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The Art of the Narrative Arc: Why Marketers Must Learn to be Storytellers

The Art of the Narrative Arc: Why Marketers Must Learn to be Storytellers

Hal Conick

Storytelling lead

For years, storytelling has been the backbone of the best marketing campaigns. Now, as a surfeit of content drives engagement down and makes it difficult to be different, storytelling defines the marketer

鈥淵ou seem strategic,鈥 a manager told Rissa Reddan during a job interview, 鈥渂ut can you really execute an idea?鈥

Reddan, who worked as a marketing leader at PwC, listened to the question and realized she could answer with a story, something she had never done during a job interview.

鈥淢ay I show you a picture?鈥 she asked the manager.

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鈥淪ure,鈥 he said.

Reddan reached into her bag and pulled out a photograph of herself. In the picture she is radiating an adrenalized smile, standing alongside a horse and a police officer. The trio stand just off a dirt road in Winter Park, Colorado, cars fanned out in a panicked formation behind them, another man in the background looking toward the ground. 

鈥淢y husband and I were walking back from a music festival out in Winter Park, and this horse was running down Highway 40,鈥 Reddan says she told the manager. 鈥淎ll the cars are stopped and everybody is looking at one another like, 鈥榃hat鈥檚 happening? What should we be doing?鈥 I鈥檓 standing there watching, and the horse comes around the corner. I step into the middle of the street and grab onto the bridle.鈥 Reddan pauses her story, takes a breath and laughs. 鈥淚 think that鈥檚 what it鈥檚 called; I don鈥檛 know anything about horses.鈥

The horse was bigger up close than Reddan imagined, but as she grabbed it, the horse slowed its gallop before faltering to a stop. 鈥淚 was terrified,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 just felt like something needed to happen.鈥

As police officers and the horse鈥檚 owner arrived, Reddan鈥檚 husband snapped a photo of Reddan holding onto the horse as proof of the improbable moment. In the photo, her hand rests under the horse鈥檚 black mane, her body craned forward in a pose of astonishment. 鈥淎nybody could have stepped in to grab that horse,鈥 Reddan says she told the manager. 鈥淏ut I was the one who did it. So I would say, yes, I am somebody who can take an idea and put it into practice or be the one to take some action.鈥

Weeks later, the manager offered Reddan a job. She worked as CMO of financial adviser Performance Trust Capital Partners for the next two and a half years.

Stories have long defined marketing. The story has been one of marketing鈥檚 best tools for building desire, interest and bonds with customers. Apple鈥檚 鈥1984鈥 commercial is a classic example of the power of storytelling in marketing. The minute-long ad told the story of how Macintosh computers would free consumers from tyranny鈥攕omething Apple Art Director Brent Thomas told The New York Times was 鈥 It was one hell of a marketing position: Apple aired the ad once during the 1984 Super Bowl and sold $3.5 million worth of computers the morning after and $155 million over the next 100 days, per David Lewis鈥 The Brain Sell: When Science Meets Shopping.

Just as stories have defined marketing, stories now define the careers of marketers, the people attempting to build desire and create bonds with consumers, managers and employers in a world awash with content. 

The surfeit of content鈥攖weets, videos, r茅sum茅s, portfolios, blog posts, white papers, market research and inspirational speeches鈥攈as worn away the audience鈥檚 willingness to engage. finds that from 2015 to 2017, social sharing fell by 50%, even as the amount of content increased. 

However, a well-told story can stand outside the flood of content, engaging listeners and carrying a marketer鈥檚 message to the public. Think of the marketing stories that have stood time鈥檚 test: People still discuss Apple founder Steve Jobs鈥 keynote addresses, in which he mythologized newly created products鈥攕uch as the now ubiquitous iPhone and iPad鈥攁s he introduced them. , a story told in 30 seconds and 44 words, is readily recited by anyone with hoop dreams: 鈥淚鈥檝e missed more than 9,000 shots in my career. I鈥檝e lost almost 300 games. Twenty-six times, I鈥檝e been trusted to take the game-winning shot and missed. I鈥檝e failed over, and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed.鈥

Smart marketers have noticed the power of storytelling, but few marketers have become good storytellers, according to , a 2018 book written by Robert McKee, creative writing instructor of the 鈥淪tory Seminar,鈥 and Thomas Gerace, CEO of Skyword. 鈥淪tory, like art and music, is a word you think you understand until you try to define it,鈥 McKee and Gerace write.

Marketers and advertisers鈥攅ven Super Bowl spenders鈥攁re often complacent with their limited definition of storytelling.

Most advertising campaigns lean on bragging and promising (McKee鈥檚 term for hard selling) coupled with a conflict-free, chronological narrative. Most corporate websites feature a carefully written history that reads as though the company were founded by improbably lucky businesspeople. Most speakers at marketing conferences tell stories of successful campaigns in data points rather than plot points. When the campaign bottoms out, the website gets no hits or the speaker puts the audience to sleep, McKee says, the storyteller blames the story. 

鈥淏ut what they don鈥檛 realize is that they didn鈥檛 tell a story, they told a narrative,鈥 he says. 鈥淚f they had told a true story, they would have seen the effect of it. It鈥檚 inevitable. There鈥檚 no avoiding it. But it requires a huge transition in thinking.鈥 

Case in point: Research from Jennifer Aaker, a marketing professor at Stanford Graduate School of Business, found that , but only 5% will recall a single statistic. Put this stat in context (if you haven鈥檛 already forgotten it) by thinking back to your favorite stories: Were any of them read from a PowerPoint slide?

鈥淭oday鈥檚 CMOs must be change agents,鈥 Gerace says. Marketers spend hundreds of billions of dollars on ad distribution, but many are losing faith in advertising鈥檚 ability to grab the attention of ever-distracted consumers. Stories, he says, will grab the attention lost by ads. 鈥淭oday鈥檚 successful marketers will be folks that shift from ad-centric to story-centric marketing.鈥

This huge change in thinking鈥攆rom bragging to storytelling鈥攊s summed up by McKee and Gerace in three words: Conflict changes life. 

鈥嬧婥onflict on the side of a dirt road in Colorado may not have changed Reddan鈥檚 life, but it certainly gave her a good story to tell. Before she learned how to tell a story, she would have answered a question like 鈥淐an you really execute an idea?鈥 with a platitude like 鈥淚鈥檓 a go-getter.鈥 Now, Reddan keeps the runaway-horse photo tucked into her folio, looking for her next chance to retell the tale. Reddan pulled out the photo during a recent truncated job interview with PayNet鈥攁n interviewer told Reddan he had a flight to catch鈥攁nd immediately told her story. Later in the interview process the same man told Reddan he was telling the company great things about her. 鈥淚 think you鈥檇 be a terrific add to the team,鈥 Reddan says he told her. That company also offered Reddan a job as senior vice president; she started in April.

鈥淲hen I have reached for a story versus saying 鈥楲et me tell you about the 57 facts on my r茅sum茅,鈥 the story has resonated more,鈥 Reddan says. 

Reddan鈥檚 anecdote is bolstered by research from New York University psychology professor Jerome Bruner, who found that facts wrapped in stories are 22 times more memorable than facts alone. Marketers who clothe facts in story will benefit, McKee says, as the story format allows marketers to contextualize the facts. 鈥淚f you don鈥檛 tell them the story that you want them to hear, they will 鈥榮torify鈥 it their own way, which may not be persuasive for you,鈥 McKee says. 

Why Stories Matter and How They Work

Scott Whitehair didn鈥檛 plan to make a business of storytelling鈥攊t was 2013, and Whitehair loved stories so much that he ran events where his friends and neighbors could spin yarns in front of an intimate crowd鈥攂ut one day, Whitehair鈥檚 phone rang.

鈥淲e found you through your website,鈥 a nonprofit executive said to Whitehair.

鈥淵ou did?鈥 Whitehair replied, slightly confused. He had been telling stories publicly and coaching others in Chicago鈥檚 tightknit storytelling community, but he wasn鈥檛 sure how a business could find him鈥

鈥淵eah,鈥 the exec said. 鈥淒o you coach sales teams?鈥

鈥淥f course, yes,鈥 Whitehair said, even though he had never coached a sales team. 

Whitehair still shakes his head in disbelief when retelling the story of his first call from a business. 鈥淚 worked with people who want to tell stories to their family and socially and on stage,鈥 Whitehair says, 鈥淏ut [after that call], it clicked for me that this stuff is useful anywhere people communicate.鈥 Whitehair researched the business he鈥檇 be coaching, scribbled down everything he knew about storytelling and coached his first group of employees on the art of the story.

Five years later, Whitehair is a full-time storytelling coach, a fantasy job for an English major and storytelling hobbyist. He has coached at corporations (Johnson & Johnson, BlueCross BlueShield and PwC), nonprofits (Chicago Cares, Rady Children鈥檚 Hospital – San Diego, Boston Children鈥檚 Hospital) and universities (Northwestern University, DePaul University, University of Chicago Booth School of Business). Whitehair spends a lot of time working with businesses, but he doesn鈥檛 spend any time wondering why a business would want employees to learn storytelling. 鈥淚t bypasses the skeptical mind,鈥 Whitehair says. 鈥淚f I tried to tell you about all my values, how I was raised … it would take 10 or 15 minutes. Or, I could tell you a story about finding a wallet full of cash in front of my apartment and how I took all day to track this guy down. He had a very common name, but I found him through Facebook and gave his wallet back. At the end of that story, you know about my values.鈥

Sharing values through storytelling succeeds, Whitehair says, because people want to work with people, not ideas. This ability to relate to others can be critical to a career, according to research from Lauren Rivera, associate professor of management and organizations at Northwestern鈥檚 Kellogg School of Management. Rivera conducted two years of interviews with hiring professionals at 120 large companies and found that the most common way interviewees were

One professional told Rivera that potential employees must be able to pass the 鈥渟tranded in the airport test,鈥 which asks, 鈥淲ould I want to be stuck in an airport in a snowstorm with them? And if I鈥檓 on a business trip for two days and I have to have dinner with them, is this the kind of person I enjoy hanging with?鈥 Rivera called another common interview test 鈥渓ooking glass merit;鈥 interviewers defined merit by their personal sense of worth and goodness, using themselves as the standard bearers, judging interviewees thusly. 鈥淏ecause these firms leave a lot of discretion to evaluators鈥斺業 want you to pick somebody that鈥檚 driven!鈥欌攂ut they don鈥檛 tell you what drive looks like, people end up defining it in their own image,鈥 Rivera told Kellogg Insight.

Interviewees can鈥檛 know the merits or personality of a person they鈥檝e never met, but they can use stories to relate to interviewers as human beings instead of potential employees. Esther Choy鈥攖he woman who coached Reddan on storytelling, president and chief story facilitator at the and author of 鈥攕ays most people banter with and talk past one another, but very few people communicate well. When they learn how to tell stories, they鈥檙e learning how to captivate and communicate, all while sharing memorable truths about themselves. The standard reaction from new storytellers, Choy says, is, 鈥淲ow, people finally understand what I鈥檓 saying.鈥

To the human brain, a good story is like riding a rollercoaster, says , chief neuroscientist at Nielsen Holdings PLC. A good story has moments of tension and release built throughout the beginning, middle and end, just as a good rollercoaster clacks upward before dropping down, speeding along and clacking back up again for the next drop鈥攅very good story has the tension of the climb and the emotional release of the drop. The brain reacts to a poorly told story or a set of data points as if it were an uninspired firework display: 鈥淵ou get a little pop of attention early, but then engagement falls off,鈥 Marci says. 

Getting the listener鈥檚 brain to pay attention is tough, he says, whether working on a campaign or speaking at a conference. Distractions are everywhere: A social media marketer must compete with 330 million Twitter users, just as a conference speaker must compete with the glow of smartphone screens. 鈥淲e鈥檙e pretty taxed when it comes to attention,鈥 he says. And attention is just step one of engagement.

Step two, Marci says, is conflict. This is an ingredient that changes a story from good to great by going beyond tension and release to give the listener themes, stories and relatable characters. When listeners can relate to a character, they feel empathy. Put that empathetic character into a surprising, thematic dilemma鈥攚anting peace while at war, longing for love while experiencing hatred, wishing for freedom while held in captivity鈥攁nd you鈥檝e gone a long way toward activating the emotional and memory circuitry in the listener鈥檚 brain, which Marci says is essential for the third and most difficult step: creating an emotional response that forms new memories. 

This step鈥攖he payoff鈥攊s why you鈥檒l remember every detail of your favorite childhood story but forget every detail of the PowerPoint presentation you heard yesterday. It鈥檚 likely a big reason why Reddan received a glowing recommendation from the manager she spoke with for 15 minutes. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 act on something in the future unless it stays with us,鈥 Marci says. 鈥淭he key is that big emotional payoff at the end.鈥 

The emotional payoff chemically bonds us to a brand, a character or an interviewee. As a great story develops, according to research from Paul Zak, director of the Center for Neuroeconomics Studies at Claremont Graduate University. When the brain synthesizes oxytocin, Zak writes 鈥減eople are more trustworthy, generous, charitable and compassionate.鈥 Oxytocin is why great stories often leave us feeling exhilarated, ready to change our own lives, but it鈥檚 also why narratives without conflict are instantly forgotten. 

鈥淗ow many times have you left a movie saying, 鈥業 want to do something differently in my life鈥?鈥 Whitehair says. 鈥淚鈥檝e been there. But if you鈥檇 gone into the theater and they just flashed bullet points at you, would you leave and say, 鈥業 should do the thing the bullet points said鈥?鈥

If this all sounds difficult, that鈥檚 because it is, McKee says. But that鈥檚 good news. All marketers can improve the way they tell stories. The human brain may want to take the easy way by bragging and promising, McKee says, but that doesn鈥檛 take listeners on a twisting, looping rollercoaster ride. It leaves them watching the hiss, fizzle and whimper of an underwhelming firework display.

The Pattern of Well-told Stories

When was a child, he spent hours finding the pattern of the artificial intelligence in computer games, working until the games were effortlessly beatable and exceedingly boring. 鈥淚鈥檝e always been a tinkerer,鈥 he says, pausing his story to ask a waitress to bring a straw for his iced coffee (鈥淕otta protect those teeth,鈥 says Gannett, who has tinkered his way out of extrinsic stains). 

As a teenager, Gannett badly wanted to appear on a game show. He methodically applied to dozens of auditions and was quickly called for an audition on 鈥淲heel of Fortune,鈥 a show he had never watched. Gannett binged on episodes, trying to figure out what contestants had in common. 鈥淚 realized that there鈥檚 a certain way they enunciate that works really well on TV and they鈥檙e all really silly, but they鈥檙e actually not good at solving puzzles,鈥 Gannett says. 鈥淚 practiced, I drank a lot of espresso, killed the audition and got on 鈥榃heel of Fortune.鈥欌

Gannett lost, but he kept searching for patterns and applying to gameshows, appearing on 鈥淢overs & Changers,鈥 an MTV take on 鈥淪hark Tank鈥 that has since been deleted entirely from MTV鈥檚 website. Gannett didn鈥檛 win 鈥淢overs & Changers鈥 either, but at 19 years old, he formed a hypothesis: There鈥檚 a pattern to everything, including stories. 

鈥婲ow, Gannett is 27 and runs , a marketing analytics firm with clients such as GE, Honda and Saks Fifth Avenue. He鈥檚 also written a book,

The title of Gannett鈥檚 book offers a peek into what he believes to be the pattern of the story and all creative endeavors: The familiar and the unknown intersect and become something new. Stories have narrative arcs and character archetypes that have existed for centuries, but life is always offering new twists, situations and technologies that can be combined with the classic arcs and archetypes. The existing patterns of stories allow people who may not consider themselves creative鈥攂usinesspeople, numbers people, methodical tinkerers鈥攖o be storytellers, too, so long as they鈥檙e willing to try something new. 

Gannett leans forward; he鈥檚 a super-liberal, he says, but he employs a practice from Steve Bannon, former chairman of Breitbart News and former White House chief strategist for President Donald Trump, that perfectly underlines the importance of story patterns. When Bannon ran Breitbart, a far-right news and opinion website, he said he used narrative arcs for each news story. 鈥淧aul Ryan is the globalist, and Donald Trump is the savior, Hillary Clinton is going to prison,鈥 Gannett says. 鈥淭hey follow these arcs and they鈥檙e telling lots of stories. Content is coming out on these longer narrative arcs people can follow along and come back to.鈥 , according to Five Thirty-Eight. 鈥淭hey bring you back in,鈥 Gannett says. 鈥淥therwise, why should we come back to your website, your channel or your brand if it鈥檚 just one random piece of content?鈥 

Despite the rapidity of modern media, Gannett says people still want content they can follow episodically鈥攖hink of the popularity of serialized podcasts such as 鈥淪-Town,鈥 which was downloaded 10 million times in four days. Gannett wants to give people something both familiar and unfamiliar as they follow him online. If TrackMaven releases something familiar like a white paper, a few people may read it, but if Gannett does something unfamiliar, like a silly video on LinkedIn that tells the white paper as a story, he believes the information will resonate with the audience. 鈥淚t brings people into my story and my company鈥檚 story,鈥 Gannett says. 鈥淭here are consistent characters in my story, there are tropes, there are inside jokes. People get latched into that.鈥

A story has eight stages, according to McKee and Gerace鈥檚 Storynomics:

  1. Find the target audience. Who should the story emotionally affect? GE targeted potential employees with its 鈥淲hat鈥檚 the Matter With Owen鈥 campaign, which followed a young software developer who explains to confused friends and family that he has been hired by GE to write code that matters to the real world. The campaign increased job applications by 800%, per the company.
  2. The protagonist needs a core value, a prime principle. 
  3. An inciting incident occurs. An unforeseen event must upset the protagonist鈥檚 balance. What happens when their core value is tested? Think Tom Hanks being marooned on an island in 鈥淐ast Away,鈥 or turning from a child to an adult in 鈥淏ig,鈥 or needing to find Private Ryan in 鈥淪aving Private Ryan.鈥
  4. The protagonist longs for an object of desire to restore balance. What does the character want? Kurt Vonnegut once wrote that you must 鈥淢ake your characters want something right away even if it鈥檚 only a glass of water.鈥
  5. The protagonist makes a tactical choice she hopes will push her toward the object of desire. This may be clumsy, like Tommy killing Billy Batts in 鈥淕oodfellas,鈥 or it may be inspiring, like Rocky beating up a side of beef in 鈥淩ocky.鈥 
  6. The tactical choice fails. A gap opens between what the protagonist thought would happen and reality. (Damn, you mean you shouldn鈥檛 rage-kill a made mobster?)
  7. The protagonist makes a crisis choice. Does she use insight gleaned from the first choice to make a more informed, more difficult tactical choice? 鈥淕oodfellas鈥 protagonist Henry Hill knows his time in the mob is over. Does he risk death or go into a witness protection program?
  8. Closure, the payoff. The character鈥檚 insightful choice brings the story to an end. Cinderella marries the prince. The audience leaves hepped up on oxytocin. 

Marketers who are unaccustomed to telling stories may look at these stages鈥攁 character who fails?鈥攁nd get nervous. McKee and Gerace say marketers have 鈥渘egaphobia,鈥 a fear of showing their conflicts and failures, but McKee says that marketers need to get over negaphobia and start thinking in conflict. Remember: their definition of story is 鈥渃onflict changes life;鈥 no conflict, no story. 鈥淢arketers must be willing to recognize the negative side of life and dramatize it,鈥 McKee says. 鈥淭hings go wrong. There are negatives all along the way; they鈥檙e essential in story. If [marketers] can鈥檛 [realize] that, they鈥檒l never tell stories. It starts with a recognition of that positive-negative dynamic, the conflict of life that鈥檚 underneath the surface.鈥 

In marketing, failure and conflict should look different than Hollywood鈥檚 dramatic deaths and life-shattering events. Nationwide CMO Matt Jauchius produced a story-based Super Bowl ad in 2015 that featured . The ad was designed to save lives by warning of the danger of child accidents, Jauchius told AdAge, but it left consumers feeling sad and cold鈥攁 multimillion-dollar insurance payout can鈥檛 make up for the loss of a child.

Instead of using severe conflict, marketers can use conflict and failure as obstacles in the way of success. One of Choy鈥檚 clients won business after a moment of vulnerability. They asked a potential client, 鈥淒o you struggle with this?鈥 After a nod from the listener, Choy鈥檚 client followed with, 鈥淲ell, we do too.鈥 Reddan melded conflict into a video testimonial campaign by asking clients 鈥淲hat was your hesitation in working with us?鈥 followed by 鈥淲hat got you over that hurdle?鈥 The result was an unvarnished look at the biggest hurdle any company faces: winning over a client. 鈥淵ou weren鈥檛 getting a polished talking head,鈥 Reddan says. 鈥淵ou were getting a real client account of what they value.鈥

Gannett understands why conflict makes marketers nervous. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really risky,鈥 he says. 鈥淪ome stories don鈥檛 work even if you plan really well.鈥 However, Gannett says marketers who continue to use outdated content strategies will stunt their professional growth and hurt their companies. Marketers who send a higher volume of the same content through e-mail and social media will get the same response rate and burn out their followers in the process, all without developing a knack for storytelling. Marketers who long for a job at a prestigious company or to be the CMO of the next big startup while only speaking in facts, boasts and promises will fail the 鈥渟tranded in the airport test鈥 and get used to hearing the phrase 鈥渏ust not the right fit.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 easy to be right down the middle and not take risks,鈥 Gannett says. 鈥淭here are a lot of people who have loss aversion and a lot of corporate environments that don鈥檛 reward failure.鈥 By focusing on stories, marketers are accepting failure of the old way, but they鈥檙e giving themselves the freedom to do something different. 

Change is scary; using a big-budget ad campaign or important interview to tell a story can make a marketer feel vulnerable, but Whitehair says this vulnerability can be a strength. 鈥淲ho is the stronger leader: the person who says, 鈥業鈥檝e never done anything wrong. I鈥檓 amazing at what I do. I have all the answers,鈥 or the person who says, 鈥業鈥檓 human, and here鈥檚 where I made a mistake. Here鈥檚 where I need to get better鈥? I think there鈥檚 great strength in the latter.

鈥淎ny story that shows a mistake you鈥檝e made also shows that you鈥檙e still standing there. You have overcome it,鈥 Whitehair says. 鈥淭he act of telling that story is a strength. It鈥檚 you saying, 鈥業鈥檝e learned from it, and I鈥檝e moved past it.鈥欌

Hal Conick is a freelance writer for the 萝莉社官网鈥檚 magazines and e-newsletters. He can be reached at halconick@gmail.com or on Twitter at @HalConick.