The eight AV topics generating the most conversation in 2026 are AV-over-IP, digital signage and LED video walls, audio quality, AI-driven meeting experiences, the evolving integrator relationship, LED as a display standard, network monitoring and Day-2 support, and XR collaboration. Every single one of them points to the same shift: AV is becoming a managed, IT-aligned discipline. The days of treating a conference room like a one-time purchase are pretty much over.
Not long ago, most organizations treated AV as a project. You scoped it, bought the gear, installed it, and called for help when something broke. Clean and simple, but increasingly outdated. Today, IT, facilities, and operations teams expect AV to behave like the rest of the network: monitored, updated, and managed continuously.
The eight topics below are not predictions. They are the conversations already happening as teams plan and support their environments right now.
Yes, and most organizations planning new builds or major refreshes are adopting it as their default architecture. AV-over-IP moves signal distribution onto the network, replacing proprietary matrix switchers with software-managed routing. IT teams can monitor and manage AV rooms the same way they handle any other networked asset.
For the full breakdown, read What Is AV over IP, and Why Is It the Standard for Modern AV Environments?.
Because static displays and printed content simply cannot keep up with modern communication. Cloud-managed platforms let teams push updates to hundreds of screens from a single dashboard. LED video walls add brightness above 1,000 nits and the flexibility to build custom aspect ratios that standard displays cannot do.
Read more in Why Are Digital Signage and LED Video Walls Taking Over Every Industry?.
Because bad audio is still the number one reason meetings fall apart, and organizations are finally treating it as an infrastructure problem rather than a peripheral one. Teams are investing in ceiling array microphones, tuned DSP configurations, and acoustic panels that cut reverberation and background noise.
More in Why Is Audio Quality the Most Important Part of a Conference Room?.
AI is improving meetings in ways you can actually feel: cameras that frame the right people automatically, noise suppression that kills HVAC rumble and keyboard clicks in real time, and post-meeting tools that generate attributed summaries without anyone taking notes.
For a closer look at how this works, read How Is AI Improving Meetings Today?.
Organizations are pulling integrators into projects earlier, during space planning and network design, and expecting them to stay involved long after the punch list. Firmware management, remote monitoring, and real support after installation are becoming table stakes, not extras.
In larger rooms and high-visibility spaces, absolutely. Direct-view LED offers pixel pitches as fine as 0.9mm, brightness that holds up under strong ambient light, and the ability to build non-standard configurations that LCD simply cannot match.
For a practical guide, read The Smart Buyer's Guide to LED Video Wall Technology.
As AV becomes a networked asset, uptime expectations are aligning with IT standards. Real-time device dashboards, proactive alerts, structured firmware update schedules, and regular health reporting are becoming standard. Day-2 support is not a warranty call anymore. It is a managed service with defined response times and documented outcomes.
Extended reality tools are showing up in two places: as a design validation tool before construction begins, and as a collaboration environment for distributed teams. Stakeholders can walk through a virtual space, check sightlines, review speaker placement, and approve layouts before a single cable is pulled. Fewer surprises. Fewer change orders. Happier everyone.
AV is getting more connected, more IT-aligned, and more critical to how organizations function day to day. The organizations that treat it strategically, with the right partners, clear standards, and a real support model, are building environments that stay reliable and relevant for 5 to 7 years. The ones treating it like a one-time purchase are back at the drawing board every couple of years.
For a framework on making the right call, read Why AV Strategy Beats More Tech Every Time.
Each of the eight topics above gets its own deep-dive post in the series. Dig in wherever your biggest questions are.