Really great storytelling isn’t always about crafting a brand new tale. Sometimes, it’s about retelling truly worthwhile stories to keep them alive.
On Father’s Day, there’s perhaps no better way to celebrate and honor dads, whether in person or in spirit, than by sharing stories about them in gratitude and love.
Today, many will mark Father’s Day with outdoor barbecues, the unwrapping of gifts, greeting cards, phone calls and time spent as a family. It is a day to create new memories and reminisce about old ones. For others, those whose fathers can only be with them in spirit, the day will no doubt include time for remembrance, prayer and grief.
Recent tragedies have resulted in 49 fathers spending this Father’s Day mourning the senseless loss of their adult sons and daughters, victims of the recent Orlando nightclub shootings. Another dad in Nebraska will spend this Father’s Day without his only son, Lane, a two-year-old toddler who lost his life in an alligator attack at a Disney resort in Orlando. Countless other children will have no dad to give homemade Father’s Day cards to thanks to random violence and shootings which have taken their fathers’ lives and changed the course of their childhoods forever. Many others,, like myself, will simply spend this Sunday remembering and mourning our dads who are no longer with us due to a passing from illness or disease or natural causes.
Whatever the circumstances, each dad has a special story, worthy of remembering, honoring, acknowledging and telling this Father’s Day. It is in the very telling of our “dad story” that keeps their spirit alive, creates meaning for their lives and ours, and honors the mark they have left and continue to leave on this world. In nearly every case, these stories help create a sense of gratitude and deep appreciation for the impact fathers have on their children, a gift unto itself that is priceless for both parent and child.
Like any worthwhile tale, taking a few minutes on Father’s Day to revisit your “dad story”, to reminisce about laughter shared, memories made and lessons learned, just makes it stronger and more meaningful.
FOR SALE: Baby Shoes….Never Worn.
Just six simple words but what a story they tell. Ernest Hemingway penned this short, short story years ago on a $10 bet. But it speaks to what makes for a truly compelling story.
Ask any brand today and they’ll proudly tell you they are now actively in the business of producing content. Nearly every brand has moved content marketing to the top of their to-do list. They tweet and pin and post and blog. But are they really moving the needle in engaging their audiences through story?
There is a huge difference between those that are merely producing content and those that are actual, bona fide storytellers.
Storytelling isn’t just about pushing out content. It’s about getting into people’s heads and hearts using the basic storytelling principles of character, conflict and resolution. As Maya Angelou once said, ““I’ve learned that people will forget what you said, will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.”
Speaking during Social Media Week Chicago, Daryl Travis, Founder and CEO of Brandtrust and author of the new book, How Does It Make You Feel? Why Emotion Wins the Battle of Brands, stressed that today’s content creators and marketers need to think and behave more like social scientists in order to better understand the unarticulated needs for consumers. According to Brandtrust research, our non-conscious system accounts for 95% of our motivations and reveals the true mind of the consumer and uncovers emotional drivers of their behavior. The remaining 5% comprises our conscious self which reveals the voice of the customer and elicits rational answers. Storytelling allows us to tap into both.
“What drives brands is emotional, irrational and beyond our conscious awareness,” he said. “We need to understand the stories and narrative patterns of consumers’ lives and how they’re connected to brands in order to bring them to life.”
Brands are beginning to realize what every writer and journalist has always known: “Never underestimate the power of a great story.” Stories are the essence of human communication. Just ask yourself: Do you most remember bullet point factoids from a PowerPoint presentation or a story told around the office water cooler?
As author Douglas Van Praet aptly notes in Unconscious Branding: How Neuroscience Can Empower (and Inspire) Marketing, “We need to remind ourselves that we are all in the business of buying and selling good feelings. The more emotionally charged, the more likely your brand will stick out or break through the clutter, forcing people to notice your message.”
One brand that not only gets consumers’ attention but does so by focusing on feelings is Virgin Atlantic airlines. Founder Richard Branson stated: “The idea that a business is strictly a numbers affair has always struck me as preposterous. I’m convinced that it is feelings–and feelings alone–that account for the success of the Virgin brand in all its myriad forms.”
He added, “It is my conviction that what we call shareholder value is best defined by how strongly employees and customers feel about your brand. Nothing seems more obvious to me that a product or service only becomes a brand when it is imbued with profound values that can translate into fact and feeling that employees can project and customers can embrace.”
An increasing number of brands are zeroing on emotions to move the needle in the marketplace. And you don’t have to be Apple or Starbucks to make it work. Consider the case of Morton Salt. Clearly a commodity product, salt is salt with nothing differentiating it. Yet, Morton Salt enjoys a 50% market share because it sells trust to make its brand stand out. It features the familiar illustration of a little girl under her umbrella with the tag line, “When it Rains, It Pours” on its packaging, reminding customers it is the same product their mother, aunts and grandmothers used for generations.
Brands must also take into account the shape of the story they are crafting. Does the subject matter align better with an episodic or thematic approach? While episodic stories tend to be more effective at motivating an audience to take action, thematic stories earn greater emotional involvement from the audience.
Consider Microsoft’s popular ad campaign, “I’m a PC” featuring an “everyman” who identified himself as a PC user and his Mac user counterpart. Through a series of effective ads, Microsoft told a thematic story that prompted a broad consumer conversation of the merits of both products and the kinds of people who use them. The campaign proved to be a successful example of how emotional attachments can be used to develop strong brand identity and loyalty.
What’s your brand’s story? Whether it’s your personal brand or a professional one, when deciding how to tell your brand’s story consider these guidelines:
There are some that would have you believe that today’s world in which everyone’s a content producer pushing out 140-character tweets, Instagram selfies and instant Vine videos is responsible for creating an industry characterized by mediocrity and lacking in imagination. But that couldn’t be further than the truth.
In fact, those of us in the content and marketing spaces are not less creative; we’re just working to be more creative at a faster pace.
“We’re in a content marketing arms race,” explained Scott Smith, VP, Content Marketing, Cramer-Kasselt, during a recent Social Media Week Chicago presentation. “It’s not about trying to reach everyone at the most efficient cost. It’s not about impressions, or page views. It’s about quality over quantity and having real conversations with individuals.”
To do that requires that brands tap into their unique culture to do more than just tell a story; they must tell their story in a way that connects with their audiences.
The whole point behind creating content, especially in social media channels, is to connect with people. Thanks to reams of data, brands can effectively talk to individuals. To do that effectively requires that brands understand the reader comes first when developing content.
Before launching any kind of content marketing program, brands need to answer some key questions:
Armed with this critical information, brands will be better prepared to create really great content that accomplishes three basic goals:
Too often brands get hung up on having to create really intellectual content based on research or data. That’s important content to have but it doesn’t always have to be so cerebral. Sometimes it just needs to be entertaining and memorable.
There’s really no excuse for brands not to be able to engage readers with quality content as they have so many sources of content at their disposal. Some common sources of content to consider include:
Share the story of your brand’s history and the milestones it hit along the way.
New product or service ideas that were nixed can be interesting fodder for brand stories.
Consumers can gain real insights into a brand by learning about the drivers behind key business decisions.
Honesty and authenticity are critical to creating engaging brand content. Consumers appreciate hearing about challenges facing a brand and, more importantly, how they worked to overcome them.
Stories that exemplify your culture and mission can go a long way in humanizing your brand.
Stories about the causes your brand is committed to help to define what you stand for.
Don’t forget to engage consumers by asking for their feedback, questions or comments about your brand. Follow up with content that responds to that feedback or provides updates.
Creating compelling, quality content is not only helps keep brand engaged with their audiences, but it’s also good news for search engines. Nick Papagiannis, VP, Search Director, Cramer-Kasselt stressed that “Content should be beneficial to your customer, reflective of the brand, and optimized for Google.”
Content that is truly search friendly is optimized for the technology environment, includes the right keywords in the right places and is adequately promoted. Links to new content via social channels is one way to effectively rank higher in the search engines while engaging your audiences.
However, even Matt Cutts, head of Google’s Webspam team, has cautioned, “Never sacrifice the quality of your copy for the sake of search engines.” The reader always comes first.
There are a number of brands today that are maximizing the benefits of a great content strategy. Sephora, for example, has been successful in creating engaging video and Tumblr content. It’s clear Sephora’s strategy is to create memorable, shareable content rather than focus on direct lead generation. The brand has a long-term perspective rather than seeking an immediate return. The strategy is working well for Sephora which boasted a 400% increase in iPad traffic to the brand’s website in 2012 and a 300% increase in shipments via mobile in 2012.
Panera Bread is another brand that generates a variety of content which focuses on creating human connections with its customers. The brand’s website includes a number of “feel good” stories about the role Panera Bread plays in local communities. The popular restaurant chain also highlights the history of its products in an engaging way.
For AMEX Open, a website dedicated to small business networking, content is all about usefulness and creating one-on-one conversations with customers. Backed by 200 expert contributors, the brand’s strategy focuses on delivering content that small business professionals need, providing a forum for them to exchange advice and helping them to make smart decisions.
Are you truly focused on telling YOUR story, or just pushing out content in the hopes of garnering another like or share? Before you hit that publish button, make sure what you’re sharing is advancing your brand story in a personal way that truly connects with your audiences.
In kindergarten, I really, really loved Show and Tell. I would dig deep into my toy box, scrounging through every toy and prized possession I owned as I agonized about selecting the absolute coolest one to share with my classmates. Surrounded by my captive audience, all sitting cross legged in a circle as they intently looked up at me, I was excited to just not proudly hold up my cherished possession but to share with them the story behind it. That was, no doubt, my very first experience with curation.
In my high school and college years, I graduated to creating mixed tapes and CDs for friends and loved ones. I spent an inordinate amount of time carefully selecting each song assembling each playlist to match a theme. There was one for post-break ups, dance parties, girl anthems, new romances and favorite classics. I learned to hone my curation skills as I carefully packaged my playlists to fit specific recipients, moods and themes.
These early experiences helped prepare me for the more advanced curation skill sets I would come to depend on in my chosen career as writer, editor and content strategist.
Today, curation has become not just the latest buzzword but important business. It used to be that if you called yourself a curator, you spent your days in the musty back rooms and marble halls of museums. But today, thanks to technology, a variety of creators, content professionals and consumers are laying claim to the title.
What exactly is curation? As defined by Macmillan Dictionary, curation is “the process of analyzing and sorting content and presenting it in a meaningful and organized way around a specific theme.”
Often sold as the answer to information overload, content curation involves the human act of sifting, sorting, arranging and publishing content around a topic into a story narrative that adds value and helps the audience make sense of the big picture. A content curator, akin to the editor’s role, is to add context to the material for the intended audience. It requires a critical hand to thoughtfully sort a few pieces of content from a wide variety of options.
What content curation is NOT, however, is mere aggregation or regurgitation of content, especially that which is volume- or brand-driven. Content curation is really about storytelling through the selection of choices the curator makes.
When distilled to its simplest form, as a content curator, the content I select is that which I’ve seen, read, or heard about that is something I think my audience should also experience. As a result, the job of content curator is highly personal and individualistic. When you decide to include this content and not that, you are making decisions that best serve the story.
However, curators must walk a fine line between making decisions based on their personal choices with those of the broader audience they serve. The truly talented curators actually convince their audience that they are crafting their own choices rather than adopting someone else’s.
As the role of content curator continues to evolve, brands and professionals alike are redefining it. Red Bull now curates events with street artists. Restaurant guide Zagat curates its listings while Etsy, the ecommerce website focused on handmade or vintage items, uses “guest curators.” Actress Blake Lively recently announced she’s launching a lifestyle company that helps people “curate” their lives. In a Business Insider article, Lively explained, “”The main element of it is that it’s about storytelling and it’s about living a very one-of-a-kind, curated life, and how to achieve that.”
From playful Pinterest collages to carefully nurtured iTune playlists to Amazon’s “list” feature, just about everyone is becoming a curator. There’s even a “Curate Meme” Tumblr page which offers up a series of images with curation jokes.
12 Top Content Curation Sites
There are lots of great content curation sites from which to choose. Here are a dozen of my current favorites.
One of the more unique curation sites, The Monkey Cage curates social science research that is publicly available. Content is primarily limited to blog posts by chief blogger and political scientist John Sides but the commentary is well-written and illustrated.
For more content curation examples, download the Content Curation Look Book by Curata.
Do you have any favorite content curation examples? Share them here.
Late today—April 27, 2013—I realized it was a holiday of sorts. Though admittedly, I had never really heard of it before, I learned today was indeed National Tell A Story Day. For someone who has made her living as a storyteller, I knew I couldn’t let this day go by without a proper celebration.
Naturally, the only way a storyteller can properly celebrate National Tell a Story Day is to, of course, tell a story.
What better story to tell on National Tell a Story Day than the story of how I began to tell stories in the first place—-first for fun and then as a career.
My story begins with Miss Constance, who happened to be my fourth grade teacher. Miss Constance was one of those no-nonsense, old-fashioned teachers with sturdy shoes, a firm voice and a love for good writing. Truth be told, most of her students were afraid of her. She could be stern and disciplined but her love of teaching was her passion. She spent each hour in her classroom doing her best to pass on her love of learning to the 18 young students she shepherded through fourth grade every year.
In the year I was 8, Miss Constance gave us all a writing assignment. She asked us to choose a topic related to our hometown and write something about it. We were to write a full page in our own handwriting (no laptops, tablets or smartphones to cheat with back then). We were, she explained, to tell the class a story about our topic.
I set about writing my story. I knew I wanted to accomplish 3 things. First, I wanted to tell a story that would be unique. Second, I wanted to tell a story with both words and pictures so that my classmates would remember it. Third, I wanted it to be good writing—no spelling or grammatical mistakes for me.
On the day the assignment was due, I handed in my entry titled “A Bird’s Eye View of Chicago.” I realized as I looked around the classroom that it looked nothing like that of my classmates’ assignments. It wasn’t written on lined notebook paper in large letters. Instead, I had written it in the form of a mini-book. I suppose you could call it my first e-book. It was in color with many pages and with a hand-drawn picture on every page.
The next day in class, Miss Constance handed back all the graded writing assignments–all except mine. Instead, she asked me to come up to the front of the class and read my assignment to the class. Yikes! Butterflies were swarming around in my stomach. Would the class like my story? Did Miss Constance? Or was I being called out in front of the class?
As I began to read my story and showed the class each page and picture I had hand-drawn, I became aware of something for the first time. They were paying attention. At some points, they even laughed. And when I was done, Miss Constance had this big smile on my face.
Then, on that day I read aloud the first real story I had ever written, Miss Constance did something I’ve never forgotten. She walked up to me and told me–and the entire class—that she loved reading my story and that she knew I would be a professional writer some day. She told me to keep writing and to write about what I loved and was important to me…no matter what anyone else thought. She told me writing was hard work but that it was worthwhile work. Finally, she said that she knew she would look forward to one day seeing my writing in print.
From that day on, I knew what I wanted to do. I continued to write and pursued a career in journalism which today has morphed into a career in content marketing and social media. I’ve told hundreds of stories since that day in Miss Constance’s class and have never forgotten what she said.
Decades later, I continue to take with me key lessons learned from that 4th grade class:
Keep at it.
Writing is hard work. Good writing takes time, effort and commitment. But if you keep at it, you can get better at it and others will benefit from it.
Seek both to inform and entertain.
Good writing should attempt to inform and educate while also seeking to entertain, amuse and inspire.
Listen and learn from others.
Good storytellers learn as much, if not more, from reading others’ work and connecting with them as telling their own stories.
Tell stories that are memorable.
Think out of the box. How can you tell your story differently to add value? What will be memorable to your audience? Is it a story you’d be interested in reading?
Think visually when storytelling.
When crafting a story, think in pictures as well as words. Endeavor to use images and imagery to be an effective visual storyteller.
Make each story your own.
Good stories should reflect your personality. Share yourself with your readers in ways that add value.
Pay it forward.
Share what you’ve learned with others. Mentor other would-be storytellers and acknowledge and appreciate good work….and great writing.
Oh, and that very first story I wrote for Miss Constance’s fourth-grade class? A+.
Tell a great story today…and tomorrow. Craft stories that matter and are memorable.
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