3
TRUST
There’s no room for complacency
Trust was a huge issue at Advertising Week Europe – whether it was
the ongoing issues around brand safety or the need for platforms to
demonstrate trustworthiness in how they use people’s data. We were
treated to a lot of sessions exploring brands’ responsibilities under
GDPR and the approaching ePrivacy regulation. But trust isn’t just about
obeying the letter of the law. It also relates to how we use the data that we
have permission to access.
4
VIDEO
Time to define your signature style
No one platform can own the definition of video. The reason it’s such an
exciting format is that it’s so versatile. Video can incorporate anything
from a few seconds of animation to an emotive three-minute film, a
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46 S o p h i s t i c a t e d M a r k e t e r
W0RDS BY JASON MILLER
A story told by
LinkedIn data
The rise of
storytelling
in marketing
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S o p h i s t i c a t e d M a r k e t e r 47
ots of people will tell you that market-
ing has always been about storytelling
– and that marketers have always been
storytellers. Indeed, storytelling is such
an established part of the marketing
vocabulary today that it’s tempting to
believe it’s always been treated as an important
skill. But it hasn’t.
LinkedIn data provides a unique perspective
on the very rapid rise of storytelling in marketing.
It shows that storytelling was very much a fringe
concept as recently as six years ago. This was despite
the fact that pioneers like Seth Godin were already
arguing for marketers to start thinking in terms of
stories. Then, very suddenly, things changed.
In early summer 2011, the number of marketers
listing storytelling as a skill on their LinkedIn profile
was miniscule. It effectively didn’t exist as a market-
ing discipline. Just two years later, storytelling was a
key part of the profile of almost a quarter of a million
marketers, 7% of all marketers worldwide, in fact.
What had happened to turn a concept that
people once associated with children’s bedtimes
into an essential marketing skill? We analyzed the
LinkedIn data to help tell the story of storytell-
ing’s rise. It’s the tale of a 12-month period, from
August 2011 to August 2012 that created unstoppa-
ble momentum behind this form of content and its
role in brand relationships. It’s a story populated
with stand-out campaigns and great ideas that are
worth revisiting today. At a time when the concept
of storytelling in marketing can still feel frustrating-
ly difficult to define, it reminds us what this vision
of brand content means – and why it matters.
L O N G F O R M
IT'S TEMPTING TO ASSUME
STORYTELLING HAS ALWAYS
BEEN SEEN AS AN IMPORTANT
MARKETING SKILL. IT HASN'T.
L
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48 S o p h i s t i c a t e d M a r k e t e r
L O N G F O R M
THE STORY OF 2012:
the year that put
storytelling on the
marketing map
In April 2011, it was easy to poke fun at the concept of
brand storytelling – and that’s what Tom Fishburne did
when launching his now well-established Marketoonist
cartoon series. Fishburne actually bought into the
concept of brands and marketers as storytellers. He
just didn’t think most brands were doing a good
enough job. Judging from the LinkedIn data, he was
right. Marketers may have liked the buzzword, but they
didn’t take storytelling seriously as a skill.
2.
THE TRIGGER
AUGUST 2011
Number of storytellers in marketing:
0
COCA-COLA CHANGES THE GAME
The launch of Coca-Cola’s Content 2020 strategy saw one of the world’s biggest
brands seeking to define brand storytelling and its specific role in a connected
marketing strategy. The marketing world took notice. It was at this point at which
we can first detect marketers adding storytelling as a specific skill on their profile.
1.
BEFORE THE RISE
APRIL 2011
Number of storytellers
in marketing:
0
STORYTELLING AS PUNCHLINE
2011
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S o p h i s t i c a t e d M a r k e t e r 49
The Cannes Lions festival announced a new category: Branded
Content and Entertainment. That wording was significant. It captured
the idea that branded content was more than just a different form of
advertising: it had to captivate audiences as entertainment; as stories.
FEBRUARY 2012
Number of storytellers
in marketing:
10,000
CHIPOTLE STEALS THE SHOW
AT THE GRAMMY’S
APRIL 2012
Number of storytellers
in marketing:
12,000
ALL MARKETERS TELL STORIES
Nobody tuning in to watch Adele sweep the Grammy awards expected the
highlight of their evening to be a Chipotle ad. The Mexican food chain with the
“Food with Integrity” message had never run a national TV campaign before.
Then came a two-minute animated film backed by a heartbreaking rendition of
Coldplay’s The Scientist, performed by Willie Nelson. It was a story about a farmer
losing his soul to industrial techniques, and then battling resolutely to get it back.
It set Twitter alight, bringing brand storytelling into the big time.
Seth Godin was one of the first thinkers
to argue that the art of storytelling was
fundamental to marketing as a whole.
He’d written about it as early as 2005,
in his book All Marketers are Liars, an
underground hit. In April 2012 it was
re-issued, with a cheeky new cover. The
original title was scrawled out
and rephrased as ‘All Marketers
tell Stories’. Putting storytelling
center-stage in this way
demonstrated that it was no
longer just a content marketing
tactic. It was now part of the
strategic marketing discussion.
3.
THE TAKE-OFF
JANUARY 2012
Number of storytellers
in marketing:
5,000
STORYTELLING GETS ITS OWN LION
APRIL 2012
Number of storytellers in
marketing:
12,000
THE SCIENCE
BEHIND STORIES
The Storytelling Animal
by Jonathan Gottschall
was the New York Times
Editor’s Choice book
that put the science
behind storytelling.
Gottschall looked at
stories through an
evolutionary lens; not
just as a cozy way of
wrapping up a message,
but as a means of
shutting down critical faculties and opening people
up to emotional influence and manipulation. This was
serious stuff: not just a new creative technique, but a
new science of storytelling.
2012
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50 S o p h i s t i c a t e d M a r k e t e r
L O N G F O R M
4.
THE EARLY MAJORITY
MAY 2012
Number of storytellers
in marketing:
18,000
THE YEAR OF STORYTELLING
Late spring and early summer 2012 saw a significant shift. Bloggers
and mainstream media alike stopped treating storytelling as another
marketing buzzword, and started to discuss it as part of a new
marketing zeitgeist. The Guardian, Fast Company and Forbes were
amongst those declaring this the year of storytelling. A tipping point
had been reached. If marketers needed permission to start treating
storytelling as an essential skill, they now had it.
JOE PULIZZI PRESENTS THE
HISTORY OF STORYTELLING
Joe Pulizzi’s presentation at the Online Marketing
Summit argued that brands now needed to compete
as media companies in order to earn audiences’
attention. That didn’t just mean putting branded
content out there. It required them to develop their
own compelling stories. While most attention had
focused on the storytelling of consumer
brands, Pulizzi showed it
to be fundamental to B2B
strategies as well. And
through the story of
brands like John Deere,
he demonstrated that
storytelling has always
had value to add to
those who can execute
it properly.
JUNE 2012
Number of storytellers in
marketing:
21,000
CHIPOTLE WINS THE FIRST
STORYTELLING GRAND PRIX
Chipotle landed the first Grand Prix to be awarded at the
Cannes Lions for Branded Content and Entertainment,
beating off strong competition from Montblanc, Qantas,
Intel, Carling Black Label and others. The 13 Gold Lions also
awarded in this category showed the sudden strength in
depth of storytelling campaigns.
2012
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S o p h i s t i c a t e d M a r k e t e r 51
5.
WHAT HAPPENED NEXT
STORYTELLING
(number of marketers)
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
600k
500k
400k
300k
200k
100k
0
25,000
200,000
310,000
350,000
450,000
570,000
OCTOBER 2013:
THE RISE
No. of storytellers in
marketing:
200,000
MASSIVE NUMBER
OF PEOPLE ADDING
"STORYTELLING" TO
THEIR LINKEDIN PROFILE
Storytelling represents 0.2% of all skills added on LinkedIn Profiles.
Gary Vaynerchuk joins the keynote speakers taking it as a theme.
AUGUST 2014:
POWERFUL STUFF
No. of storytellers
in marketing:
310,000
FACTS TELL, STORIES SELL
Subaru’s Commercial ’They lived’ demonstrates it’s not the product
but the story that holds the power.
JANUARY 2015:
FORCE FOR GOOD
No. of storytellers in
marketing:
350,000
LIFE ITSELF
UN partnered with Unicef Jordan, Samsung and vrse.works to create a
virtual reality experience that would transport
the world’s top decision makers to a Syrian refugee camp.
OCTOBER 2017:
WHAT'S NEXT
No. of storytellers in marketing:
570,000
DON’T MISS A THING
The Future of StoryTelling (FoST) is a passionate community of people
from the worlds of media, technology, and communications who are
exploring how storytelling is evolving in the digital age.
Generated from LinkedIn profile data,
this graph shows how storytelling
changed the landscape of marketing
skills over a five-year period. With an
ongoing upward trend, this is a story
that's not finished yet.
MAY 2016:
NEW TECH
No. of storytellers
in marketing:
450,000
IS VIRTUAL REALITY THE
FUTURE OF STORYTELLING?
Whether for charity or to create marketing trends, the
convergence of media and tech is enabling immersive
new storytelling forms.
BACK TO CONTENTS PAGE
BRIAN SOLIS
ON HOW
STORYTELLING
CAN SAVE
MARKETING
ILLUSTRATIONS BY GAPINGVOID
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S o p h i s t i c a t e d M a r k e t e r 53
L O N G F O R M
Brian Solis, author of Engage and X: The Experience When Business Meets Design, has teamed up
with LinkedIn and Gaping Void to create an exclusive new eBook, Once Upon a Digital Time. LinkedIn’s
Megan Golden talked to him about how telling better stories can help future-proof marketing itself.
MEGAN GOLDEN:
There are over half a million LinkedIn members with storytelling listed in their
profile. Why are modern marketers self-categorizing themselves as storytellers?
BRIAN SOLIS:
I always remember a quote from a very interesting, well-known advertis-
er, who was fond of saying to agencies and other marketers, “You’re not
an effing storyteller!” This advertiser had read an interview with one of the
most famous rollercoaster designers in the world, and this rollercoaster
designer categorized his work as storytelling.
For the advertiser, this showed how easy it is for
us to believe we’re storytellers, just because we
produce content or we produce experiences.
He was making the point that being a storyteller
takes much more than just saying you’re a story-
teller. We keep saying it, not because it’s true, but
because it feels good to say you’re storytelling
instead of admitting you’re in marketing.
Personally, I think of storytelling as an
aspirational title of sorts. I’m an optimist and
so I want to believe that marketers do genuinely
believe that they’re storytellers. What they need
to consider though, is that this is a very sacred
word. We’ve bought into the aspiration and the
ideal of storytelling-based marketing, but we
haven’t yet gone through the exercise of what it
actually takes to become a storyteller.
I realized this several years ago when I was
writing my book, X: The Experience When Business
Meets Design. I was guilty of thinking that, because
I was in control of the narrative, I was a storyteller. I
wasn’t. My response was to find a storyboard artist to
teach me the art and science of storytelling. That made
a big difference, but I can tell you that even after going
through that, I would never put storyteller in my title.
It’s too sacred a term and we have to respect that.
MEGAN GOLDEN:
You say in our book that marketers have ended up
distracted by social media follower numbers, and
lost their sense of purpose. How do you know when
the purpose is missing? And how can you reclaim it
through storytelling?
BRIAN SOLIS:
The challenge for marketing is that it’s adapting
storytelling, it’s adapting social media, it’s adapting
mobile, it’s adapting all of these new channels on
the basis of a classical foundation of what market-
ing means. It has a traditional matrix that has to
adapt to new times, technologies and trends. That
matrix ends up focused on the wrong things.
It’s not that marketers don’t get it. It’s more that
they’re packaging technology into a construct that
they know. It’s self-reinforcing. Executives there-
fore see marketing in these terms, and fund it and
support it in these terms. They’re supporting what
marketing is, not what it could be.
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54 S o p h i s t i c a t e d M a r k e t e r
This is a time for reinvention and innovation. In the book, we talk
about using storytelling not just as a guiding light for the future of engage-
ment and experience, but also as a catalyst to drive innovation. What
does it take to tell a great story? What does it take to really understand
your audience? What does it take to be really compelling? What does it
take to move, guide and inspire them?
The answers to those questions are going to take some marketers
out of that old construct and start them building something new: a new
generation of marketing that’s less about ‘Marketing’ and more about
experience and engagement.
This raises the question: once I have your attention and you have my
attention, what are we going to do about it? When you start thinking in
these terms, you’re stepping in a new direction, and you continue to step
in new directions as you pursue these ideas. I call it ‘progressive trans-
parency,’ moving beyond what marketing used to focus on and taking an
interest in ‘The Embrace’, or what happens when you engage.
The challenge that marketers have today is that their budgets, resourc-
es and expertise are all emblematic of how we viewed marketing yester-
day, not of how marketing needs to be tomorrow. We get caught up in
these cycles of allowing marketing to be driven and guided by executives,
who want to see certain things communicated in certain ways. I mean
the fact that legal has such a strong voice in what we can say and what
we can’t say, or what the narrative has to be according to the “optics of
the organization”. These are all designed based
on yesterday’s view of what marketing is, and this
holds marketing back from what it could be.
MEGAN GOLDEN:
How were you originally connected with Hugh
MacLeod and what is it about Hugh’s illustrations
that you feel really bring your words to light?
BRIAN SOLIS:
I was part of the startup community that eventual-
ly became Web 2.0 and then developed into social
media. Hugh was also part of that group. He was
coming from Savile Row and leaving the advertis-
ing world behind. He was using cartoons to express
some of the really amazing things that technolo-
gy was starting to empower us with, and all of the
paradoxes that it had introduced into our lives. He
was also taking shots at the way marketing kept
focusing just on the next advertisement. We orbit-
ed the same circles in the Web 2.0 world and in its
earliest stage, that community wasn’t just about
working. It was also about validation and self-help
L O N G F O R M
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S o p h i s t i c a t e d M a r k e t e r 55
and support. We would meet for drinks and bring all of the entrepre-
neurs together to talk about what we were working on, and help us get
everything to the next level. I just instantly bonded with Hugh. He’s a
wonderful human being and so witty and clever.
MEGAN GOLDEN:
You wrote a book a couple years ago, X: The Experience When Business
Meets Design. In there you talked about the need for businesses to invest
in experience architects. Can you explain how storytelling plays into the
design of those experiences?
BRIAN SOLIS:
Once I got to the core of what an experience was, I realized that you can’t
design experiences unless you’re intent on them. When someone comes
into contact with your brand, your product, your service, your packaging
or your representative, you don’t want them just feeling the value of those
parts; you want them to feel more than the sum of those parts. You have
to design the experience as a story where everything comes together into
an arc that people will feel, walk away with, and talk about. So, it was very
intentional way of looking at experiences. I think it
was a little early as an idea, and now it’s starting to
be appreciated a bit more.
So, the idea of becoming an experience archi-
tect is essentially not unlike becoming a storyteller.
It’s about being able to build experiences by trans-
forming every aspect of a company around the
experiences you want to deliver.
The real challenge is that we approach all this
acting like marketers. We talk like marketers. We
measure like marketers. We talk at people based
on what other people have approved us to say and
none of it feels human. That has to change. The first
step is realizing that we’re in denial. Then we can
accept the need for change and start moving in a
new direction.
“I love receiving generic emails and text messag-
es,” said no-one ever. We have to understand that
marketing is what it is. The reason it doesn’t have
a seat at the table in most C-suite discussions is
because it’s not aligned with business growth and
it’s not aligned with customer experiences.
But it could be! Marketing doesn’t have to be
a discipline or a function. It could become the
work that customer experience teams are doing
by using communication, touchpoints, technology
and channels to deliver experiences holistically. I
think marketing’s futures are bigger than we give
them credit for because we’re still stuck looking
at what marketing was rather than what it could
be. The reason storytelling in marketing matters is
because it starts to force us to move beyond that.
When we accept it as the sacred term that it really
is, it absolutely demands transformation. It’s not
just another marketing tactic.
Explore Brian’s vision of storytelling in marketing
in full by downloading Once Upon a Digital Time
at lnkd.in/storyteller
THE OPPORTUNITY
WITH STORYTELLING
IS AS A CATALYST FOR
INNOVATION: MOVING
BEYOND THE OLD
MARKETING CONSTRUCT
AND BUILDING
SOMETHING NEW
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