HOW DOES IT END?
The end result of telling a story is to
convey a message. If you want your
audience to feel something, or take
action, keep the ending in mind with
every word you write. For instance, if
your goal is to tell the story of how your
product addressed a business challenge, then the story should
end with the customer result, including real ROI numbers, so
it’s tangible, believable and honest.
WHOSE STORY ARE WE TELLING?
As humans and brands, we tend to talk about ourselves; howev-
er, storytelling is not the place for this. The more you can tell
the stories of others, the more engaging and interesting you’ll
become. Telling the stories of customers, partners and employ-
ees will get more interest than a story about your brand, because
you’re creating a person-to-person connection with your story.
Your reader should relate to the story. Make it about them.
WHERE DO YOU SOURCE THE STORY?
If your story is not about you, then where do you get the infor-
mation? The best place to start is with your audience. If you’re
telling customer stories, reach out to your customers and ask
them to share their stories. Start with those customers that
enjoy talking to you. These customers leave product reviews,
speak at conferences about you, and answer questions about
your product on Twitter. This is your low hanging fruit.
Interview and record the conversation. Have a planned list
of questions going in, and a transcriber on standby.
HOW CAN THE STORY BE SHARED IN OTHER WAYS?
Consider how you can slice and dice a story. Start big and
broad, with all of your supportive assets driving back to that
bigger story.
W
Give your stories the impact they need by answering these 5 questions
STORYTELLING
CAN TAKE THE
MUNDANE
AND MAKE IT
INTERESTING
Amanda Nelson
is Director,
Community
Marketing at
Salesforce.
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17/05/2018 17:18
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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 15
The best
TED Talks on
Storytelling
S
You can search each of these fascinating
storytelling talks by name at
www.TED.com, and
in the process you’ll find more related inspiration.
torytelling is no simple, off-the-peg
strategy. As these TED talks reveal, it’s a
complex and nuanced art, a fundamen-
tal aspect of being human that can drive
powerfully positive, or powerfully negative results.
Stories engage and inspire, but they also manipu-
late and mislead. That’s why learning to challenge
the stories you hear can be just as important as
learning to tell new ones. Here’s our hand-picked
selection of the best TED Talks on stories: why they
matter, how to construct better ones and where
they might lead us in the future:
WHY STORIES MATTER
Need convincing about the importance of story-
telling for marketers? Try Yuval Noah Harari’s talk,
T H E B R I E F
Gearoid Buckley explores the best TED insights on the
science, meaning and potential of stories
What explains the rise of humans? The answer
(no prizes for guessing) is stories, but not necessar-
ily, the type of stories you’d expect. Harari explains
how our ability to create new fictional realities is
what separates us from animals, and has given
birth to companies, brands, nations, even money.
HOW TO TELL A GREAT STORY
Much has been written about formulas for the
perfect story. Andrew Stanton, the writer behind
Toy Story and Wall-E, rejects some of those ideas
and embraces others in a hugely entertaining talk,
The clues to a great story, that’s a must for anyone
looking to make an audience care. In a world where
marketers face intensifying competition for atten-
tion, this is an essential guide not only to creating a
great story, but making that story count.
STORIES THAT TRANSFORM?
OR STORIES THAT LIMIT?
Stories have the potential to free our minds, punch
holes in preconceptions and generate empathy
that crosses nations and cultural boundaries.
Unfortunately, that’s not always what happens.
In
The danger of a single story, Nigerian author
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie explores how single,
dominant, stereotypical stories can be used to
reinforce power relationships and disenfranchise
whole groups of people. It’s a theme continued by
Turkish-born novelist Elif Shafak, in her talk on
The politics of fiction. Both of these authors argue
passionately against a world with preconceptions
about the types of stories different people should
tell. As Adichie puts it, stereotypes aren’t wrong,
they are just incomplete stories. You won’t change
people’s perceptions by conforming to them.
THE VALUE OF CHALLENGING THE STORY
Malcolm Gladwell’s talk on
The unheard story
of David and Goliath is not only a brilliant
telling of a story you thought you knew, but also
a masterclass in looking at established stories
from different perspectives. Don’t just accept the
narrative around your category. There is often
a more unexpected, profound and illuminating
story hiding below the surface.
THE FUTURE OF STORIES
As the media landscape evolves, what new forms
will storytelling take? In
The visual magic of comics,
artist Scott McCloud shares some fascinating
insights on how to evolve storytelling techniques
when the creative canvas keeps changing.
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16 S o p h i s t i c a t e d M a r k e t e r
Andrew Monu grew up on the receiving end of ignorant profiling, and promised himself never to let
bias affect his own judgments of people. He explains why that’s such a difficult promise to keep
hen I was 19, I was rollerblading in a near-empty car park,
practising doing circles and going backwards. That was a big
manoeuvre for me back then! I was really starting to get the hang
of it when a loud voice broke my concentration. “You there!”
It was a woman’s voice coming from the tennis court next to the
car park. At first I wasn’t sure that she was addressing me, so I carried on
skating. In the corner of my eye, I could see the woman signalling to her
tennis partner to halt the game. She was now walking across the tennis
court towards me. Her voice became more and more irritable.
“Yes, you! You there!” She banged her tennis racket against the mesh
fence of the tennis court. “What do you think you’re doing?”
At 19, I’d already been subjected to enough ignorant profiling to know
what she was getting at. A black kid, especially a young black man, could
only have been up to no good, despite every indication to the contrary.
I stopped skating and looked up at her. Despite my anger, I somehow
managed to stay calm and to keep my voice even. These are the words
that came out of my mouth:
“I was actually trying to steal your car.” I said, nonchalantly gesturing
around the car park. “Which one is it?”
The woman was dumbstruck; rooted to the spot
like I’d just served an ace down the middle. Take
that! I thought. I had said to her face what she was
thinking all along. I turned away and carried on
skating in the same spot. Now I’d love to tell you
that I did a little mic drop and that was the end of
it, but that’s not how this story goes. Five minutes
later, I was pushed up against the door of a police
car with my hands held behind my back by an
officer. My guess was that they’d called the police
before the woman had even started talking to me.
I was angry because this woman simply didn’t
see me for who I actually was. I was a studious,
hard-working kid, who had never stolen anything.
She didn’t ‘see’ me. She didn’t even bother to look.
And so she saw something else entirely, a work of
fiction based on her own prejudice.
I’m telling you this story because of a promise I
made to myself. I told myself that I would never be
that person at the tennis court. I would never jump
to conclusions about people. But twenty years later,
I have broken that oath many times over. I carry
bias in almost everything that I do. We all do. But
the more I work on managing my biases, the better I
get. Why am I telling you this? I hope that by admit-
ting to my preconceived ideas, I can help others to
be more aware of their own, and that’s a vital part of
building an inclusive workplace.
HERE ARE SOME THINGS THAT I TRY
TO REMIND MYSELF ON A DAILY BASIS:
You bring the bias with you
I believe strongly in the importance of being
yourself at work. It’s non-negotiable. But while it’s
important for my personal wellbeing, bringing my
true self to work can come at a price for those who
work with me. I have bias. Both conscious and
unconscious. Whether it’s during that interview
where I decided early on that I wasn’t really feeling
the candidate. Or how I assume that the middle
class, death metal-loving white guy has nothing in
common with me.
The bigger you are, the bigger the impact
The more power and influence you have, the more
damage your bias can cause. When John Amaechi
OBE came to speak at LinkedIn recently about the
importance of discussions around race and inclu-
sion, he used the funny analogy of how managers
are like giants who tower above their employees.
The point stayed with me: we must watch where we
tread as we will have a lasting impact on our teams
- good and bad.
WHY BEING
CONSCIOUS OF
YOUR BIAS
IS THE FIRST STEP
W
T H E B R I E F
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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 17
Stop thinking that this doesn’t
apply to you
Many of us believe we’re too ‘enlightened’ to be
biased. We have travelled, have a diverse group of
friends and are liberal at heart. Things like racial,
gender or sexuality bias are problems that belong
to past generations, right? Sorry, but not true.
This isn’t about overt prejudice. It’s about how
you inform your decisions, which can be harder
to unpick. There are dozens of reasons why I
carry bias. It could be my African upbringing, my
immigrant experience or my professional life.
Here’s an interesting test to see what might be
shaping your bias. Write down the 10 friends who
you trust the most in the world. And you can’t
include family - no cheating. Then break down
their key characteristics such as ethnicity, educa-
tion level, class, sexuality. When I did this, it opened
my eyes. Although I pride myself on the fact that my
closest friends are mixed racially and socio-eco-
nomically, every one identifies as cisgender and
heterosexual. I don’t occupy as diverse a piece of
the world as I thought, and I need to change that.
Don’t ‘tut’. Pick up the litter around you
John Amaechi OBE talks about how tolerating bad
behavior is like letting litter build up around the
office. He points out how many of us just ‘tut’, when
colleagues say inappropriate things about our
female, gay, white or black colleagues. Just like litter,
we view each instance as ‘too small’ an issue and we
let it go. And before we know it, we’re surrounded by
it. And that becomes part of our culture.
Be open to uncomfortable
conversations
I’m not saying that bias is good, but denying its
existence is so much worse. It gets in the way
of meaningful conversations that could lead
to better understanding. Acknowledging that
you’re not perfect makes you more open to
learning. Hopefully, that means that I can feel
comfortable telling my white colleague that I
don’t appreciate the term ‘colored’ without him
thinking that his card is marked and without me
feeling like I’m now viewed as someone with a
chip on his shoulder.
Bias is not someone else’s problem. We all have
a role to play to create a more inclusive workplace.
That’s why I volunteer as part of Embrace, LinkedIn’s
Employee Resource Group. The aim of the group is
to overcome unconscious bias and build a sense
of belonging by embracing cultural, national and
ethnic diversity at every level of our organization. I
hope that one day this becomes the new norm and
the group becomes redundant. Until then, we have
some work to do. Together.
“I’M NOT SAYING
THAT BIAS IS
GOOD, BUT
DENYING ITS
EXISTENCE IS SO
MUCH WORSE”
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This is a great time for any B2B marketer interested in
accessing original thinking and inspiration. Here are 50 blogs
that I wouldn’t want to be without:
W0RDS BY J
ASON MILLER
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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 19
SEO
It’s one of the fastest-moving areas of marketing and a
skillset that every marketer needs. These blogs will help to
keep you where it’s at on search trends:
1.
BLIND FIVE YEAR OLD
Blind Five Year Old is an SEO agency and blog run by AJ
Kohn. The name comes from a tried-and-tested SEO philos-
ophy: treat search engines like they are blind five year-olds.
It’s technical but very authoritative and a must-read if you’re
passionate about search.
http://www.blindfiveyearold.com
2.
SEARCH ENGINE JOURNAL
Mixing news, tips and tactics, this is applied search marketing
wisdom with some great insights for marketers.
http://www.searchenginejournal.com
3.
BACKLINKO
Link-building is still a woefully under-appreciated art in
SEO and content marketing. Brian Dean’s blog dispenses
much-needed, practical wisdom that can make a real differ-
ence to your content visibility.
https://backlinko.com
4.
TUBULAR INSIGHTS (FORMERLY REELSEO)
If you’re planning a role for video content in your strategy then
you need to follow this blog. It’s where you find the real juice
on what works and what doesn’t, in both the technical and the
creative sense.
http://tubularinsights.com
5.
MOZ
The grand-daddy of all SEO blogs, founded by the legendary
Rand Fishkin. It will keep you on top of all the latest develop-
ments in search, with plenty of inspiration mixed in.
https://moz.com/blog
6.
SEARCH ENGINE LAND
More news-focused than the other SEO blogs that I follow, this
one gives me absolute confidence that I’m on top of everything
I need to know.
https://searchengineland.com
7.
SEO BY THE SEA
I think of this as a living encyclopedia of search. It takes
a research-led approach to SEO issues as they come up,
combing through published material from the search engines
to piece together how things actually work.
http://www.seobythesea.com
T H E B R I E F
5
3
I was updating my Feedly RSS feed last month as part of a
digital spring clean, and two things struck me: firstly, I follow
a lot of creativity and marketing-related blogs; secondly, I
wouldn’t want to be without any of them. Here are the 50 that I
follow most religiously. I believe any B2B marketer will benefit
from making space for them in their feed:
BACK TO CONTENTS PAGE
20 S o p h i s t i c a t e d M a r k e t e r
Marketing and
advertising
From content marketing to demand and lead generation and
proving ROI, these are the blogs I turn to for industry news
and inspiration:
8.
CONTENT MARKETING INSTITUTE
From the ups and downs of working with content agencies to
the nuts and bolts of building a content calendar, with plenty
of top-level tips on formats from podcasts to webinars: this is
a feed must-have for content marketers. You’ll find plenty of
great in-depth resources too.
http://contentmarketinginstitute.com/blog
9.
CONVINCE AND CONVERT
Jay Baer is one of the most entertaining, original and insightful
voices out there on content. His blog stands out for its focus on
linking content back to the bottom line. You want evidence,
numbers and ROI? This blog will help you deliver them.
http://www.convinceandconvert.com/blog
10.
SOCIAL MEDIA EXAMINER
Your ‘guide to the social media jungle’ delivers a regular flow
of ‘how-to’ posts that answer some of the most pressing practi-
cal questions you’re likely to have as a content marketer.
https://www.socialmediaexaminer.com
11.
MARTECH
There’s a great mix of technology-related content on here,
including broader issues of how marketing and tech intersect.
The real value, though, is in the podcasts: practical insights
from real experts on different emerging platforms.
https://martech.zone
12.
COPYBLOGGER
Copyblogger founder Brian Clark is one of the pioneers of B2B
content marketing. This blog reflects that legacy: packed with
resources (the podcasts are particularly good), but also explor-
ing all aspects of what it means to be a content marketer today.
https://www.copyblogger.com/blog
13.
MARKETING INSIDER
Michael Brenner is the author of The Content Formula and one of
the most widely shared thought-leaders on LinkedIn SlideShare,
which makes his blog an essential addition to your feed.
https://marketinginsidergroup.com/blog
14.
MARKETING LAND
Broad-ranging, authoritative and current, with around five
new posts a day on average: Marketing Land is a great source
for the digital marketing news that you won’t necessarily get
from the mainstream marketing press. It’s not afraid of a good
strong opinion either.
https://marketingland.com
15.
MARKETINGPROFS
Any blog associated with my friend and mentor Ann Handley
is guaranteed to deliver smart, alternative opinions that are
sharply expressed. The MarketingProfs blog doesn’t disap-
point. Add it to your feed and you’ll find a regular stream of
alternative perspectives on life as a content marketer. You’ll
also get a heads up on MarketingProfs’ new resources (some
of the best in the business), as they’re launched.
https://www.marketingprofs.com/opinions
16.
KISSMETRICS
Metrics and analytics remain a blind spot for many content
marketing strategies. This blog is on a mission to remedy that.
It focuses on the outcomes you need and then works back to
explore the techniques that can get you there.
https://blog.kissmetrics.com
17.
INTERNETMARKETINGNINJAS
Great name, and a very canny blog approaching internet
marketing from an SEO perspective.
https://www.internetmarketingninjas.com/blog
18.
AIMCLEAR
It promises “digital marketing news with side of snark” and I
honestly can’t think of a better description for what AimClear
serves up. It’s a living example of how you can pep up content
by stirring a bit of attitude and energy into it.
http://www.aimclearblog.com
T H E B R I E F
24
12
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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 21
19.
ADAGE
AdAge is still one of marketing’s most authoritative
thought-leadership brands, and that’s reflected in the heavy-
weight line-up of columnists on this blog.
http://adage.com/blogs
20.
ADLAND
Savvy, smart and plugging you straight into the creative
side of marketing: I get a regular top-up of creative inspi-
ration from Adland.
https://adland.tv
21.
ADRANTS
Out-there opinions, occasionally off-message, and always
interesting whether you agree with them or not: that’s what
you get with this blog.
http://www.adrants.com
22.
OGILVY ON OUR MINDS
Tapping you straight into the thinking of a global agency, with
perspectives and practical advice from across different markets.
https://www.ogilvy.com
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