storytelling

Don't Leave Out the Best Part of Your Story

Don't Leave Out the Best Part of Your Story

Just the Facts, Ma’am?

"A guy falls in love with two women and ends up picking the wrong one."

My daughter hates the way I press her for details whenever she shares things about her day to me.

"Tell me about that," I might press.

"I just did," she'd reply.

No, you didn't, I press on (if I dare). You told me the outcome of what happened. What matters to me is how you got here from there. The storyarch.

Maybe that's just the storyteller in me. Details matter. Overcoming adversity matters. The hero's journey matters. I’m not just interested in the destination.

👉 Something to keep in mind as you formulate messaging and marketing for your business…

Don't Be a Hero

Don't Be a Hero

The story you're telling isn't working.

And it's probably because you’ve chosen the wrong hero.

Kristian Alomá just flipped everything we thought we knew about storytelling in marketing. His insight? We don't buy products because of features and data. We buy them because of the stories we get to tell ourselves after we own them.

That's worth unpacking.

Don't Be a Hero

Don't Be a Hero

Who Is the Hero In Your Story?

If I told you my life story, would you care?

What if I asked you tell me your life story?

Eugene M. Schwartz’s The Brilliance Breakthrough: How to Talk and Write So That People Will Never Forget You should be (and often is) considered to be the “bible” of effective copywriting and storytelling. One of the many tenets Schwartz embraces is the notion of making the reader (or the customer) the hero of the story you’re trying to tell.

Too often, we put the capes on our own backs. And that’s where the writing falls short.