Monthly Archives: December 2025

Storytelling Is the New Marketing Superpower

Marketing jobs used to come with neat labels like copywriter, social media manager, and brand strategist. Now, companies are hiring something that sounds both ancient and futuristic – storytellers. And no, this isn’t about sitting around a campfire and yes, this is something many students are probably already doing.

Across industries, brands are racing to control their narratives. LinkedIn data shows job postings mentioning “storyteller” have doubled in just a year, spanning tech, finance, media, and entertainment. Why? Because content is everywhere, attention is scarce, and brands need people who can turn ideas, data, and culture into stories audiences actually care about.

Look at Sony Pictures. Their marketing campaigns often begin with a simple question, “What if?” That mindset led to a collaboration between Megan Thee Stallion and the character Venom. It was an idea rooted not in demographics, but in cultural fluency and genuine fandom. The result was more than a promotion; it was a moment people wanted to share. That’s storytelling as branding.

At the same time, AI is changing how marketing content is produced. Algorithms can generate headlines, images, and variations instantly. They can’t, however, decide which story matters. That’s where new hybrid roles like creative strategists come in. These marketers blend analytical thinking with narrative instinct, using AI to test ideas while relying on human insight to spot cultural signals and emotional resonance.

For students – whether or not marketing is your future – the takeaway is powerful. Storytelling isn’t a soft skill. It’s a career skill. It shows up in brand strategy, content marketing, leadership, and even how you pitch your own ideas. In a noisy world, the ability to make meaning is what cuts through.

Discussion Questions and Activities

  1. Why do you think companies are rebranding marketing roles as storyteller positions?
  2. Can storytelling be measured, or is it purely creative?
  3. How does cultural fluency affect brand credibility?
  4. What can AI do well in marketing and where does it fall short?
  5. Is storytelling more important today than it was 10 years ago? Why or why not?
  6. Career Scan. Analyze three marketing job postings and identify the storytelling skills they require.
  7. “What If?” Workshop. In groups, create a bold campaign idea starting with “What if…?”
  8. Story Audit. Evaluate a recent brand campaign and map the story it’s trying to tell.

Sources: Deighton, Katie (12 Dec 2025), Companies Are Desperately Seeking ‘Storytellers’, Wall Street Journal; Fisher, Jennifer D., Sony Executive Perspectives in The Wall Street Journal, Deloitte Services LP; D’Alterio, Darren, (22 Oct 2025), 5 New Marketing Jobs Created by AI Automation, Ad Age.

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When a $50 Price Cut Beats a Gaming Giant

What happens when a startup rewrites the rules of product design, pricing, and retail? It wins the holidays. This season, Nex Playground did something few thought possible – it outsold Microsoft’s Xbox during Black Friday week. Not by chasing hardcore gamers, but by building a product for people who don’t even think of themselves as gamers. That is, parents and kids. The strategic choice Nex made touches three core marketing decisions every company faces: what to build, how to price it, and where to sell it.

Start with product development. Nex didn’t ask, “How do we make a better console?” Instead, it asked, “What problem are parents trying to solve?” The answer wasn’t graphics or frame rates, but rather screen-time guilt. By designing a motion-based system that gets kids moving, Nex positioned its product as part toy, part activity, part peace-of-mind purchase. Licensing games like Bluey only strengthened that family-first positioning.

Next comes pricing. At $249 and on sale for $199 during Black Friday, Nex Playground’s pricing landed far below traditional consoles. That $50 holiday discount wasn’t just a deal, it was a trigger. While Xbox held firm on price, Nex leaned into value perception at the exact moment parents were comparison shopping. Same category, very different pricing logic.

Finally, retail strategy sealed the deal. Instead of relying on specialty gaming stores, Nex went where parents already shop and were looking for value: Walmart, Target, Best Buy, and Amazon. Being visible in the toy aisle and topping Amazon’s charts reframed the product from gaming console to must-have gift.

The bigger lesson? Market leaders don’t always win because of better technology. Sometimes they win because they’re solving the right problem for the right customer.

Discussion Questions and Activities

  1. How did Nex redefine its competitive set compared to Xbox and PlayStation?
  2. Was the Black Friday price cut a short-term tactic or a long-term brand risk?
  3. How did product design influence where Nex could sell the Playground?
  4. Could this strategy work outside the kids/family market?
  5. What happens to demand when the holiday discounts disappear?
  6. Product Repositioning. Redesign an existing console for a non-gamer audience.
  7. Pricing Scenario Create three pricing strategies for Nex post-holidays.
  8. Channel Strategy. Decide which retail channels best fit different types of products and why.
  9. Perceptual Mapping. Create a perceptual map showing product positioning of different gaming consoles and brands.

Sources: Cohen, Ben (12 Dec 2025), The Hottest Toy of the Year Is Made by a Tech Startup You’ve Never Heard Of, Wall Street Journal; The Tech Buzz, (13 Dec 2025) Nex Playground’s Holiday Surge Leaves Xbox in the Dust, The Tech Buzz.

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From Fan-edits to Fan Power

Scroll TikTok long enough and you’ll notice something interesting: some of the most compelling brand content doesn’t look like advertising at all. It looks like fandom. Fan edits are short, emotional video montages set to music and they have become one of Gen Z’s favorite content formats. Naturally, brands are paying attention.

Take Doritos and Lionsgate. Instead of forcing traditional ads into feeds, they are designing campaigns that feel like they belong to TikTok’s culture. Doritos didn’t simply hire an actor to represent its product. Rather, it created a cinematic fan edit of Walton Goggins that felt tailor-made for the platform. Lionsgate went even further, recruiting actual fan editors to promote films like The Hunger Games and Twilight, sometimes outperforming official trailers in views and engagement.

The marketing shift is undeniable. Influence is moving from who posts to who edits. Fan editors are emerging as a new kind of influencer – part creator, part curator, part cultural translator. Their power lies in their ability to reach target audiences with relevant content. These content creators spark comments, shares, and emotional connection, which algorithms reward and audiences trust.

This trend also connects to bigger influencer marketing shifts. As platforms get better at serving niche content, micro-influencers and micro-fandoms are becoming more valuable than celebrities. Add social commerce and AI-powered tools into the mix, and brands now have unprecedented ways to insert themselves into culture. The trick is to do it authentically. For marketers, the lesson is clear: attention isn’t bought by interrupting culture anymore. It’s earned by understanding it and sometimes, by letting fans take the lead.

Discussion Questions and Activities

  1. Why do fan edits often outperform traditional brand-created content on TikTok?
  2. Are fan editors influencers, creatives, or something entirely new?
  3. Where is the line between authentic participation and brand exploitation?
  4. How might this strategy work differently across industries (food, entertainment, fashion)?
  5. Should brands give up creative control to gain cultural relevance?
  6. Fan Edit Analysis. Analyze a brand-related fan edit on TikTok and identify why it works.
  7. Strategy Pitch. Design a fan-edit-based campaign for a brand targeting Gen Z.
  8. Team TikTok. Student teams choose one of the student-designed strategies and create a fan-edit for a product or brand.

Sources: Follett, Gillian (11 Dec 2025), Inside TikTok’s fan-edit frenzy and how brands like Doritos and Lionsgate are using it to reach Gen Z, Ad Age. El Qudsi, Ismael (2 Dec 2025) From Reach to Relevance: Current Trends In Influencer Marketing, Forbes Agency Council.

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