Viewing Category: Applied Narrative

Norma Cameron: Cultivating Narrative Intelligence

January 26, 2012 Comments (0)

In this TEDxVictoria video, Norma Cameron looks at the evolution of story. As we evolve into a global community, the skills of a storyteller—cultivating imagination, embracing listening and exercising perceptual agility—are needed more than ever before!

Posted on Jan 26, 2012 Comments (0)

Daniel Kahneman: The Riddle of Experience vs. Memory

December 19, 2011 Comments (0)

In this TED talk, Mr. Kahneman explains how the remembering self (storyteller) dominates the memory of the experiencing self. Our future is made up of anticipated memories. My favorite part is when he asks about what kind of vacation you’d choose to take if you knew you were not going to remember the vacation. Would you still go?

Posted on Dec 19, 2011 Comments (0)

Kain Carter: Gather Round, I Got a Story to Tell…

December 16, 2011 Comments (0)

This is awesome. Kain Carter tells a story. Simple, straight up storytelling.

Posted on Dec 16, 2011 Comments (0)

Public Speaking Tip: How to Use Storytelling

December 01, 2011 Comments (0)

Scott Ginsberg talks about the “PIP” method, which is a three-part framework for improvising stories.

Posted on Dec 01, 2011 Comments (0)

How to Be a Hero in Art, Sales, Service, and Story

November 28, 2011 Comments (0)

Help someone from their point A to their B.

Ever run out of gas and someone stopped to pour a gallon into your tank for free? They became your hero! Remember what it was like to hear an artist articulate something that spoke a truth to you so deeply you nearly cried? That artist became your hero! Have you ever wished there was an easier way to get from point A to point B only to discover a service provider that helps you do just that? The service became your hero!

Forget about making the customer the hero. Take action and become a hero yourself! The customer is the dude or damsel in distress. Save them! Save them from their bad breath, their boring life, their poor choices, or their terrible job.

In the image above you can see the person in location A. They want to cross the chasm to location B. How will they get across? This situation frames the plot and the story unfolds in the distance between the two points. A hero provides a means to the end. In this case the hero is (or provided) a red bridge that literally carries the person across the gap. When you act as the hero, your action becomes the bridge that safely takes someone from here to there.

To apply this idea, you must understand the needs of your customer or audience and know what you are willing to risk in order to help them reach their goal. If your client wants a website, you make them one. If they need new tires, give them tires. If they want to be enlightened, enlighten them.

Whenever you interact with someone you’re creating a story. Keep that story in mind and it will shape your actions. Your actions create the tale that later gets told about you. Be the hero to your customer and they will tell a positive story with you or your product as a major player in their story.

To be the hero you need to skillfully and swiftly provide the product, service, or experience that your audience needs in order to bridge their gap, thus taking them from point A to point B in their personal journey.

Posted on Nov 28, 2011 Comments (0)

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