Published on 27th March 2026
By Stefan Pollack of The Pollack Group
Every year, the USC Annenberg Global Communication Report gives us a snapshot of where our industry is heading. This year, it does something more consequential. It reveals the subtle shifts in behavior that are quietly redrawing the boundaries of our field. Not with noise or spectacle, but in ways that will fundamentally reshape how we operate as communicators.
The theme of this year’s report, “A Quiet Shift,” is exactly right. What’s unfolding in PR today is a steady, consequential evolution.
For years, communications have been defined by expansion. More channels. More voices. More expectations for companies to speak out. That phase is now giving way to something more measured. The 2026 report signals a new phase: the era of calculated communication. Organizations are no longer asking, “What should we say?” They are asking: should we say anything at all? Is this worth the risk? Does this directly serve our business? This is a profound shift from expression to precision.
One of the report’s most important findings is that polarization is no longer viewed as temporary. It is now the environment we operate in. More than 80% of PR professionals believe the level of political and social polarization is extremely or very high, and likely to stay that way. This matters because it redefines the job. Communications now operate in a constate state of heightened risk, rather than defined cycles. Every message now carries consequence. Every statement can be reframed, challenged or amplified in ways we cannot always predict. In this environment, communication now extends beyond clarity. It requires control, discipline and foresight
This is the tension at the heart of this year’s report: 91% of PR professionals say polarization has increased the importance of communications within their organizations. At the same time, companies are becoming significantly more selective in what they say
PR now sits closer to the C-suite. But the mandate has shifted. The role has expanded beyond amplification to include advising when restraint is the better course. That is a fundamentally different mandate.
Perhaps the most striking shift in the data is the sharp decline in support for companies engaging in social issues not directly tied to their business. Just a few years ago, nearly 90% of PR professionals believed companies had a responsibility to take a stand. Today, that number has dropped to just over half. Purpose remains important, but it is being applied with greater discipline. Organizations are now asking:
In other words, purpose without proximity is now risk.
One of the most telling insights from this year’s report is the growing acceptance of silence as a legitimate communications strategy. More than 40% of PR professionals, and more than half of in-house teams, believe that in certain situations, saying nothing is the smartest move. A decade ago, this would have been unthinkable. We built an industry on responsiveness, engagement and visibility. Recognizing that not every moment requires a voice; some moments demand restraint. The challenge is knowing which is which.
The tactical implications of this shift are unmistakable. Communications teams are becoming more deliberate across the board:
This reflects a more deliberate and intentional approach to communications. PR is evolving from a storytelling function into a hybrid discipline: Strategy, risk management and executive counsel
Another important finding: PR professionals and the public are not always aligned on what matters most. While communicators tend to focus on social and cultural issues, the public places greater emphasis on economic concerns like inflation and affordability. This creates risk. When messaging is driven by internal perspective rather than external reality, it misses the mark. The opportunity for our industry is clear: shift from issue-driven communication to impact-driven communication.
In a fragmented media environment, trust is consolidating. Traditional, credible media outlets, national and international publications, financial media, and trade press, continue to command the highest levels of trust. Meanwhile, trust in influencers, social media and AI-generated platforms remain significantly lower. For communicators, this reinforces a critical point: where you communicate matters as much as what you communicate.
Taken together, these findings signal a redefinition of our role. The role now spans, message creation, media strategy, brand amplification, executive counsel, risk navigation and translating complexity for stakeholders
If there is one takeaway from this year’s report, it is that communications is not becoming quieter. It is becoming more intentional. The organizations that succeed will not be those that say the most. They will be the ones that say the right thing at the right time, for the right reasons, and just as importantly, know when not to say anything at all.
The role of communications has sharpened. In a world where every word carries weight, the value of PR is no longer measured by volume, it is measured by judgment. And that may be the most important shift of all.
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