Your customers don’t care about your business. Harsh, but true.
They don’t care about it beyond how it can help them make their lives better or solve a problem they have, that is.
But it’s not all bad news. You can use that knowledge to your advantage.
The biggest impact in marketing hasn’t been made by things like chatbots, machine-learning, IoT, or even ChatGPT4.
Despite those buzzwords dominating our zeitgeist for the last decade.
What’s resonating with marketers, designers and entrepreneurs alike is storytelling.
So why am I obsessed with storytelling, and you should be too?
A terrible accident at 19 years old, where I broke my back by falling off a waterfall fueled my obsession to try and understand myself, my body, and others around me1.
Actually, that’s not how my fascination with storytelling began. But I got your attention.
Universe didn’t conspire to ‘push’ me towards storytelling.
But that would sure make a great story.
In fact, that’s the story of how Jessie Inchauspé became the Glucose Goddess.
You see, people love stories. They appeal to the emotional decision making bits of our brains in a way that facts and figures can’t.
And from a business point of view, you should know that stories can influence those decisions.
Consumers make purchasing decisions based on their emotions (feelings and experiences) rather than information (brand attributes, product features).
In fact, storytelling is more science than magic.
If you take the time and careful consideration crafting your brand story, it can work wonders for your business. Here are just a few potential benefits:
So as we see, when applied to your business, storytelling can be leveraged as a tool to attract better customers and build a loyal audience. But how? By building a brand story around your customer and showing how much you can help them. But, I would be providing a dis-service if I gave away the winning formula for generating a great brand story, without sharing some context first.
Some of you may be familiar with the ‘Hero’s Journey’ popularised by Joseph Campbell, or the Seven Basic Plots by Christopher Booker.
Both are Jungian-influenced theories, suggesting that you can distil any story in history down to one of these basic plots.
Ultimately every great story that’s ever resonated with populations worldwide adheres to a formula.
Formulas are used to create a predictable result. Formulas are a great way for someone to study something new and to learn why and how something works. If you want to become an expert in any field, you’ve got to master the formulas.
Every author, screenwriter, or public speaker has studied the ‘formulas’ for their respective creative fields. Why? Because they work.
But blindly following formulas can get you into trouble too.
As Seth Godin says: “The problem with the formulas — let’s just pick an obvious category like screenwriting — is there are 10,000 hacks who are turning out formula-driven screenplays every day in Hollywood. Almost none of them turn into great movies. The great movies are the ones that broke part of the formula, right? It’s when you break one of the principles that you’re actually doing great work.”
So if you follow them to the letter, your new brand story won’t set your brand apart – which is a key reason for crafting a brand story in the first place. That means you’ve got to master the formulas so that you know how to bend them in creative ways.
That’s where the magic happens.
So without further ado, I’m sharing a 4-step recipe that will help you put together a winning brand story that builds relatability and trust.
Whether the story is about a hero who faces the unknown, and needs to overcome some challenging times to transform.
About a protagonist faced with defeating a powerful enemy that threatens everything and everyone.
Or about a hero who must seek out the help of the supernatural or a guide to grow.
If you distil down the Hero’s Journey or the Seven Basic Plots you will notice they all have:
And as we’ve learned, customers only care about how you can make their lives better, so to empower your brand story, a fourth, and the most crucial ingredient is necessary.
Introduce your character/s to the story, in our case the person or people who conceived the business and brought it to life. Also, you want to set the scene of how things were before starting the business.
Have a look at some of these powerful brand examples:
Reading a story without a conflict would be like watching paint dry. At their core, all stories that resonate are those that deal with challenges and adversity. A problem can unite an audience in a quest for a resolution and can rally customers around your brand.
To refer to our brand examples:
Without a resolution to a conflict, there would be no story. And there isn’t anything quite as satisfying as a ‘happily ever after’ that shows hope and achievement.
To use our brand examples:
This is possibly the most important ingredient to our 4-step formula.
As humans, we are all wired to have needs. As such, once our basic needs of food, sleep and shelter are fulfilled we then shift our focus on more ‘meaningful’ needs such as self-actualisation, companionship, recognition, enlightenment and more.
We are constantly looking around for ways to meet those needs, so if your brand isn’t offering a way to serve one of those, then your business may as well not exist. And no amount of storytelling is going to convince them to care.
So even though you are writing a story about your business, make sure that your customer is the beneficiary of the story’s resolution.
Let’s look at how our examples handle that:
I know I’ve just unleashed a ton of information at you. Let me summarise.
Create a brand story around how things were, defining your main characters, the conflict or obstacles they’ve faced, and how they’ve achieved a successful resolution, demonstrating how that benefits the customers.
Simple, right?
The main idea is that customers don’t want to hear you tout your own horn.
Or sell them your product features. Consumers want to be part of a story.
Giving proof that you are the best solution to the problem doesn’t make the sale. If a customer figures something out or discovers it on his own, he’s a thousand times more likely to believe it than if it’s something you claim.
Craft a compelling journey that customers want to come along on.
Whether you’re using storytelling to craft an about us page for your website or creating an overarching story to inform your brand mission and strategy, make sure the information is true, relevant and inspiring to your customers.
Simply listing out your highlight reel and milestones, like so many other brands do, won’t resonate with them or make anyone care.
Instead, what people will relate to is a story of your journey. A journey in which you’ve faced and overcome obstacles in the pursuit of your goals, finding a path towards success that ultimately benefits those who you serve. Your customers.
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1 I actually did break my back when I was 7. Spending the subsequent 3 months on my back, tied up to a bed, pulled by springs. That time was mostly used by sharing and listening to stories with my fellow ward members. So I guess you could say that my fascination with storytelling has an interesting origin story.