
Adobe Summit Recap: Here’s What You Need to Know
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Book a Meeting With Code and TheoryBy the Code and Theory Enterprise Experience Transformation Team
March 24, 2025
As the lights went down on another inspirational Adobe Summit, there was no shortage of announcements. To catch you up, we’ve pulled together the key new announcements followed by the unavoidable, emerging themes.
For starters, Adobe unveiled a suite of innovations designed to bridge the gap between creativity, marketing and AI-driven automation, all with the goal of delivering personalized experiences at scale.
One of the most interesting announcements? Adobe Experience Platform Agent Orchestrator
— a game-changer for businesses looking to seamlessly manage AI agents across Adobe and third-party ecosystems. It’s designed to bring intelligence, automation and dynamic decision-making into every part of the customer journey, transforming how brands engage with their audiences.
But Adobe isn’t stopping at orchestration. Generative AI is becoming deeply embedded in Adobe’s workflows, with Firefly continuing to evolve as a commercially safe AI model that integrates across the content supply chain. From automating content creation to refining target audiences and visualizing complex data, these AI-driven capabilities are unlocking efficiency, scale and creativity like never before.
Another huge leap? Pre-built AI agents within Adobe’s enterprise applications. These AI-driven assistants can:
Optimize and troubleshoot/fix web experiences on the fly
Accelerate content production (resizing, adaptation and personalization)
Automate data management tasks like cleansing and audience segmentation
Turn raw data into real-time, actionable insights
It’s no longer about just managing customer experiences; it’s about orchestrating them seamlessly, intelligently and at scale. Adobe is redefining what’s possible by merging AI, creativity and data into a single, cohesive ecosystem– empowering businesses to deliver the right message at the right time on the right channel.
To enhance the power of the Adobe content supply chain, Code and Theory made some headlines of its own, launching its new Enterprise Experience Transformation (EXT) Practice. The EXT practice breaks down silos by fusing strategy, technology and creativity into a unified team approach that focuses on identifying CX opportunities that will drive board-level outcomes (i.e., revenue acceleration, market share growth, improved customer lifetime value). Our Creative Intelligence framework bridges brand purpose with practical implementation through AI-enabled technology. Click here to learn more.

Throughout the massive 12,000-person conference, six key trends were evident. Here is what we heard:
1. Speed Is An Attribute, Not The Strategy
The gap between idea and execution keeps shrinking. Inspired by real-time workflows, Adobe’s GenStudio is pushing teams to move sharper and quicker, with fewer layers and more impact. Planning, production and deployment are blurring into one flow. Momentum matters more than ever and hesitation costs more than it used to.
Yes, AI makes things faster. But speed without discernment is just noise. What clients need most isn’t just acceleration; it’s taste at scale, editorial authority, brand guardianship and visual sophistication.
2. Content Supply Chain Is Business Infrastructure
Content creation isn’t a side stream anymore. It's become central to how businesses operate. The brands that build intelligent content pipelines aren’t just producing more; they’re getting more leverage from everything they produce: better coordination, smarter reuse and higher throughput. The system becomes the differentiator.
The experience isn’t the wrapper around the business; it is the business. Every brand interaction now carries the weight of a system behind it–content velocity, platform agility, distribution logic and data fluency. If your infrastructure can’t deliver at the speed of expectation, the experience falls flat, no matter how good the surface design is.
Brands can’t just launch ideas; they must now scale frameworks. Marketing can’t live in isolation anymore. It has to be interoperable with business goals, product systems and cultural signals.
The creative process isn’t linear anymore– it’s modular, adaptive and recursive. The tools have evolved. The audience has evolved. So should the output. The future of creativity isn’t just about storytelling, it’s about system orchestration, behavioral nudges, contextual surprise, and real-time relevance.
What used to be media strategy is now content logistics. How you generate, version, approve, adapt, and deliver content is now the engine of modern marketing.
As Adobe’s Hannah Elskar noted in her fireside chat with Code and Theory CEO Michael Treff, people have increasingly been commenting on the fact that Adobe Summit, once a hot spot for analytics and martech experts to learn about their ‘lane’, has become increasingly more about the creative process. As she noted, this is by design: Adobe has integrated its martech with its creative tech because it is impossible to deliver content at scale without doing so.
3. Design Commands Attention
In a world drowning in content, design isn’t an add-on, it’s the filter, the guide, the signal. It’s what brings clarity to complexity and emotion to systems. The strongest design work isn’t just beautiful, it is directional. Great design helps people move faster, understand faster, and decide faster.
Our role isn’t just to make things beautiful. It’s to architect systems that scale beauty, intelligence, and emotional connection simultaneously. Most of what’s being called design today is decoration. We reject that. Real design is decision-making in disguise.
It’s how complexity gets filtered, utility meets emotion, and AI-driven systems remain human. Our work is not aesthetic; it’s strategic clarity in visual form. That’s where attention is earned, and trust is built. Campaigns are dead-end streets if they don’t plug into something bigger.
4. The Quantity Game Is a Trap
With so much talk about the ‘content at scale’ that AI-driven marketing and creative tech can finally deliver, marketers are rightfully enamored by the promise of more: more assets to more people in more places. But the downside could be steep if we don’t tread thoughtfully. As Coca-Cola’s CEO James Quincey warned, we can’t let this new engine of plenitude become a runaway train that leaves us with “a lot of annoyed consumers” who will want to “buy apps that block everything.” The antidote will be quality creative and discerning creatives. Always remember: just because you can, doesn’t mean you should.
5. Don’t Underestimate Change Management
As companies are embarking on bringing AI-powered martech into their organizations, many are being met with a healthy dose of resistance from every angle. To get adoption from executives, they need to understand the use cases and the business case, and they need to be brought along for the ride by seeing clearly documented value creation. To get adoption from teams, they need to be taught and educated with intent, with many suggesting “old school classroom” sessions early and often. The most important change management lesson to keep in mind? “Infiltrate by success,” as one IBM exec said.
6. The Internet Is Young – and AI Is Even Younger
We’re in the infancy of the internet, as Code and Theory co-founder Dan Gardner reminded us all. There is so much innovation ahead of us, and we’ll all look back at this time not long from now wondering why we spent our time with our heads down, scrolling, navigating unnecessary complexities. And AI is even younger. There is tremendous opportunity ahead of us, if we allow for it. The key is using it to enhance and accelerate creativity, not replace it.
Inspiring times ahead! What innovation are you most looking forward to implementing?
For More, Read:
Adobe Summit Day 1 Kicks Off the Golden Age of Design
Adobe Summit Day 2: The Rise of Creative Intelligence
Code and Theory Enterprise Experience Transformation Practice Debuts