The Perfect Story focuses on cultivating storytelling skills to foster connections, optimize how analysis is received, and influence decisions. This post will highlight how to use effective storytelling to gain buy-in on work projects.
When sharing our work and ideas, expecting the audience to automatically grasp the depth and meaning we’ve uncovered is shortsighted. Effective stories bridge this gap by connecting with the audience and providing compelling relevance. Your work alone represents the what; the story behind it reveals the why and how.
Karen explains that ideal stories have four parts: 1) context, 2) conflict, 3) outcome, and 4) takeaway. While context may seem obvious, it’s essential to spend extra time on it when presenting to an audience not familiar with your work, such senior leadership. The conflict clearly identifies the problem at hand and inspires your audience to yearn for a solution. Mild surprises can effectively jolt the audience’s brain out of autopilot and promote engagement.
Once they’re hooked, the outcome reveals how the issue is planned to be (or was) resolved. It’s crucial to state it plainly upfront before delving into supporting detail. Finally, don’t overlook the takeaway. Your ideas have the power to change the audience’s thinking or behavior. The takeaway is a pithy statement of what you want your audience to remember or do differently as a result of your story.
This book has helped me refine how I communicate research, analysis, and decisions, leading to more engaging and supportive audiences.
You should read this book if you…
- want to improve the receptivity of your ideas
- seek a compelling narrative to support your analysis
- are looking to better connect with your audience
Additional Information
Year Published: 2023
Book Ranking (from 1-10): 8 – Very Good – In depth insights on a specific topic
Ease of Read (from 1-5): 3 – Average
Key Highlights
- Stories are the original scalable technology, allowing you to deeply touch endless numbers of people at once
- This book is structured after a four-part storytelling method: context, conflict, outcome, and takeaway
- A great story acts as a roadmap, guiding your audience through information to build an idea, feeling, or inspire action. They act as an open door, inviting people to come through. Stories create understanding by building relatable, recognizable, and reinforcing concepts for the listener
- Great stories show ideas instead of telling you facts. They invite the listener to have their own experience of the story. Ever notice how you share a story with a friend and they reply with a similar story of their experience? We listen to each story through our experiences, often evoking other stories and memories
- A great story helps connect people to a desired outcome that informs thinking, influences behavior, or inspires action. Stories can either slow down or leverage assumptions. Unexpected plot points and the “I didn’t see that coming!” moments disrupt assumptions and force the brain out of lazy mode. The same is true when you build tension and highlight what is at stake in a story
- We feel a part of in-groups when we hear stories that share beliefs, experiences, or aspirations with our own. Empathy and connection are experienced, increasing oxytocin and trust. This belonging helps us feel comfortable, relaxed, or excited. Stories create in-groups when they relate to the audience’s “I want that!” feeling
- Data doesn’t change behavior; emotions do
- Great stories have three key elements: characters, conflict, and connection. They also culminate in an outcome for the audience—something they know, feel, think, or do differently because of the story
- You can’t create and edit at the same time. Creating is expansive. It involves building one idea upon another without judgment or critique. Editing is tightening, analyzing, and refining
- Your best ideas will be discovered when you apply constraints within a specific context. Constraints aren’t limiting; they provide focus
- Personal experiences don’t mean private moments or oversharing, but they do mean including your perspective
- The secret of storytelling is that it doesn’t start with the story; it starts with the audience
- Each time you tell a story (or communicate information), ask yourself these four questions to define your audience and the desired outcome. Don’t skip this step, even if you already know the story you want to tell. What do you want the audience to know or think because of the story? What do you want them to feel or do because of the story? What is their current mindset? What might be an obstacle in getting the audience to think, feel, or act differently?
- A context sentence sets the scene and significant plot points in an intentionally high-level summary. It doesn’t include every detail about Maria or Walt—or include every character
- Describe the moment where something happens and impacts the direction of the story. This is the fuel of your story—the conflict, tension, problem, or what is at stake. It’s often the moment that sits between “before” and “after.” You can point to it as the moment that things change
- Summarize what you want your audience to know, think, feel, or do differently after the story. The takeaway lands the story idea for the audience. Try to write this as a short, pithy phrase. A succinct takeaway is easier for the audience to understand and recall
- Communicating information to an audience is like getting ice cream from your freezer. It’s fine and serves its purpose. But it often isn’t memorable or engaging. Telling a great story is like going out for ice cream. It is so much more appealing, vivid, and memorable. And just like the variety of flavors, there are so many ways to tell a story based on the specific details you decide to include
- In business presentations, you often hear a reference to “The Money Slide.” This is the one slide in a presentation that clarifies the point of the presentation and the takeaway. It’s often the “decision-making” slide that brings things to a culmination and lands the strongest takeaway. I’ve always thought of it as the slide where people see the things that they can no longer unsee. A great story is your money slide. It’s going to build an idea and awareness that the audience can no longer look past and unsee
- Editing is as important as creating the story. It’s a combination of adding, cutting, and testing. Through editing, the real story emerges. There are two parts to editing your story. The first part ensures you have leveraged the Five Factory Settings of the Brain. The second part involves making everything earn its place
- In the final moments before telling a story, there are two things left to do: The first is to channel the energy of a child who is excited to show you something. When showing you their bedroom or a piece of art they created, children vibrate with excitement. It’s a moment of sharing and connection. That is the energy and mindset you want to tap into when telling a story. Focus on the excitement of sharing an idea with your audience. The second habit is to tell yourself, Have a conversation
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