This week, new data from Statusphere reveals a shift in how micro-influencer content is being treated and how AI is changing the way brands are using that content. This week, Klaviyo said its AI solution is closing the traditional gap between digital marketing and customer service.
And lastly, Packsize said this week that it wrapped up an agreement to acquire the packaging business of Panotec, thereby significantly growing its business.
Statusphere data shows shift in micro-influencer market
Retailers and brands are pouring far more energy and budget money into creator campaigns built for social SEO, a shift that Statusphere says more than doubled in 2025. The company’s new report, “The State of Micro‑Influencer Marketing in 2026,” tracks more than 68,000 creator posts and shows a market in transition, one where micro‑influencer content is treated less like fleeting social chatter and more like a durable discovery asset.
Brands are now optimizing posts for AI answer engines. They are also amplifying creator content as paid ads while creating formats that surface products in search. It’s a strategic pivot, the report’s authors said. And it’s happening fast. “Brands are increasingly treating micro‑influencer content as a long-term discovery asset,” said Kristen Wiley, Statusphere’s chief executive officer and founder. Wiley said the companies winning today are the ones that recognized early how creator content fuels product visibility across AI-driven platforms.
That urgency is reshaping category behavior. Beauty, home goods and CPG/food led the charge in 2025, while TikTok remained the most requested platform for collaborations. In-store creator content delivered stronger engagement, paid amplification surged and social SEO became the fastest-growing campaign goal.
Statusphere is leaning into the momentum, rolling out tools that let brands activate Pinterest creators at scale and repurpose high-performing TikTok and Instagram posts for Pinterest’s 619 million monthly users. The company also said its recent $18 million “Series A” funding is fueling expansion into YouTube Shorts, which is now a critical input for Google’s AI Overviews. There’s also expansion into Amazon, where influencer videos can lift sales by nearly 24 percent.
Statusphere says the brands that close these gaps first will own the next era of product discovery, a landscape already shaped by more than 180,000 creator collaborations and 2.1 billion engagements powered through its platform.
Packsize makes acquisition
Packsize said it wrapped up an agreement to acquire the packaging business of Panotec, which is an Italian manufacturer of high- and low-automation, right-sized packaging machines. Terms of the deal were not disclosed, but Packsize said under the agreement, it iwll will grow its machine portfolio while expanding its combined installed customer base in over 50 countries throughout North America, Europe and beyond.
Brian Reinhart, chief revenue officer of Packsize, said the acquisition “further aligns our go-to-market approach and strengthens our ability to offer more flexibility and choice to businesses looking to optimize packaging operations while reducing waste and cost.”
He said the deal “brings together teams that share a similar innovative vision for the future of right-sized packaging, making us better positioned to accelerate growth and deliver even greater value globally.”
This deal follows the 2025 acquisition of Sparck Technologies, which combined Packsize’s “innovative technology and service model with Sparck’s fit-to-size box systems and best-in-class box-last, and lid-and-tray solutions,” the company said.
Kellen Frey, chief operating officer of Packsize, said the deal for Panotec “strengthens our core technology capabilities and positions us to deliver even more scalable, efficient, right-sized packaging solutions.”
Klaviyo rolls out new AI tools
Boston-based customer relationship management company Klaviyo said it has launched a new pair of artificial intelligence tools designed to bridge the traditional gap between digital marketing and customer service.
The company said it is moving its marketing AI assistant, named Composer, into a public testing phase alongside a set of upgrades to its existing Customer Agent tool. Unlike standard retail platforms where marketing communications and support departments operate independently, Klaviyo said ts two AI systems are built into the same core database, allowing them to instantly share real-time customer feedback and insights to boost overall brand revenue.
The unified system works by creating a continuous loop between promotional outreach and ongoing customer support. When a consumer speaks with the customer agent to resolve an issue or ask a question, the tool logs their specific product preferences and buying signals back into their profile, which Composer can then use to craft targeted email or text campaigns.
Early tests of the technology with consumer brands such as Spanx and Dermalogica helped identify hidden revenue friction points, such as uncovering automated messages within a brand’s library that were accidentally competing for the same shoppers.
