Sunday, July 24, 2022

Life is short and storytelling

 


Life is too short to worry about stupid things. Have fun. Fall in love. Regret nothing, and don't let people bring you down. Study, think, create, and grow. Teach yourself and teach others. 🧠


The best meditation is being genuinely curious about the contents of your own mind.

The most important skill you’ve never been taught: Storytelling 10 dead-simple tips to make you a better storyteller:

Replying to
Cut the fluff Most people amble on in backstory for 10 minutes or write an intro paragraph. This is a waste of time. Find the interesting parts of your story, jump right to it, and provide as little backstory as possible.

Start with the end in mind What do you want the outcome of your story to be? • Customer buying a product • Friend laughing his ass off • Investor giving you money If you start with the end in mind, the intro and middle naturally funnel to that target.

Make it emotional People make decisions based on emotion. But it’s impossible to make your audience feel everything. Nail down 1-2 emotions and direct the entire story to amplify those. I regularly refer to this chart from :



Raise the stakes Apple realized the iPhone was competing on the same few features each release. So it raised the stakes: privacy. This tells two stories: • Apple protects your privacy • Competitors exploit your privacy

Use data intentionally Numbers tell, stories sell. But if used well, data backs up the story you’re telling. I aim to use 1-3 high-impact data points to support my stories.

Keep a story log You have story-worthy moments every day but forget almost all of them. Simple fix: • Create a two column spreadsheet (date and story) • Before bed, take two minutes to write the best story from that day You’ll start seeing stories everywhere.

Structure your story Humans gravitate to structure. Luckily there are tons to wrap around your story: • Hero’s Journey • StoryBrand • Three Act Here’s the structure JK Rowling used for the 5th Harry Potter:

Talk to a niche Great stories aren’t told to everyone. They’re told to the specific group of people who will resonate most with them. The idea of “1000 true fans.”

Nail the hook It doesn’t matter how incredible the rest of your story is if nobody sticks around for it. A few guidelines: • Punchy • Short • “Big if true” Here’s the hook Steve Jobs used for the iPhone product launch:


Sell the transformation Great storytelling boils down to the transformation the Hero goes through. Nike never sells its clothing — it sells what the clothing can do for you. “If you wear our stuff, you’ll jump like LeBron, run like Ronaldo, and hit like Serena.”

Hope you enjoyed that! I write about storytelling 1-2x times per week. Follow so you don’t miss those. Here’s another one you may enjoy:

The story log concept seems to be resonating here's mine (started it july 1) the key for me has been keeping it short and informal. it provides just enough context to jog my memory idea came from the book storyworthy: amazon.com/Storyworthy-au






















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