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While the Iron is Hot
And yes, big or little, it doesn't matter. What matters is that there is a character people care about, facing a problem we want him/her to solve, and a resolution that leaves us satisfied.
Troy Malone
Just a gut feeling, but I suspect this approach will be even more effective in the coming months/years. With major chunks of the population ticked off at major institutions, from banks to politics to the auto industry, the human approach might well be the only thing that works.
Though I may be telling them what I will be doing for them, it is always couched in "we".
We will be building traffic to the site, using Google in so many ways ( a term that brings enthusiastic smiles and wide eyes from most), and then we will venture into social media - this is where will all get to have some fun. Promoting the company, engaging potential customers with creative videos, funny stories that get people amped on products and services... we need to create personas that people will warm to like close friends....
You get the idea - it is the fun part of the endeavor, followed by the well written proposal and then commencement of the work
Thank you for your great advise. I am never sure about what I write, if it conveys the correct message. This approach takes the fear out of the writing process.
Real world solutions to pre-market development is what we look for all the time, from both a consumer viewpoint as well as a company one. As a consumer, I'm more likely to buy Joe's Fishing Pants if I know that, by wearing these pants, Joe could wade deeper into the stream and catch the better fish.
As a company, if I can connect that story to the product I have, my job just got at least 50% easier.
Why is fiction so much more popular than non-fiction when it comes to book sales? Because fiction offers us the chance to look at the story from whatever angle we choose - the author gives us the idea and we adapt it to our needs at that time.
Storytelling is the same - adapt it to our needs and we're sold. That's why it's such an important tool. That's why perhaps businesses need to re-evaluate their approach. Either that, or be satisfied with the non-fiction crowd...
TLR
I think Storytelling is extremely powerful on so many levels. It is often used in building a personal brand - instead of telling others your professional title, you share your war stories and interesting experiences. Great speakers are excellent story tellers. Not only do they deliver the points, but people actually remember them!
Marketintg communication, in my opinion, is a form of storytelling. Or should be. The trick is how to find the right "story title" and format to get AND keep listeners' attention.
Product information or product "experience" ain't no different. Humans look for stories they can relate to, not specs in a brochure because after a while, they'll still remember that story and forget all the technical info.
This is gospel. Been passing this around all morning, so thank you for a great post. It all comes down to connections. People want to experience things with other people and I think in particular the web and social media are the most authentic way to share discovery that's scalable and available.
BUT I'd say the most important thing in effective storytelling in marketing is that it is authentic. Period.
Chris, could you lead me to some good examples to watch on YouTube of speakers who use "story" well? I would greatly appreciate that. Thanks!
Plus, from the standpoint of a "psychology of persuasion" obsessed copywriter, if the story is constructed the right way and shared with the right audience, it allows your readers to step into it and see themselves in the characters...and decide that the character's resolution would work for them, too.
That's where the marketing impact can really hit a home run. If reader has a problem that is similar to the person in the story and the character in the story resolves her problem with the product or service you've been hired to help market, there is a certain amount of transferance that happens. You don't even have to end with some version of "if you have the same issue, try out the same product." It's automatic, subtle, yet very powerful.
Exceptional therapists use this technique all the time with patients and people like Milton Erickson were legendary for their ability to tell a story that changed a patient's state in a single session, but they call it "therapeutic metaphor.
In fact, if you'd like to learn how to construct stories that do this amazingly well, there is a book by David Gordon called, Therapeutic Metaphors, that breaks down the entire process. It was written originally for therapists, but it's also a tremendous tool for marketers who are looking to hone their storytelling abilities and use those stories to create compelling marketing outcomes,
Excellent post as usual. People relate to stories and they can see themselves or someone else they know in a story. When someone gets to that point, then they are moved to action. Great stuff.
Take care,
Bill
Tony
Hmmm, maybe it is simply a matter of getting one's story straight for each piece of their puzzle and not engaging in chatter?
For instance, I counseled a Corp. Media Relations VP recently who was torn that her Executive wasn't relating to customers and staff with "stories." Little did she know, this Executive was well-equipped with stories to share. In my private meeting with him, he revealed off-handedly that he'd been getting to know his customers by joining the technical crews that make house calls, albeit under cover as a "marketing assistant." During these visits, he had some very positive human experiences, very worth re-telling.
As you say Chris, it's good to just "stop and think" about the stories we possess and their value to others.
It’s an interesting coincidence that you mention Coraline as our consultancy spun out of the animation studio that created the film. While at the studio we found that the brands that communicated the most effectively where the brands we treated like characters in their own stories. They resonated on an emotional level with consumers. They related to them like they would a character in a movie or play. The most successful brand characters we created were ones where we had defined the world they lived in, their desires and what conflict propelled the story. Conflict is the engine that drives the story, it is what keeps it interesting. Conflict is a good thing, because when it is over the story is over.
Every company has a story they are telling whether they realize it or not. Many companies have been intuitively communicating this way for years. The danger in not having the meaning and purpose of your brand defined is the possibility of losing control of your story to your critics.
Excellent and important post Chris. Thanks and keep up the great work!
It's that old saying, "If a marketer tells a story in the forest, and there's no one around to hear it, does the story exist?"
I want to add a thought from Andy Sernovitz: tells a authentic stories - Emotion & Ego: making people feel great for sharing.
Their best example is Subway. The campaign they used immediately before Jared was "6 under 6" (6 subs under 6 grams of fat). The Jared message was the EXACT SAME message of healthy eating at Subway. But one campaign was a boring fact. The other was a story. Presto! Marketing gold. Side note: The agency that came up with it was originally shot down by Subway. They believed in their idea so much, they got a single franchisee to run it locally, and then came back to corporate with sales data. That's conviction.
A more recent example is the BestBuy TV ads over the holidays. Nothing about the products, but all about how the products improve lives. Nice work.
Thanks for reminding us that features and benefits are not inherently memorable or interesting.
j
I find that most people can relate to at least some of the stories I've told.
People remember idea or products longer when they've been told about something that's happened, rather than reading a list of attributes, I think.
It gives them a frame of reference and puts them in the shoes of whatever point you're trying to get across.
David
Walking up the stairs, for example..
"The slightly balding, middle aged man pulled himself up the short staircase, breathing heavily as he went. The old bannister creaked under the strain. As he paused on the landing, bathed in the bright early morning sun streaming through the dirty skylight above him, he sighed as he remembered .... " etc...
Keep doing that and everything you do, everything that happens around you will be a stream of narrative that you easily write as a blog post, an essay, a speech or a book. Instead of a passive stream of iPod music, you will be writing your story...
I read your stuff faithfully - one of my 'must reads'. I also read Glenda Watson Hyatt's blog faithfully - and her book was inspirational to me. She is my hero in more ways than one - to see her featured was a treat.
Since we are from the same part of the country (grew up in RI and went to school in MA) it's also nice to hear a bit about your everyday life - where you are eating, what you are buying, etc - storytelling that lets the reader feel as if they know YOU. Nicely done.
Regards,
Mary McD
thank you!
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