The Made in Starbucks campaign is arriving in the UK as a means of spotlighting the creativity of consumers who do some of their best work in the brand's coffeehouses each day. The campaign prioritizes the roll the cafe brand plays for creatives whose workflows have been transformed with digital tools, but who still believe in the power of in-person ideation and collaboration. This follows on research that reveals a strong percentage of Millennials and Gen Z consumers believe face-to-face connections are essential for unlocking the best creative opportunities.
The Made in Starbucks campaign was developed by Anamoly whose Chief Creative Officer Toby Allen commented saying, "Made in Starbucks was built around a simple creative principle: capture what’s really happening in the coffeehouse. Instead of creating a polished version of creativity, we put real customers, baristas and makers at the heart of the campaign, documenting the conversations, ideas and passions that come to life in Starbucks stores every day. The result is work that feels authentic, human and rooted in genuine stories."
In-Person Creativity Cafe Campaigns
The Made in Starbucks Campaign Spotlights Customer Creativity
Trend Themes
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Creativity Third Places — Coffeehouses and hospitality venues are evolving into informal creative studios where brands can monetize collaboration, community rituals, and work-adjacent experiences beyond traditional food and beverage sales.
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Authentic Customer Storytelling — Real patrons, employees, and everyday makers provide a credible campaign foundation as audiences increasingly respond to documentary-style narratives over polished brand-led advertising.
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Hybrid Ideation Culture — Digital workflows paired with face-to-face collaboration create new demand for physical spaces designed around spontaneous brainstorming, social productivity, and creator networking.
Industry Implications
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Coffee Shops — Cafe operators are positioned to differentiate through experience-led environments that support creative work, peer connection, and branded community participation.
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Advertising — Agencies can expand campaign models by using real customer behavior as creative source material, making brand communications feel more participatory and culturally grounded.
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Coworking — Flexible workspace providers face new competition from lifestyle venues that blend casual hospitality, productivity infrastructure, and social inspiration in accessible urban settings.