There has never been this much content. There has never been this little attention. In an oversaturated digital ecosystem—where thousands of new pieces are published every second—the true scarce asset is no longer content, but the ability to capture and retain people’s attention. Today, the attention economy is redefining the rules of marketing.
According to the WARC Attention Economy Report, attention has become the primary battleground for brands. The study highlights that “attention is now one of the most limited and valuable resources in modern marketing,” in a context where consumers are exposed to thousands of stimuli daily and develop increasingly sophisticated filters to ignore them.
The challenge is not only saturation—it’s competition. Brands no longer compete solely with other brands, but with the entire world of entertainment: platforms like Netflix, TikTok, YouTube, independent creators, and even memes. As WARC notes, “brands compete in an ecosystem where commercial content must rival content designed purely for entertainment.”
This shift forces a strategic rethink. It is no longer enough to simply be present—content must be relevant, culturally connected, and designed to deliver immediate value. Data shows that sustained attention is directly linked to stronger brand outcomes, including ad recall, purchase intent, and long-term brand equity.
In this new landscape, the key question is no longer how much content you produce, but whether it truly deserves someone’s attention. Because in 2026, attention is not just a KPI—it is the most valuable currency in marketing.
Source: WARC – Attention Economy Report
Tomilli
