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Breaking the Top 10 storytelling posts for 2016 into two parts, I published the first part last week.
Here’s the second part, again reflecting the varied facets that make up today’s communications in the business world.
In spite of the massive changes in our industry, media relations and PR storytelling still matter, an apt way to kick off the rest of the list....
One of the best parts of my job involves conducting storytelling workshops.It’s both fun and satisfying to help participants connect the dots to a simple premise: Given a choice between “interesting” and “dull,” human beings pick “interesting” virtually every time.
I’m constantly refining the package shared with participants in our workshops for business storytelling.Lately, these are my go-to narratives....
We are all hopelessly distracted. It’s not a disorder -- it’s the new world order. Can I have your attention, please?
Whichever methods we put in play with our marketing, we’re powerless unless we’re able to get a prospect to pay attention. It doesn’t come easy. As long as we’re online, on earth, and in a media-centric society, there will always be a shiny object scattering, shattering, and battering our focus.
Okay, when you practice inbound marketing for a while, you start getting good. You figure out how to write a headline cursors and fingers are magnetically attracted to. But a click is nothing more than a click until you, the messenger, truly click with your customer....
It begins with listening. Understanding what your audience is interested in and how they want to interact with your brand....
My philosophy is simple. The traditional channels for storytelling may have changed and are certain to change more, but what remains constant is the power of listening, of earning your way into a conversation, and respect for your audience. This is the foundation for a new communications contract between businesses and stakeholders that’s based on genuine engagement....
Your competition can copy everything you do except for the story you tell.
Stop slugging it out with your competitors for a trickle of long-tail traffic. Content Marketing Institute’s Chief Strategist Robert Rose explains how you can crawl out of the trenches and get noticed by shifting your focus from search engines to storytelling.
Your competition is optimizing for the same keywords you are. More likely than not, they even follow the same recipe that you do: research keywords for the different stages of the funnel, spin up a post for each, and wait for Google to deliver new prospects. Even if you tweak your optimization to get ahead, a competitor will notice, copy it, and leave you back at square one.
Instead of relying so heavily on search engines to deliver customers, make your content the lead generator by telling a compelling story that engages readers, gets shared, and produces conversions. Robert Rose, Chief Strategist at The Content Marketing Institute, sat down with OpenView Labs to discuss why storytelling is such an important differentiator in today’s content-saturated marketing landscape and how you can get started....
... Stories have a connective quality, linking individuals together through similar emotions, thoughts, moulding our minds and reinforcing experiences. Although it may not be an intuitive conclusion, this is especially true in business. Besides merely relaying information, a relevant and compelling story can bring employees together for a common goal & becomes a stong engagement technique to be used in the workplace. Hearing stories about employees who behaved properly or employees who made similar mistakes when dealing with Customers and still succeeded at the company, can make team members feel more comfortable to try new things and to strive for new heights. Understanding that employees in the history of a company that have had opportunities to learn and grow through errors and triumphs can be a rewarding conclusion. The unifying quality of storytelling can be particularly useful when working with new employees. Remaining cognisant of the fact that team members new to an organisation do not understand the same details about clients, customer service, history and company objectives in the same way seasoned employees do, is something for which management must strive towards....
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As the founder of Southwest Airlines, Herb Kelleher did something no other person in the airline industry could do—grew an airline from nothing to more than 3500 flights a day, and turning a profit every single year.
Organisations that “do things” are said to be more successful than companies that merely “talk”. Now there is proof. As a consumer, we already knew this was true, now your professional alter ego can be persuaded as well.
The world has changed dramatically. Bob Garfield and Doug Levy recently wrote a book about it. According to their conclusions, we have entered what they call “the Relationship Era”. A world in which companies no longer hide behind well-chosen visuals and creative one-liners that — at best — stick. Companies have to do things, more than just saying....
Research shows that stories, anecdotes and metaphors are more memorable than data. At Searchlove last week, business consultant and author Danny Scheinmann discussed why stories work, the hidden structures behind them and how they can help your business to communicate effectively....
The challenge is clear by now: Intrusive, interruptive, self-centered marketing no longer works the way it once did, and its effectiveness will only continue to diminish in the social age. The question is what will replace the legacy model.
There’s a one-word answer: stories.
It makes sense. Finding--or creating--a narrative thread has always been how we as a species find order in the chaos of life. And it’s how smart brands are defining what’s next in the chaos of modern marketing.
What’s the case for content? There are human reasons. Stories are welcome where ads are resisted. They’re shareable and shapeable, constantly changing based on those they touch and those who touch them. They carve the quickest path to the heart and the mind--there’s literally brain science behind how humans interact with stories.
There are also business reasons. Content marketing moves the brand needle, increasing awareness, changing perception, creating desire and driving to purchase. And as stories spread--carried along by audiences--budgets don’t. Stories work....
Kevin Spacey's comments about the Netflix release of "House of Cards" contains a road map for brand storytelling worthy of global enterprise brands.
...In the video, Spacey himself speaks to the potential benefits of this innovative distribution strategy, proclaiming, “Give them [the audience] what they want, when the want it, in the form they want it in…”
The success of House of Cards (as well as that of the latest Netflix series to be released en-masse, Orange is the New Black) proves that this distribution model can work. But how might it apply to content marketing, which operates in vastly different ways than the business of television? And, more specifically, how might a nontraditional release schedule like this impact corporate storytelling?
Here are some key insights, derived directly from the words of Kevin Spacey, that all content marketers need to take to heart...
Think of web television as a nuclear family. It all started with TV — the traditional type. Along came the web, which, in many ways, was TV’s polar opposite: interactive, responsive, progressive. As much as TV was about tradition, the web was all about change. From this unlikely pairing came little programs that, when viewed together, make up an episodic web series, or webisode. Webisodes share some of the attributes of each of their media parents; yet they also bring a whole new generation of brand storytelling opportunities to life. It’s this pedigreed combination of the web and television that some big brands are experimenting with as a way to provide distinctive and uniquely engaging content to consumers. As one of the most engaging forms of branded content, the episodic web series has a lot of appeal. For example, just like a TV miniseries or a series of books, a good web TV series can help forge an ongoing relationship with target consumers: Once viewers have been drawn in by the entertainment value of a webisode, they’re likely to stick around to see what happens next — and to visit related YouTube channels, Facebook pages, or other touch points that are part of your branded environment. They’ll get to know your brand a little better. They may even start to like it more than they realized....
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Lou Hoffman shares best 2016 storytelling posts. Good writing and reading. H/T Frank Strong.