AKQA won the Grand Prix and a Gold Lion in Creative Direction at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity for *Never Done Evolving*, a Nike campaign marking Serena Williams' 27th and final professional season. The agency used AI and machine learning to archive and reinterpret Williams' career across video, digital, and retail channels. The Grand Prix is Cannes' highest single honor in a given category.
Nike and AKQA built the campaign around computational analysis of Williams' match footage spanning nearly three decades. The technology mapped movement patterns, court positioning, and stroke mechanics to generate visual narratives that evolved as her playing style did. The campaign launched in 2023 during Williams' farewell tour and ran across Nike's owned channels, retail installations in 12 markets, and digital platforms where the athlete's social reach exceeds 16 million followers. Cannes jurors cited the work's integration of advanced tooling with editorial restraint.
The Grand Prix matters because luxury and heritage brands are now five quarters behind where Nike was when it greenlit this execution. LVMH's recent partnership with Google Cloud, Kering's AI product-placement trials, and Richemont's machine-vision initiatives all arrived after Nike demonstrated that computational creativity could clear the highest bar in advertising. Allocators building digital-experience budgets for 2025 are fielding pitches that reference this campaign by name. The work proved that AI in luxury need not mean generative chaos or cost-center experiments. It can mean a tighter edit and a faster path to owned media that performs.
AKQA's win also clarifies which agencies are converting AI capabilities into margin expansion rather than overhead. The shop's parent WPP reported AI-related revenue up 18% year-on-year in Q1 2024, with AKQA contributing disproportionately to that line. Cannes recognition typically lifts an agency's pitch-win rate by 12-17% in the subsequent 18 months, according to historical pitch-tracking data. For AKQA, that means higher odds on the $200-$500 million experience-platform builds that luxury groups and family offices are scoping for late 2024 and 2025 deployment. The Grand Prix is a signal to procurement teams that the firm can ship high-stakes work under compressed timelines with unproven technology.
Watch for AKQA to convert this momentum into announcements with LVMH or Kering properties by Q4 2024. Nike's campaign budget for *Never Done Evolving* has not been disclosed, but comparable Cannes Grand Prix winners in recent years carried production and media spends between $8 million and $15 million. That range is now table stakes for heritage brands building AI-led content engines. Also watch for Cannes juror composition in 2025: if the Creative Direction jury adds more technologists and fewer traditional creative directors, it will confirm that the festival's definition of craft has permanently shifted toward computational execution.
The Grand Prix arrived the same week Serena Williams announced an equity stake in a machine-learning sports-analytics startup, a detail Nike and AKQA will not need to manufacture into their next case study.