Branding with Powerful Stories: The Villains, Victims, and Heroes Model
By (Author) Greg Stone
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
7th December 2018
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
658.827
Hardback
224
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
595g
Whether you are branding your company, your product, your service, or yourself, learn to boost the power of your story and convey a compelling message in any setting by incorporating villains, victims, and heroes. Compelling stories exalt, motivate, and acculturate every worker in an enterprise. They also attract customers and media alike. Imagine an elderly man, snowed in, unable to shop for groceries until a supermarket comes to the rescue and delivers his food. The story of this company going out of its way to help a customer in need will resonate not only with consumers but also with employees. This book explains not just how to tell a captivating story, but also what elementsnamely, villains, victims, and heroesit should include in the first place. This approach is based on the notion that in business messaging, the villains may just be your best friends. The "villains" are simply any problems that cause pain, discomfort, or extra expense for customers, who are in effect the "victims." As for the "heroes," they are best illustrated by the supermarket going beyond expectations. Who in business wouldn't want to emulate that company If your products and services offer real solutions to customers' predicaments, there is nothing more powerful than communicating that message and making sure your potential customers remember it.
Greg Stone, founder of Stone Communications, is a highly sought after media strategist whose clients have included Fidelity, IBM, 3M, and Harvard University. He is author of Artful Business: 50 Lessons from Creative Geniuses.