I participated in a recent tweet chat, and the topic for the week was storytelling, which seems to be the latest marketing buzzword, although corporate storytelling isn't anything new.

Keep in mind that storytelling is less about creating a mini-episode on your website or broadcast commercial, and more about communicating the story of your brand in a meaningful way so that your audience gets what you are about, remembers you, and advocates you and your cause.

You should be doing that sort of communication with every piece of content—telling your story in a personal, authentic way that engages your reader to take action. You connect with your audience through your brand; you tell them who you are, what you do, why they should care and trust you, and why you can help them.

And to do that, you must reach and speak to each person on an individual and personal level.

I call that "Argo-izing" your content.

I hope you either saw Argo or heard someone talking about the film. There is no doubt why the film won the Best Picture Oscar. The filmmakers followed what I now call the Argo rule: Lure them in, keep them engaged end-to-end, and keep them talking about you long after it is over.

So how do you go about Argo-izing your content?

Four Rules

1. Plan each piece of your content

What is your objective? Who do you want to reach? What story do you want to tell? How do you tie your brand story into this piece of content?

Take a page out of Hollywood's playbook and storyboard your content. If you watched Argo, storyboards came in handy for the crew. Outline each idea. What is the objective? What is the journey you want the reader to take with your content? What response do you want the audience to have? Connect these ideas.

I am sure you know that your content has to have a beginning, middle, and end. Do you also have to have a "character" in each piece of content? Not necessarily, but it helps. Perhaps one of the personas you have researched can be your lead character. Emotion drives response, so your audience should be emotionally connected somehow to your content or the characters you use in your content.

Being authentic and genuine will give your content what it needs to connect with your audience on an emotional and personal level.

2. Ensure your brand story is consistent across all communication channels and with other pieces of content

Speaking Farsi helped the Argo crew communicate and be believable. Speak your reader's language and communicate a consistent message through your content on your website, posts on social channels, posts and comments you make on online communities and elsewhere, etc. because you never know who is reading at any given moment.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Sue Duris

Sue Duris is president of M4 Communications Inc., a Palo Alto, CA-based marketing strategy and communications firmthat helps technology, entertainment and nonprofit organizations build and extend their brands. Reach her via sduris@m4comm.com.

Twitter: @M4_Comm
LinkedIn: Sue Duris