Iconic brands from Starbucks to Nike to Burberry have dusted off their origin stories, recentering on their founding purpose and leaning hard into what made them matter in the first place.
It’s a great reset, with each returning to the story that made them matter, after they all hit a wall.
Early results suggest the instinct is right.
Nike’s shares had fallen nearly 60% from its 2021 peak. When 32-year vet Elliott Hill returned, he reorganized the company around sport categories, reinvested in “relentless brand storytelling,” and used the global “Why Do It?” campaign to reestablish a single center of gravity for the first time in years.
Starbucks had strayed from its core by the time Brian Niccol took the helm in September 2024. His “Back to Starbucks” strategy focused on coffee, community, and the experience. By Q1 2026, revenue rose by 5% to $9.9 billion, and U.S. transactions grew across all customer types for the first time in eight quarters.
Burberry followed the same logic with “Burberry Forward” returning the brand to its British heritage. Although revenue dipped initially, shares rose by 20%.
Three of the biggest brand turnaround stories of the past 18 months point back to origin, clarity, and the brand’s foundational story.
None of these moves happened because of AI. Yet, the same qualities driving these turnarounds, a clear founding story, a consistent narrative, a documented sense of what the brand is and who it’s for, are precisely what a new and rapidly growing audience needs to make sense of a brand.
And that audience isn’t human.
The audience you haven’t accounted for
AI is becoming an increasingly powerful intermediary between brands and the humans who buy from them.




