Insights Industry News

January 26, 2016

4 Tips for Better Storytelling

When it comes to sharing data, great storytelling can mean the difference between lackluster results and mind-blowing success.

4 Tips for Better Storytelling
Kristin Luck

by Kristin Luck

Growth Strategist at Luck Collective Co

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Our brains are insanely greedy for stories. We spend about a third of our lives daydreaming—our minds are constantly looking for distractions—and the only time we stop flitting from daydream to daydream is when we have a good story in front of us.

As researchers, telling stories doesn’t necessarily come naturally. We are inundated with data constantly. But it’s important to remember that when we’re reading straight data, only the language parts of our brain work to decode the meaning. When we read a story, not only do the language parts of our brains light up, but any other part of the brain that we would use if we were actually experiencing what we’re reading about becomes activated as well. Stories have the ability to engage an audience in a way that logic and bullet points never could.

Whether you’re using research to convince internal stakeholders, inspire clients with data or sell your next big idea (or project!), great storytelling can mean the difference between lackluster results and mind blowing success. So how to become a master storyteller? Here are 4 tips for great storytelling:

  1. Establish a connection and make your audience root for you. Personalizing your stories is key to connecting with your audience but steer clear of the “humble brag.” In interviews and client meetings you’ve likely been trained to talk yourself up, but in storytelling, people want to root for an underdog. Storytelling is not pitching.
  2. Make it memorable. Making a story memorable is as important as establishing a connection. Stories can be about very small stuff, so long as the emotions involved are big.
  3. Deliver meaning. Stories are memorable patterns with meaning. The challenge with being a researcher is that something what we’re presenting (for instance selecting the label for a new brand of soup), doesn’t have a lot of meaning. This is why storytelling is critical to our success not just as researchers but as business owners.
  4. Don’t forget your “hook.” Finding a hook, that link between the research and the story, is imperative. There’s a great quote from Christina Baldwin: “Words are how we think, stories are how we link.” Make sure your story has a clear beginning, middle and most important, an END that brings it all together.

Interested in learning more? Make sure you check out one of my favorite storytelling books, Lead With A Story by Paul Smith. or Anthony “Tas” Tasgal’s The Storytelling Book.

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