest is building a new content-to-commerce funnel through CTV. The QR code integration turns passive Roku viewers into active Pinterest shoppers. For brands with strong visual products, this is a new path from screen to purchase.
- Shoppable editorial content is expanding. Pinterest is also launching over 100 actionable boards with brand integrations baked in. Getting your products featured in editorial board content is now a legitimate media opportunity.
- The couch-to-cart moment is here on Pinterest, too. YouTube has been making this case for TV shopping for a while. Pinterest is now entering that conversation with a content-first approach that feels native to how its users already behave.
15. Snapchat Introduces Total Snap Takeovers and New Shoppable Ad Formats
Takeovers place a brand in the first ad slot across every tab in a session. New shopping features include Offers embedded in ads, Multi-Segment Dynamic Product Ads, and tests for vertical carousel and product-level video ads. Sponsored Snaps are also gaining traction, with purchase-driven clicks up 17% quarter over quarter.
What this means for brands:
- Takeovers on Snapchat now span the whole session. Total Snap Takeovers give you first visibility across the app. Use them for launches or moments that require full attention.
- Snapchat is quietly building a serious commerce stack. Snapchat is adding real lower-funnel infrastructure. Triple Whale's 2025 benchmark report, flagging Snapchat as the highest-ROAS platform across ecommerce, is worth taking seriously.
- Multi-format campaigns significantly outperform single-format ones. Unaided ad recall was 30 percentage points higher when brands ran across Sponsored Snaps, AR, and video versus video alone. If you're only running one format on Snapchat, you're leaving performance on the table.
- The audience is more receptive than you might expect. Three in four Snapchat users say time on the platform feels meaningful, and those users are 69% more likely to act on relevant ads. The attention-quality argument here is worth factoring into how you allocate your budget.
16. Snapchat Makes the Case for B2B Marketing with New Audience Research
Snapchat commissioned a GWI survey of over 2,254 US professionals aged 18-45, including decision-makers, founders, and SMB owners. The data shows users are more engaged with business trends, more likely to run or start a business, and often look to social platforms for ideas and tools.
What this means for brands:
- B2B buyers aren’t only on LinkedIn. The research shows that decision-makers and entrepreneurs are active on Snapchat in personal, off-hours contexts, where they remain commercially minded and open to influence.
- Creator-led B2B content has a real audience here. Snapchatters in this study specifically want to hear from experts, CEOs, and creators on entrepreneurship and business tools. Thought leadership and founder storytelling could land differently on Snapchat than on more formal platforms.
- SMB and e-commerce brands should take note. Among SMB owners on Snapchat, e-commerce and freelance consulting are the most common business categories, making it a natural fit for tools, software, and services targeting that segment.
17. Snapchat Launches AI Clips in Lens Studio, Turning Photos into Five-Second Videos
Snapchat is introducing AI Clips in Lens Studio, a photo-to-video format that turns images into five-second AI videos. Developers control the creative setup, while users generate clips with a tap. The feature is available to Lens+ subscribers and supports payouts for eligible developers.
What this means for brands:
- Branded AI Lenses just got more cinematic. AI Clips give brands a new format to create immersive, shareable moments tied to a product or campaign. Think virtual try-ons, red carpet moments, or product reveal experiences that feel personal and instantly shareable.
- The closed-prompt design keeps brand experiences on-message. Unlike open-ended AI tools, developers control the creative direction entirely. That means branded Lenses stay consistent, which matters for campaign integrity and visual identity.
- More developers will build premium experiences: Payouts tied to AI Clips will increase supply. This is a good time to partner early and experiment with custom formats.