Let’s skip the buzzwords. Brand storytelling isn’t about spinning a narrative—it’s about giving people a reason to care. The good ones don’t just get remembered. They get repeated.
And if there’s one person who knows how to break this down without the usual fluff, it’s Professor Brian Hallett, director of the Communications Lab and storytelling Jedi at IE University. With clients like Cartier, MasterCard, and Hugo Boss in his back pocket, he’s spent years turning brands into stories—and students into storytellers.
Here’s what he’s learned—and what he’s teaching.
What is brand storytelling?
Let’s start where most brands should: at the beginning.
According to Hallett, brand storytelling isn’t about “how amazing your product is.” That’s the fastest way to lose your audience. “Talking on and on about our products probably won’t engage our customers,” he says. Why? Because storytelling isn’t about you—it’s about your customer. Your story is how you help them solve a problem.
Put simply: you’re not the hero of the story. They are.
Your role? Be the guide. The Obi-Wan. The Yoda. The one who hands over the lightsaber and says, go change your world.
That’s brand storytelling. Not a product pitch. A purpose path.
Why do humans tell stories?
It’s not just to entertain. It’s to survive. “Storytelling,” says Hallett, “is a unique, adaptive technology.” We didn’t learn to talk just to chat—we did it to pass on knowledge. To share risks. Tools. Triumphs.
We’re not the strongest animals. But we’re the best storytellers. And that’s what gave us the edge.
That instinct is still hardwired into us. We don’t just want facts. We want meaning. That’s why Red Bull doesn’t spend its ad budget talking about “energy.” It shows people leaping off cliffs. Riding up walls. Going from boredom to excitement.
It’s not about the drink. It’s about the story you feel when you watch it.
“Every well-told story takes us from one idea or place to another.”
That journey—from fear to confidence, confusion to clarity, apathy to action—is what your brain craves. Dynamic value change, Hallett calls it. And when brands nail it, you don’t just buy—you believe.
The swoosh and the story
Let’s talk Nike. You’ve seen the shoes. Without the logo? They’re just… shoes. With the swoosh? Suddenly, it’s not about sneakers. It’s about becoming something better.
Nike’s story isn’t, “We make great gear.” It’s: You could always do this. We’re just here to help.
The brand isn’t the hero. You are. Nike’s just the mentor with the plan. You know, like every great story since… forever.
A logo is just ink—until it means something
Hallett puts it perfectly. A product becomes a brand when it carries a story. The Starbucks chair you love? That’s not furniture—it’s a feeling. A vibe. A cue that says, you belong here.
Every time you sip a drink, wear a logo, or choose one company over another, ask yourself: what story are they telling me?
And why do I believe it?
If you’re curious how this plays out for startups and new brands, this article breaks it down brilliantly.
Want to tell stories that matter?
If all of this makes your brain buzz, we’ve got a next step: the Bachelor in Communication & Digital Media at IE University.
This isn’t just a degree. It’s a lab where you learn to create stories that move people—whether you’re building a brand, launching a campaign, or starting your own creative empire. You’ll study with pros like Professor Hallett, work on real projects, and graduate with something way more valuable than a polished resume: a real storytelling superpower.
So if you’re ready to turn your curiosity into creativity—and your ideas into impact—pull up a chair. Your story’s just getting started.