Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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The Best Business Storytelling Posts of the Year (Part I)

The Best Business Storytelling Posts of the Year (Part I) | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

I suppose there’s a reason that “time flies” became a cliché.


It does.


I think 2015 saw a better product from Ishmael’s Corner. It certainly looks better, finally bulldozing the original design and bringing the “look and feel’ into the 21stcentury.


And with Ron Howard resurrecting the “Moby Dick” narrative, a new audience learns to associate Ishmael with storytelling. OK, that’s a stretch.


Back to the product, this year’s 100+ posts covered a lot of ground.


Which brings me to what I consider to be the top 10 posts from the lot with five coming at you today. I’ll share the second half of Monday....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Lou Hoffman shares Ishmael Corner's best business storytelling posts from 2015. Recommended reading!

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Where A Sale Begins | The Story of Telling

Where A Sale Begins | The Story of Telling | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

The sale of the first GoPro camera didn’t begin when the customer walked through the retailer’s door. It didn’t even begin with the huddle of engineers in the tiny innovation department at the factory. The first sale began in the lineup, as the surfers waited to catch a wave.


A marketer’s story typically starts with her idea—with the thing she has to sell. But if you look at any business that has taken off, you will notice that there is a step before the creation of a remarkable product, which lies at the intersection of what the potential customer really wants and what the market doesn’t offer.


Sales and marketing are less about persuasion and more about understanding. The trick is to know who is in your lineup and what they care about.It’s far easier to succeed at making things people want, than it is to make people want things....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Sales from storytelling? If there was ever a social selling mantra for 2015 this is it:

"It’s far easier to succeed at making things people want, than it is to make people want things."

rodrick rajive lal's curator insight, January 15, 2015 1:44 AM

It goes without saying that it is the story that sells, perhaps more than the product itself. Can we say that the wrapping matters more than the product? I guess till some time at least, till the product becomes established as the best, the wrapping and packaging does matter. But then, the story as a stratergy is important for educators too. Instead of presenting dry facts, figures and data about your researth paper, and thus making it so dry and drab, write the story of your research so that more people become interested in it! Story-telling continues to be an important factor when it comes to teaching a lesson in a class room, or marketing a product out there in the business world. Ultimately they are both the same, a teacher sells ideas in the classroom, while a marketing specialist sells a product. Both would do well to resort to story telling!

Patrick Wallace's curator insight, January 15, 2015 8:26 AM

This is a very true statement "Sales and marketing are less about persuasion and more about understanding."

Chuck Taylor's curator insight, January 15, 2015 12:33 PM

Love the GoPro storyline....

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50 Business Storytelling Mantras to Live By (2013) | The Chief Storyteller

50 Business Storytelling Mantras to Live By (2013) | The Chief Storyteller | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

For the past two years (2011 and 2012), I shared my top 50 business storytelling and communications mantras. As I plan for 2013, I always look to my list to light a small fire of inspiration.


As you look through this list, see what applies to your life or what you want to apply. Write your own list of mantras. Whatever you do, make a list (short or long) of your goals and aspirations. Every so often read, revise, and contemplate...


Here are the mantras at The Chief Storyteller....


Via José Carlos
Jeff Domansky's insight:

Really inspiring list to contemplate from Ira Koretsky...

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The Four-Letter Words Of Business Storytelling | 36O PhotO, LLC

“You can’t put a sausage into a meat grinder, crank the handle backward, and get a pig,” a friend once told me. The gruesome reference has always helped me with the concept that once mixed, some things remain that way forever.


The same can be said for business andstorytelling. While it’s trendy to portray them as new BFFs, the duo has always held a tight relationship. It’s revealed daily as buyers and sellers perform the transaction tango.


Business, like the sensual dance, is driven by four-letter words. One feeds off of our carnal instincts. The other attempts to justify the pursuit of these pleasures. And before your mind has a chance to caminatathrough the gutter, the four-letter words that I’m referring to are want and risk. Professional communicators that understand these core motivators excel at winning hearts and minds through stories....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

The four letter words of business storytelling:? Want and risk.

http://www.scoop.itantonioormachea's curator insight, August 1, 2015 9:35 AM

The four letter words of business storytelling:? Want and risk.

ishfaqarbi's curator insight, August 1, 2015 12:28 PM

The four letter words of business storytelling:? Want and risk.

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Reverse Engineering the Storytelling Techniques in a Fast Company Feature | Lou Hoffman

Reverse Engineering the Storytelling Techniques in a Fast Company Feature | Lou Hoffman | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Every company wants a signature win in heavyweight publications like Fast Company, BusinessWeek and Fortune.

 

By signature win, I mean 1,000-plus words devoted to a behind-the-curtain look at the company.

 

Yet, few PR teams cultivate the needed content assets to give themselves a fighting chance for this type of attention.

 

It requires thinking like a journalist, framing the tension in the story and teasing out potential texture.

 

To understand the type of fodder that drives such #storytelling, we selected a Fast Company feature, “Walmart’s Evolution from Big Box Giant to E-Commerce Innovator” and categorized the content type (3,324 words)....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Lou Hoffman provides an excellent analysis of business storytelling. Great lessons.

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