By Digiday Editors | May 7, 2026
As the dust settles on Miami Beach following the conclusion of POSSIBLE 2026, the marketing and advertising industry is left to digest a week defined by rapid technological maturation and bold international expansion plans. With over 7,500 industry leaders, brand executives, and agency innovators in attendance, the event underscored a pivotal shift: artificial intelligence has moved from the periphery of “experimental buzz” to the foundational infrastructure of the modern marketing stack.
The conference, which has quickly cemented its reputation as a premier summit for the advertising ecosystem, served as the backdrop for major announcements, including the official expansion of the POSSIBLE brand into Europe.
The Lisbon Expansion: A New Chapter for POSSIBLE
The most significant organizational news to emerge from Miami was the official confirmation that the POSSIBLE conference is heading to Europe. Founders and ownership have set their sights on Lisbon, Portugal, for October 2027.
While specific logistical details remain under wraps, Christian Muche, co-founder and president of POSSIBLE, and Mark Shashoua, CEO of The Hyve Group (the parent company of the conference), confirmed that the European edition is intended to mirror the high-impact, networking-heavy atmosphere of the Miami event, albeit with a distinct cultural flavor.
Beyond the Convention Center
In an exclusive interview during the event, Muche hinted that the Lisbon experience would deviate from the traditional, sterile environment of a massive convention center. "We are looking to create a space that fosters genuine connection," Muche noted, suggesting that the team is prioritizing atmospheric venues that encourage collaboration rather than the rigid, partitioned nature of standard trade show halls.
For the industry, this signals a commitment to the "experience-first" model that POSSIBLE has pioneered. As the global marketing community grows increasingly fragmented, the need for a cohesive, centralized European hub has become apparent, and stakeholders are already speculating on how the Lisbon venue will integrate with the city’s burgeoning tech ecosystem.
Chronology: From Miami to the Global Stage
To understand the trajectory of the POSSIBLE event, one must look at its rapid ascent since its inception.
- Early 2024–2025: POSSIBLE establishes itself as the "go-to" event for the convergence of marketing and technology, focusing on high-level networking and curated, structured meetings.
- April 2026: The 2026 summit in Miami Beach attracts 7,500 participants, marking a record attendance.
- May 2026: During the summit, leadership announces the strategic expansion into Europe, with Lisbon selected as the 2027 host city.
- October 2027: The inaugural POSSIBLE Lisbon is scheduled to take place, aiming to bridge the Atlantic divide for the global advertising community.
The AI Imperative: Moving from Concept to Concrete Results
The defining theme of this year’s summit was the pragmatism surrounding generative AI. While last year’s discussions were filled with speculation, 2026 has been marked by a focus on "concrete results."
The Brand Perspective: GoGo SqueeZ
Carolina Cespedes, SVP and General Manager at GoGo SqueeZ (part of the Bel Group), provided a clear window into how legacy brands are approaching this transition. For Cespedes, attending POSSIBLE was less about trend-spotting and more about benchmarking. "We are looking for insights on how other companies are using generative AI in ways that demonstrably drive results," she stated. The focus has shifted from "Can we use AI?" to "How does this AI deployment impact our bottom line and consumer engagement metrics?"
The Agency Perspective: Kepler’s Full-Funnel Pivot
For agencies, the pressure is even higher. Remy Stiles, Global CEO of Kepler, emphasized that the firm is operating under a mandate of speed. As Kepler transitions from a performance-oriented roots to a full-funnel agency, AI is the engine powering that transformation. Stiles noted that the agency’s internal philosophy is to "move fast," acknowledging that those who dither on AI integration risk becoming obsolete in a landscape where creative and media are being hyper-personalized in real-time.
The Ad-Tech Perspective: Clinch and the "Rope Bridge" Metaphor
Oz Etzioni, co-founder of the ad-tech firm Clinch, provided one of the most vivid metaphors of the week. He compared the current state of marketing infrastructure to a fraying rope bridge. "The volume of creative and media assets that marketers must handle today is staggering," Etzioni explained. "If we don’t upgrade our structural supports—our automated workflows and AI-driven asset management—the bridge will collapse." Clinch’s presence at the conference was defined by its mission to provide those necessary structural repairs before the industry reaches a breaking point.
Supporting Data: The Anatomy of a Successful Summit
The success of POSSIBLE 2026 was not accidental; it was engineered through a rigorous focus on attendee demographics and interaction quality.
Balancing the Ecosystem
One of the primary complaints about modern industry conferences is the "vendor-to-marketer" imbalance. Mark Shashoua, CEO of The Hyve Group, addressed this directly. Through the implementation of a highly structured, data-driven meeting setup, the organizers maintained a deliberate ratio of brands to vendors. This ensures that when a brand executive—like those from the Bel Group—attends, they are not overwhelmed by unsolicited sales pitches but are instead engaged in high-value, relevant conversations.
The 7,500-Attendee Milestone
With 7,500 attendees, the event reached a scale that creates a "critical mass" of decision-makers. The diversity of the audience—ranging from creative directors and data scientists to CMOs and CEOs—allowed for a rare cross-pollination of ideas. Data from the event floor suggests that the structured meeting format resulted in thousands of formal introductions that would have otherwise required months of cold outreach.
Official Responses and Strategic Implications
The leadership at POSSIBLE, specifically Muche and Shashoua, view the 2026 event as a successful proof-of-concept for the future of the conference series.
Muche’s Philosophy: Infrastructure, Not Innovation
"AI is no longer a separate topic," Christian Muche remarked during his keynote. "It is part of the infrastructure." By treating AI as a foundational layer, POSSIBLE is pushing the industry to stop debating the "ethics of AI" in isolation and start debating the "application of AI" in business strategy. This shift in tone is significant; it suggests that the industry has collectively moved past the fear of AI and into the phase of industrial implementation.
Shashoua’s Focus: Quality Over Quantity
Shashoua’s comments on the Hyve Group’s operational strategy highlight a move away from the "bigger is better" trade show mentality. By prioritizing the quality of the interactions over the sheer volume of floor space, the organizers have effectively created a boutique experience at a massive scale. This strategy is likely to be the template for the Lisbon expansion.
The Implications for the Industry
As the industry looks toward the remainder of 2026 and into 2027, the takeaways from POSSIBLE are clear:
- Consolidation of Purpose: Agencies are rapidly evolving into full-service entities, driven by the need to manage AI-generated creative and data-driven media simultaneously.
- Structural Fragility: As pointed out by leaders like Oz Etzioni, the current marketing workflow is under significant strain. The next 18 months will be defined by an arms race to build more resilient, automated systems that can handle the sheer volume of output required by modern digital marketing.
- Global Connectivity: The decision to move to Lisbon in 2027 signals that the American-centric model of marketing conferences is expanding. The European market, with its unique regulatory environment (such as the EU AI Act) and distinct consumer base, will necessitate a new dialogue on how to balance innovation with compliance.
Conclusion
POSSIBLE 2026 was a mirror reflecting a fast-changing industry. The energy in Miami was not one of panic, but of intense, focused evolution. Whether it is the expansion into Lisbon or the pivot toward concrete AI application, the industry is clearly moving toward a more structured, efficient, and globalized future. For those who were in attendance, the message was simple: the bridge is being rebuilt, and the work starts now.






