069: The 5-word Nike ad that brands are still copying 47 years later

A dusty black-and-white photo. No product in sight. And yet, the ad built a movement.

Hello, you lovely Creatives!

Welcome to Volume 6ļøāƒ£9ļøāƒ£ of Creative Cuts šŸ”Ŗ - your weekly dose of creative strategy from your friends at Creative OS.

And today on the cutting board…

Most ads give you a reason to buy.

Nike gave you a reason to belong.

In 1977, they released a black-and-white print ad. No product shot. No specs. No features. Just a photo of runners mid-stride on a path and one bold line:

ā€œThere is no finish line.ā€

Five words.

It didn't promise performance.

It didn’t highlight shoe tech.

It didn’t even mention Nike.

And yet, it marked a creative turning point in brand storytelling.

Let’s break down why that ad worked in 1977, why it still works in 2025, and how other brands can use the exact same formula today.

Enjoy,

Chase

Why It Worked Back Then

1/ It defied every rule of advertising in the '70s.

While competitors were shouting about arch support and heel counters, Nike leaned entirely into philosophy.

No mention of features.

No offers. Just a raw emotional truth.

2/ It positioned running as a belief system.

The line reframed the entire act of running.

It wasn’t about distance.

Or speed.

It was a lens to view life through.

Endless progress.
Self-discipline.
A refusal to arrive.

3/ It created cultural separation.

If the message resonated, it meant something about you. It was a quiet way of saying, ā€œI’m built different.ā€

That kind of identity-driven storytelling is what turns casual buyers into lifelong brand advocates.

Why It Still Works Today

šŸ‘‰ Most marketing focuses on outcomes.

Lose the weight. Hit the revenue goal. Grow the audience. All finish lines. But in life — and in branding — the finish line moves. Nike’s message removes the illusion entirely.

šŸ‘‰ It gives the audience something to grow into.
 
ā€œThere is no finish lineā€ speaks to anyone in motion. It honors the messy middle. It validates progress without needing perfection. That hits deeper than any transformation promise ever could.

šŸ‘‰ It invites personal interpretation.

The brilliance of the line is that it doesn’t explain itself. It offers space. People fill that space with their own story. And that kind of audience participation builds emotional ownership.

How AG1 Could Use This Exact Play

AG1 has the perfect setup for this kind of message.

It’s not just a supplement brand.
It’s a brand for people who treat health like something you show up for — not something you hack.

Right now, most of AG1’s messaging focuses on ingredients:

  • ā€œ75 vitamins and mineralsā€

  • ā€œOne scoop. Once a day.ā€

  • ā€œDaily foundational nutritionā€

All true. All useful.

But none of that hits the way Nike’s line did.

What if AG1 leaned harder into the identity of their customer — the quiet consistency, the discipline, the self-respect baked into the habit?

Something like:

ā€œHealth isn’t a goal. It’s how you start the day.ā€

Or:

ā€œThe ritual stays, even when the motivation doesn’t.ā€

Or even:

ā€œYou don’t chase wellness. You practice it.ā€

These aren’t taglines. They’re belief statements.

And that’s the point.

Nike wasn’t trying to sell a pair of shoes. They were making a statement that runners already believed — just louder, cleaner, and more beautifully than anyone else.

AG1 can do the same for health-minded people.

Speak the truth they already live.

Not to convince them.

To recognize them.

That’s how you build loyalty that survives algorithm changes, price hikes, and product swaps.

Not just ā€œgood marketing.ā€

Good brand.

Final Thought

The best brand messages don’t just describe a product. 

They crystallize a belief.

ā€œThere is no finish lineā€ became more than a line of copy. It became a worldview — and the foundation of a billion-dollar identity.

It still works because it speaks to something more enduring than features or trends:

A mindset that refuses to settle.

A pursuit that never ends.

A brand that knows its audience already lives this way — and just wants someone to say it out loud.

See you at the forefront,

Chase

That’s all! If you’re looking to find inspiration or get the best ad templates out there, come hang out with us at Creative OS and tell your friends!