3.2. Why Storytelling
âEvery product should have a story, a narrative that explains why it needs to exist and how it will solve your customerâs problems. A good product story has three elements:
» It appeals to peopleâs rational and emotional sides.
» It takes complicated concepts and makes them simple.
» It reminds people of the problem thatâs being solvedâit focuses on the âwhy.
Related Quotes
Storytelling is how you get people to take a leap of faith to do something new. Itâs what all our big choices ultimately come down toâbelieving a story we tell ourselves or that someone else tells us. Creating a believable narrative that everyone can latch on to is critical to moving forward and making hard choices. Itâs all that marketing comes down to. Itâs the heart of sales.
Your productâs story is its design, its features, images and videos, quotes from customers, tips from reviewers, conversations with support agents. Itâs the sum of what people see and feel about this thing that youâve created.
And the story doesnât just exist to sell your product. Itâs there to help you define it, understand it, and understand your customers. Itâs what you say to investors to convince them to give you money, and to new employees to convince them to join your team, and to partners to convince them to work with you, and to the press to convince them to care. And then, eventually, itâs what you tell customers to convince them to want what youâre selling.
And it all starts with âwhy.â
Why does this thing need to exist? Why does it matter? Why will people need it? Why will they love it?
Quick stories are easy to remember. And, more importantly, easy to repeat. Someone else telling your story will always reach more people and do more to convince them to buy your product than any amount of talking you do about yourself on your own platforms. You should always be striving to tell a story so good that it stops being yoursâso your customer learns it, loves it, internalizes it, owns it. And tells it to everyone they know.
Part 4: Build Your Business
4.1. How to Spot a Great Idea
âThere are three elements to every great idea:
- It solves for âwhy.â Long before you figure out what a product will do, you need to understand why people will want it. The âwhyâ drives the âwhat.â [See also: Chapter 3.2: Why Storytelling.]
- It solves a problem that a lot of people have in their daily lives.
- It follows you around. Even after you research and learn about it and try it out and realize how hard itâll be to get it right, you canât stop thinking about it.
Stories can almost single-handedly defeat the Curse of Knowledge. In fact, they naturally embody most of the SUCCESs framework. Stories are almost always Concrete. Most of them have Emotional and Unexpected elements. The hardest part of using stories effectively is making sure that theyâre Simpleâthat they reflect your core message. Itâs not enough to tell a great story; the story has to reflect your agenda. You donât want a general lining up his troops before battle to tell a Connection plot story.
Stories have the amazing dual power to simulate and to inspire. And most of the time we donât even have to use much creativity to harness these powersâwe just need to be ready to spot the good ones that life generates every day.