The traditional stories from our childhoods weren't just captivating, they were also easy to compose.

They had a beginning, and they had an end. There were heroes, and there were villains. And, invariably, the plot was told in chronological order by a trusted narrator.

Aware of the power of stories to hold an audience, organizations started using storytelling to sell—relying on storylines that made prospective customers associate positively with brands, and detailing how the brand could help those customers.

Whether those stories triggered fulfillment, aspiration, or satisfaction, brand stories played a huge role in influencing the actions and decisions of customers.

Just like your bedtime stories before them, brand stories were simple to narrate through traditional media like TV, radio, and print. Vitally, those mediums enabled brands to tell their story from beginning to end without breaking the all-important plot.

However, with the rise of digital, that has changed...

Digital has fragmented traditional brand storytelling

The ease of narrating a brand's story has been lost.

Digital made it almost impossible for a story to maintain its elements and therefore traditional coherence—disrupting the plot and shifting the control and power of the narrator to the customer.

Customers can now engage with the story's plot on their terms—whenever they want, however they want—changing the dynamics of how the story needs to be told and reducing brands' storytelling power.

Today, brand stories usually fail because of two main factors:

  1. The plot is constantly interrupted because of your customers' fragmented engagement points across devices.
  2. Research suggests customers are exposed to over 3,500 marketing messages a day, and you've got only around 12 seconds to engage them and get across the desired message each time you have their attention.

The result of such fragmentation, along with the ubiquity of advertising is the rising cost of attention.

However, these issues aren't insurmountable; you can still tell memorable brand stories using the following three key approaches.

1. Play your heroes against the villains

Make your customer the protagonist of your story (create a link to your customer's lifestyle and emotions, not their wallets)

Let's put this approach into practice. For an airline, which piece of copy do you think works better?

  • "Our cheapest tickets ever"
  • "Your family's summer holidays are special, start them right with [Insert Airline]".

The second is more powerful because it connects with your customers, making them the main character in the story.

You should also make your customer the hero of your story. Rather than your making your brand or product the focus, make your customer the one who defeats the villains and solves the problem.

Build your competitors as the villains in the story

Think Apple vs. Microsoft or Virgin Atlantic vs. British Airways—i.e., creating a common enemy for your brand gives your customers something to rally around. Doing so also creates a sense of alliance between you and your customers. This brand story them often emerges in cases of challenger brands against established names.

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Three Ways Marketers Can Tell Their Stories Across Multichannel Touchpoints

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Shawn Cabral

Shawn Cabral is VP of marketing at conversion optimization solution provider Yieldify. He has 15+ years' experience across digital and nondigital marketing disciplines.

LinkedIn: Shawn Cabral

Twitter: @ShawnCabral