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Masters of storytelling August 2012 Kevin Sugrue Kevin.Sugrue@brandzeal BrandZeal

Masters of storytelling August 2012 Kevin Sugrue Kevin.Sugrue@brandzeal.com BrandZeal.com. What’s this all about?. Some context before we start

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Masters of storytelling August 2012 Kevin Sugrue Kevin.Sugrue@brandzeal BrandZeal

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  1. Masters of storytelling August 2012 Kevin Sugrue Kevin.Sugrue@brandzeal.com BrandZeal.com

  2. What’s this all about? Some context before we start We spend a large proportion of our time bringing research, ideas, or data to life for our work colleagues or clients. We present actionable insights and make clear recommendations; but are our presentations always as engaging and influential as they should be? Why is this important? This presentation guides you toward more impactful and influential storytelling. Great stories are memorable, influential and resonate with their audience. They provoke an audience response and act as a catalyst for changes in behaviour. Who is this session designed for? This presentation was a skills development session originally designed to help encourage brand consultants, account planners, researchers and brand managers to be more effective storytellers. It provides advice on storytelling theory. As well as many practical examples, resource links and tools that create more influential presentations. I’m an experienced presenter, what’s so important about storytelling? I believe storytelling makes presentations more memorable and influential. Bringing ideas or information to life with stories primes your audience to share and act upon your recommendations. A great story makes your point resonate.

  3. What’s in the box? Examples of Presentation Tools and Data Visualisation The first half of the presentation provides a toolbox of ideas and aids to better storytelling. Dip into these, explore them and they should inspire you and improve your presentation technique. Use them as relevant to your storytelling needs. They don’t provide one fixed template for storytelling and using few should go a long way in any singe presentation. Storytelling The second half brings together examples of storytelling theory and tips on how to write better stories in your presentations.

  4. Data Visualisation

  5. Data visualisation – go watch this first • http://www.ted.com/talks/david_mccandless_the_beauty_of_data_visualization.html

  6. Infographics Bringing data to life in interesting ways

  7. Both simple and complex information is made more interesting through infographics

  8. But you don’t need a graphic designer to bring your story, thinking or data to life Simple infographics you make yourself may work just as well to make your point

  9. Another example of visualising data in a fun way to aid storytelling In this example the power of the story overcomes a need for exact accuracy in the visualisation – people get the point quickly, even if a cake slice is slightly too large or too small. Brand A 8% Brand B 12% Brand D 26% Brand C 9%

  10. Looking for inspiration? Here are over 50 ways to visualise data Periodic Table of Visualization Methods http://www.visual-literacy.org/periodic_table/periodic_table.html

  11. Wordle – Tip to creating word clouds Word clouds shouldn’t look like this – where phrases have been separated Word clouds should look like this it I Brand Actor I love it Ad Advertising Media The Best Brand My Favourite Media Favourite Best love My The Best Great Advertising film film Great Actor Use the Tilde key ~ between words to join them together in the word cloud. e.g. My~Favourite (Can’t find the ~ symbol on your keyboard? Then hold the Alt key down and type 0126 this = ~ (Tilde)

  12. Introducing simple graphic design and storytelling tools Creating titles, key messages and brand specific colour visuals

  13. Installing Happiness 30% Ready

  14. Spell with Flickr Create graphic signposting and headlines in presentations to provide emphasis, direction, or punctuation between sections. http://metaatem.net/words/

  15. Flickr Colr Pickr – add photos that match brand or campaign colours into your presentation http://krazydad.com/colrpickr/

  16. Maybe you could use online tools to help spell out your key message in an engaging way? http://www.allisnotlo.st/index_en.html Try this for yourself

  17. Fiverr : get people to bring your story to life – for $5 e.g. Video results written on a beach or a success celebrated with a song. Have a graphic designer create icons or key words for you http://fiverr.com/

  18. Fiverr - get people to bring your story to life – for $5 • Laser cut coffee and cupcake stencils to say your message • http://fiverr.com/fabricafifa/laser-cut-a-coffee-or-cupcake-stencil • Pop art pic • http://fiverr.com/makemebark/create-a-pop-art-portrait?autoplay=true • From 35 page PDF to a flipbook emagazine • http://fiverr.com/qualityarticle/take-your-boring-pdf-and-turn-it-into-a-professional-flipbook • Have your message sung to any tune • http://fiverr.com/divalicious09/sing-a-original-song-of-yours-or-cover-version-of-a-song

  19. Storytelling There are lots of ways to tell a good story

  20. Different ways of presenting your story: McKinsey v Bain & Co Visual and simple – requiring an engaging explanation of the context and correct interpretation – but once the convention is understood, the slide explains the story very quickly Densely complex – nothing missed out, creating almost a mini presentation on one subject or point in one slide McKinsey Style Example Bain & Co Style Example

  21. Richard E Mayer – the importance of visuals People understand LESS when the presenter simply reads every word on each slide verbatim People listen and understand MORE when a story is spoken and illustrated with relevant visuals Karaoke presentations are ones where a presenter reads aloud every word on a screen. This causes the audience to listen to how well each word is read aloud – rather than listen to and become involved with what is being said and letting the story itself influence them. Does your pet food meet the evolving needs of your pet? Multimedia learning theory – optimal learning occurs when visual and verbal materials are presented together simultaneously. Meyers = People & Emotional Involvement (Qual inspired storytelling) and Rational supporting data used more sparingly (Quant illustrated for emphasis, not just a pile of numbers).

  22. Karl Kapp – Emotions in storytelling Emotional storytelling is more impactful. Emotions, more than facts, lead more strongly to actions and behaviour change in clients. For example – use anecdotes and verbatims to make the client relate to the consumer’s emotions; make examples relevant to client’s own life e.g. Don’t just say ‘There is a 3% decline in consideration among 16-24 year olds’ if you could say ‘Younger consumers, like your kids, are growing less engaged and fewer are now considering buying your brand.’ Take a personal approach to presentations – be enthusiastic in congratulating success and deliver warnings in a measured professional tone.

  23. Kurt Vonnegut: Thesis on storytelling The author Kurt Vonnegut studied famous stories and found the most widely known and memorable ones follow commonly repeating patterns. Good fortune Ill Fortune Beginning End Time Line e.g. Boy meets girl, boy loses girl, boy wins girl back.

  24. Kurt Vonnegut: Thesis on storytelling Cinderella, or the gospels from the Bible’s New Testament Good fortune Ill Fortune Beginning End Time Line Stores that take you on a rollercoaster but clearly resolve are more entertaining, memorable and more likely to inspire action from clients http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oP3c1h8v2ZQ

  25. Kurt Vonnegut: Thesis on storytelling But what if there isn’t a clear positive or hero to your story? Does that mean the storytelling has to be dull? Nebulous Heroes and Villains: Hamlet, The Sopranos, The Wire Good fortune Ill Fortune Beginning End Time Line Even stories where there are no ‘good guys’ or where clear success is difficult to demonstrate can be told as gripping stories.

  26. Storytelling example : Spaghetti Sauce A masterclass in storytelling by Malcolm Gladwell. This concerns a researcher who changed the way brands think and what products they offer to consumers; through an insight into consumer needs. http://www.ted.com/talks/malcolm_gladwell_on_spaghetti_sauce.html

  27. Learning storytelling from Kamishibai Source: JF Chenier

  28. Let the audience construst the story, don’t tell them what to think

  29. Don’t talk about numbers or things, tell stories about people

  30. Weave facts around simple story lines, helping the listener organise the information

  31. Speak with enthusiasm; perform!

  32. Storytelling is a Show Business – don’t be bashful in showing what you mean

  33. With stats and details, guide the audience towards the point and give them time to see how this links to your story Focus the story on what they should see in data

  34. Don’t forget the candy; give them something positive to think about that they didn’t have before Kamishibai storytellers didn’t charge for their story – they sold candy to their audience. What candy do you sell to ensure a warm welcome when you turn up to present again next time?

  35. So you want to be a great storyteller? Where to start?

  36. Use visual analogies to help bring story points to life Did the client have a big idea, but leave the consumer confused by the ad – a bit like jumbling up the picture shown above? We see that all the parts are there, but the finished work doesn’t quite make sense.

  37. Collect anecdotes that demonstrate relevant examples of your point This card was in a box containing a shirt bought from an online fashion retailer. It immediately puts the buyer at ease, reassuring them and leaving them in control if they need to change their purchase. This provides a good example of customer service

  38. Analogies may be more compelling and memorable ways of communicating a key point. For example This is Eugene Cernan. He is one of only 24 astronauts who have travelled to the moon. He was the last man to walk on the moon. Do you remember him and what he did? This is Neil Armstrong. He is one of only 24 astronauts who have travelled to the moon. He was the first man to walk on the moon. Do you remember him and what he did? People are more likely to remember brands that are first to achieve a major distinction. What unique first and point of distinction will be your brand’s claim to fame?

  39. Crayola Analogy Product fragmentation vs. The Long Tail Your brand needs to be clear at which point ‘doing more of the same thing’ becomes unprofitable and ‘doing something different’ becomes imperative. Crayola Crayon Timeline

  40. Be more interactive – Use vote response cards during your presentation before revealing key results Particularly useful for auditoriums / large audiences that are otherwise hard to gauge and interact with. Probe by asking people why they voted the way they did. AGREE DISAGREE

  41. Use a cultural, entertainment, or iconic thematic to help you build engaging storytelling Example The Brand Trilogy Set your brand on the path to adventure and success: What will be your brand’s... Identity? Point of Supremacy? Ultimatum for the consumer? An idea from AMV

  42. Use a cultural, entertainment, or iconic thematic to help you build engaging storytelling Brands don’t win awards for the Best Performance without also having Best proposition Best script Best supporting cast

  43. Use a cultural, entertainment, or iconic thematic to help you build engaging storytelling Or are there heroes to celebrate in your story? Were there super powers in brands to be dramatised? http://iconlibrary.iconshock.com/icons/the-ultimate-collection-of-free-movie-icon-sets/

  44. Use a cultural, entertainment, or iconic thematic to help you build engaging storytelling Could a brand horror story be discussed with a touch of humour, to defuse tension or confrontation? http://iconlibrary.iconshock.com/icons/the-ultimate-collection-of-free-movie-icon-sets/

  45. Brand Toys – a conversation tool for brands http://www.brandtoys.com/#/build

  46. Example: Talk about social media iconically Appropriate use of graphics make a presentation more engaging http://iconlibrary.iconshock.com/icons/150-best-icon-sets/#more-7314

  47. Would icons aid navigation through your presentation? http://www.tuttoaster.com/great-web-button-set-free-download/

  48. The Resonant Phrase

  49. Collect interesting images and quotes and save them on the server – so great ideas are shared and not lost

  50. The Resonant Phrase • A good turn of phrase helps to gain audience attention summarise a point or demonstrate an issue to great effect. • A resonant phrase leaves a lasting impression on the listener or reader. It’s memorable and motivational. • A resonant phrase may act as a catalyst or clear warning; helping to influence your audience, changing their behaviour. • Some examples...

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