Something interesting is happening in brand storytelling and content creation right now. At the same time that AI made content free to produce – or a mere $20/month, depending on your subscription model – companies started paying more for people who can tell a story, not less.
The premium on human perspective and editorial taste has made headlines for months. LinkedIn job postings including the word "storyteller" doubled in a single year in 2025, according to reporting from The Wall Street Journal. Tech companies and AI labs are offering six-figure packages, some reportedly reaching $400,000+, to narrative leads who can humanize complex, technical subjects.
Output got cheaper, but the storytelling skills behind a great brand experience became more valuable than ever.
That instinct, the ability to find a real story and shape it well, runs through the team of content strategists, designers and marketing experts here at Kuno Creative. (We see that same storytelling itch-to-scratch in the client marketing teams we work with, too, including a number of published authors, which is so cool!)
I've spent time in two story-driven fields myself, journalism and brand marketing, and the same thing has always mattered in both: find what's true, the emotional and factual heart of the story, and then say it well.
AI can say almost anything well-enough. Passable, but unremarkable copy, produced quickly. But knowing what to say and getting to the core of the brand story still takes a person with marketing judgement, good taste and lived experience.
Brand storytelling is what makes someone stop scrolling and trust you enough to take the next step. It's a powerful marketing tool precisely because it does the thing information alone can't. It makes someone feel something.
Content creation is how that story shows up everywhere your audience finds you. Get the story right, and AI can be a tool for telling it. Skip that step of branding and voice, and you're producing more content that sounds like everyone else's.
The strongest brand content has a few things in common, whether it’s being shared in a 30-second video, homepage copy or a customer case study.
We care about our customers is a nice sentiment. A story about what that support looks like in real life and the impact it has on customers tells a much stronger story. Even just one real name, one real number or one real moment moves a claim from polished but interchangeable to storytelling realm.
Every story needs a hero, and in a brand story, that's the customer. The brand's role is to play the guide and be the one who shows up at the right moment with the right help, then steps back. Nike famously builds its storytelling around athletes overcoming real obstacles. The athlete carries the story. Nike shows up as the thing that helped them get there.
Customers connect with brands that understand their struggle, not ones that talk about themselves.
A beginning that grabs attention, a middle with something to lose, an ending that pays off. It’s a classic structure that’s been around since before Shakespeare, for a reason. Save the chronology and lead with tension to give the reader a reason to keep going.
The best storytellers are relentlessly curious. They get into the reader’s head and voice their inside thoughts, worries and fears, then keep asking until the polished answer gives way to the real one. A story that answers the question a reader actually has, not the one a company wishes they were asking, provides real value (both to the reader and to the search engines ranking the piece!)
Anyone can find the answer to almost anything in seconds now. Between traditional search engines and AI search, more information than we know what to do with is instantly available at our fingertips.
What's actually scarce is a human perspective on that information – someone willing to say what it means, why it matters and what to do about it. Enter brand storytelling.
Strong emotional responses are what separate a brand that resonates from one that gets scrolled past. People make decisions with their emotions, then justify them with logic afterward. A well-told story creates that response before the reader even registers the pitch. Information tells someone what a company does but a story, with a real take and emotional stakes, makes them feel something about it. That’s what turns a stranger into a customer.
Information |
Story |
|
Goal |
Describe the product |
Create an emotional connection |
Structure |
Feature list |
Problem, stakes, transformation |
Main character |
The company |
The customer |
Reader takeaway |
What it does |
What it means for them |
Effect |
Understood, forgotten |
Felt, remembered |
Funnily enough, it’s not just human readers craving perspective. Search tools have gotten good at recognizing a brand with a real point of view and a consistent brand narrative, and giving that brand more room to be discovered – which is why a strong brand story matters for SEO, AEO and GEO, too.
You've probably seen these examples before. That's kind of the point – a good story keeps getting retold.
We've seen the same principle play out with our client partners, too, like a fragmented brand identity becoming a clear, singular story that drove real traffic and leads, or a content strategy built around real search intent turning into top rankings on competitive terms. Clear stories lead to real, measurable results.
A good story can build a brand. On the flipside, a bad one can undo decades of it in a day. In May 2026, Starbucks in South Korea launched a "Tank Day" tumbler promotion timed to the anniversary of the 1980 Gwangju Uprising, a massacre that killed hundreds of civilians. The slogan echoed a phrase tied to a real 1987 torture cover-up, reportedly landed on after the team used an AI tool for suggestions. The fallout was swift with protests, a sharp drop in sales, public condemnation from South Korea's president and the South Korean Starbucks CEO fired that same day.
The broad takeaway: Don’t forget to gut check (and fact check)! AI can suggest a campaign idea and tagline, but it can’t always tell you how your audience will feel seeing it. That judgment is part of the human marketer’s job.
If you’re the human making that call, a few things to keep in mind:
A storytelling strategy makes sure every piece of content ladders up to the same brand story, instead of each one starting from scratch. That process, the one Kuno's Brand Experience team leads with every client, looks something like this:
Most brands have great stories to tell, but lack the time and structure to do so consistently. Kuno's Brand Experience team closes that gap, and the results show up where it counts: in traffic, leads and a brand people remember. If your brand's story could use a sharper storyteller behind it, let's talk.