AI Boom: Global Cloud Market to Exceed $500 Billion in 2026
Global cloud infrastructure revenue is on track to exceed $500 billion in 2026, after reaching $419 billion last year, according to Synergy Research. The market accelerated to 35 percent growth in Q1 2026, driven in part by demand linked to generative AI.
For European companies, the trend reinforces rising dependence on cloud capacity for AI, analytics and digital commerce. It also keeps pressure on sales and marketing teams to work with scalable data and customer platforms, while cloud vendor concentration remains high across Europe.
Big Three Hold Dominant Lead in Accelerating Cloud Market
AWS, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud together accounted for more than 60 percent of the global cloud infrastructure market in Q1 2026, with AWS at 28 percent, Azure at 21 percent and Google Cloud at 14 percent. Global cloud infrastructure spending rose 35 percent year on year to $129 billion in the quarter. This concentration matters for European buyers and vendors because procurement, compliance and pricing power remain shaped by a few providers. For sales and marketing teams in Europe, the continued AI-driven growth keeps cloud demand strong, but it also raises the importance of targeted positioning against the Big Three.
Interest in Politics Often Ranks Low
Statista reports that, in a survey of 34 countries, politics was among the least frequently named personal interests in many markets. In the US, 24% of respondents said they were interested in politics and current events, while Germany ranked higher than most countries surveyed.
For European sales and marketing teams, the result suggests that political messaging may reach only a limited audience unless it is tied to issues people already care about. In Europe, broad content strategies may perform better when they connect public affairs with travel, health, or lifestyle interests rather than politics alone.
Brand America 2025
Ipsos published “Brand America 2025,” which says shoppers from China to Brazil may be rethinking their relationship with American brands. For European marketers, the report signals that brand origin can influence trust and purchase intent beyond the US, which may affect positioning for US and local competitors alike.
Ipsos Consumer Tracker
Ipsos said 94% of Americans noticed higher gas prices, 63% are driving less, and 73% are combining errands into fewer trips. The findings matter for European consumer brands because fuel-cost pressure often shifts spending toward essentials and can weaken demand for discretionary categories, especially in markets where transport costs remain sensitive.
Mystery Calling: Dialing up your contact center performance
Ipsos published a new Views paper on mystery calling and contact center performance. It says poor phone service can damage customer satisfaction and retention, with 48% of affected customers dissatisfied and three in ten of those saying they would use the company less or stop using it. For European businesses, this underlines the importance of contact center quality in loyalty and revenue, especially where phone support remains a key part of the customer journey.