Ayesha Martin is helping redefine what purpose looks like inside a global brand. As Senior Director of adidas Purpose Marketing, she has spent five years building a community-centered model rooted in trust, access, and long-term impact.
That work came into full view on Giving Tuesday 2025. Martin and her team launched Community Archives, a limited-edition zine documenting half a decade of grassroots collaboration. The project reflects real relationships, not corporate messaging.
Community Archives Shows What Purpose Looks Like in Practice
Community Archives is part documentation and part love letter. The zine centers people who shaped adidas’ community work long before it had a formal name.
Featured contributors include Wanda Cooper-Jones, Dr. D’Wayne Edwards, WNBA All-Star Layshia Clarendon, and the Quilters of Gee’s Bend. Martin refers to them as “architects of change.”
“We started by asking what moments changed us,” Martin explained. “We chose collaborators who helped define the work, not just participate in it.”
Building Community Impact Beyond Corporate Statements
Martin’s approach stands out in a crowded corporate space. Many brands promote community values while cutting real investment. Her work starts by listening, not directing.
Purpose at adidas is tied to sport’s power to change lives. However, Martin pushes beyond mission statements. She measures impact through lived community experiences over time.
“Impact data through the community’s experience helps track real change,” she said. “Beyond data, it’s about creating free spaces to play.”
How adidas Built a Sustainable Community Ecosystem
Building long-term systems requires consistency. Martin says it means showing up during critical moments with clear intention.
Community leaders help shape programs from the beginning. Resources are committed early, and internal accountability remains constant.
“An ecosystem only works if people can rely on it,” Martin said. “That’s what we are building.”
Navigating Leadership as a Black Woman in Corporate Spaces
Leading purpose work inside a major sports brand carries added weight. For Martin, much of that pressure remains unseen.
“It’s more than advocacy,” she explained. “It’s designing systems and strategies that challenge centuries-old norms.”
She credits grace and community for sustaining her. Being surrounded by “co-conspirators in pursuit of purpose” keeps her grounded.
Ayesha Martin’s Message to the Next Generation
Martin hopes young creators see themselves reflected in Community Archives. She wants them to understand their experiences hold real value.
Her advice starts with self-trust. “Your intuition is a powerful, ancestral guide,” she said.
Careers evolve through iteration, not perfection. Martin believes this work proves brands can listen, co-create, and show up with care.







