Bringing your Stories to Life

Storytelling: Bringing Your Stories to Life

The idea of bringing your stories to life and using stories to make a good business case is catching on and we couldn’t be happier!

The idea of bringing your stories to life and using stories to make a good business case is catching on and we couldn’t be happier

We’ve been running more Storytelling tailored work in the past two months than we have in the past two years.

Cartoonists have had a ball illustrating what happens to people when they sit through dull, unimaginative, and purely factual presentations. Recently, I actually fell asleep during one such presentation despite using every technique I know to force my eyes open. Dull doesn’t begin to describe what and how the chap was presenting.

Bringing Your Stories to Life

If you think about some of the elements that good stories share there aren’t all that many of them that are needed to draw you in and keep you listening or reading: characters you want to know more about and a plot to keep you interested. There are many many ways to embellish the plot and character (and we have a lot of models to do that), but if you don’t have those two key ones then dullness is the most likely order of the day.

So what’s this got to do with business? How can stories make a difference? And how can a bunch of facts and figures have characters and plots?

I think people who are used to dealing with end results sometimes forget what it takes to get to that end result. The drive to be precise and concise and distill things into what they believe is manageable data usually leaches out the drama, the hard work, the myriad decisions, mistakes, corrections, and most of all the people who made it all happen.

Listen to our Storytelling Podcast
How to Use Storytelling to Boost Sales

Great Storytelling

We know the reason our Storytelling courses are so popular is that we guide our delegates through the whole process of bringing your story to life: we start with the personal because that’s what connects people to each other. The journey ends with the business side of things but by the end of one or two days of training with us, those business stories sound and look very different indeed.

Here are a couple of tips on how to bring your stories to life and breathe life into factual data focusing on character and plot.

Identify the people involved

This is where you build your cast of characters. Who are they? What are their roles in the organisation and what makes them special. Any little titbit helps titivate or intrigue your audience. Look for something quirky to toss in, even if it has no relevance to the data you are presenting.

Version One:

“These figures have been verified and are an accurate summation of the first two-quarter sales this fiscal year.”

Version Two:

“Andrew Williams, our Sales Director, who’s about to take 8 fifteen-year-olds on a camping trip, verified these first two-quarter figures. I’m glad he checked them before the trip.”

The Journey to the End Result (plot)

This is where you build your plot. Think about key milestones, anything that created tension or was a problem that had to be overcome. Linking plot to characters, is there something ‘Andrew’ did that you can add to the mix?

Version One:

As you can see from this graph, our sales increased significantly in the second quarter in comparison to the first.”

Version Two:

Andrew, our intrepid camper, pulled out all the stops this quarter and turned into a Rottweiler chasing after the Sales Team to exceed their targets. He got some friendly rivalries going and his strategy clearly worked because as you can see from this graph, sales really did take a jump and are significantly up on the first quarter figures.”

As soon as you focus on character and plot your language also has to change; it has to be more descriptive and less dry.

These are just two elements that will help pump life into your stories so your audience is engaged.

Come along to one of our Storytelling Open courses and learn a shedload more techniques that will pump even more life into your stories

By Jo Ellen Grzyb, Director, ImpactFactory

Check out Speaking with Confidence: Our Ten Top Tips

Storytelling Bringing Your Stories to Life

Impact Factory runs

Open Storytelling Courses

Tailored Storytelling Training

and personalised

One-to-One Storytelling Skills Training

for anyone interested in

Storytelling

Discuss your requirements