We Have a Story to Tell
Jordan Liebman
Head of Marketing | Board Member & Advisor | Marketing & Business Growth | Brand & Creative Strategy | Ex-Verizon/BBDO | I help brands find their purpose & then activate against it to drive business growth
Marketers, let me ask you something: Why did you get into marketing? Non-marketers, what is it that draws you into a really good TV commercial?
For me, it's that indescribable thrill of connecting with people. Of crafting a message that doesn't just inform but resonates. Entertains. Compels. Inspires.
But here's the thing - in our data-driven world of KPIs and ROIs, it's easy to lose sight of what really makes marketing tick. We get so caught up in the numbers game that we forget the most powerful tool in our arsenal. A tool that's been shaping human behavior since before we even had words for 'marketing' or 'branding'.?
I'm talking about storytelling.
Now, I know what you're probably thinking. "Oh great, another piece about storytelling in marketing. Groundbreaking." But hear me out.
This isn't just about slapping a narrative on your campaign. It's about understanding why stories work on a fundamental, almost primal level. It's about tapping into something so deeply human that it transcends industry jargon and marketing trends.
Think back to your childhood. Remember those nights when you begged for just one more bedtime story? Or how you'd huddle with friends, swapping tales that left you wide-eyed? That wasn't just entertainment. That was human connection in its purest form.
As marketers, we're not just selling products or services. We're continuing this age-old tradition of human connection through stories. It’s as if we’re the modern-day shamans, gathering our tribe around the digital campfire to share tales that inform, inspire, and incite action.
But why does it work? Why do our brains light up like Times Square when we hear a good story?
It's not just fuzzy feelings - it's science. When we're wrapped up in a compelling narrative, our brains release oxytocin. Yeah, the same chemical that bonds mothers to babies and lovers to each other. Stories literally change our brain chemistry, making us more empathetic, more trusting, and - here's the kicker - more open to influence.
In a world where consumers are bombarded with thousands of ads daily, where B2B decision-makers are drowning in white papers and sales pitches, storytelling isn't just nice to have. It's our secret weapon for cutting through the noise and all the BS.
Brand Marketing: Creating Legends, Not Just Products
?Do you remember the last time you bought something just because of its features? Yep, me neither.
Sure, we might tell ourselves we're making rational decisions based on product specs or price points. But let's be real: we buy with our hearts, then justify with our minds.
This is where storytelling in consumer marketing really shines. It's not about selling a product; it's about selling a story that the consumer can see themselves in.
Stories are rooted in emotion. At some point they no longer belong to the brand and get passed down.
Storytelling, more specifically authentic storytelling, has a real connection with the product and creates a deep connection with the consumer.
Take Nike, for example. They're not selling shoes. They're selling the story of the athlete in all of us. That "Just Do It" tagline? It's not about footwear. It's about overcoming our inner doubts, pushing our limits, becoming the hero of our own story.
Or look at Apple. Yes, their genius is in product design; but it's also in how they've crafted a narrative of creativity and innovation. When you buy an Apple product, you're not just getting a device. You're buying into a story of thinking different, of being part of a creative revolution.
These brands understand a fundamental truth: people don't buy products. They buy better versions of themselves.
But here's the kicker - you don't need Nike's budget or Apple's cool factor to harness the power of storytelling. You just need to understand your audience's desires, fears, and aspirations. Then craft a narrative that speaks to those core emotions.
Take Dollar Shave Club. They disrupted a stagnant industry not with revolutionary technology, but with a story. Their viral launch video didn't drone on about blade quality. Instead, it told a hilarious story about the absurdity of traditional razor marketing. It positioned them as the straight-talking underdog in a world of overpriced, overhyped grooming products.
The result? A billion-dollar acquisition by Unilever just five years after launch.
That's the power of a good story in consumer marketing. It can turn a commodity into a must-have. A purchase into a statement. A product into a movement.
But effective storytelling in consumer marketing isn't just about the big, emotional brand stories. It's also about the micro-stories we tell every day. The Instagram post that shows your product in action, solving a real customer's problem. The customer service interaction that turns a complaint into a story of exceptional care. The origin story of your brand that makes customers feel like they're part of something bigger.
Each of these is an opportunity to reinforce your brand's narrative, to deepen the emotional connection with your audience.
Remember, in consumer marketing, you're not just competing for wallet share. You're competing for mindshare, for emotional resonance. And in that arena, a well-told story is your most powerful weapon.
But what about in the world of B2B, where decisions are supposedly all about logic and ROI? Is there room for storytelling there?
Spoiler alert: not only is there room, but it’s also arguably even more crucial. But we'll get to that in a moment.
For now, think about your own brand. What's the story you're telling? Is it compelling enough that your customers would want to make it part of their own narrative?
If not, it might be time to revisit your brand's storytelling strategy. Because in the world of consumer marketing, the best product doesn't always win. The best story does.
The Untapped Power of Storytelling in B2B Marketing
"But we're B2B. We don't need stories. We need facts, figures, and ROI."
?If I had a dollar for every time I've heard that, I could probably fund a Super Bowl spot And let me tell you, it's one of the biggest misconceptions in our industry.
Here's the truth bomb: B2B customers are still human. Shocking, I know.
领英推荐
They might wear suits instead of sweatpants, and their purchasing decisions might involve more zeroes, but at their core, they're driven by the same emotions as any consumer. Fear. Ambition. The desire to look good in front of their boss.
Yet so much B2B marketing reads like it was written by robots, for robots. Jargon-filled white papers. Feature lists longer than a CVS receipt. Sales decks that could cure insomnia.
We've forgotten that behind every B2B decision is a person. A person with hopes, fears, and a career on the line. There’s so much more at risk.
This is where storytelling is the secret weapon in B2B marketing. It's how you stand out in a sea of sameness. How you make complex solutions understandable. How you create an emotional connection in a world that pretends to run on logic alone.
Let me give you an example. Salesforce isn't just selling CRM software. They're telling a story about transformation. About businesses becoming more connected, more responsive, more human. Their "Trailblazer" narrative isn't about features - it's about being a pioneer, an innovator. It speaks to the aspirations of their customers, not just their technical requirements.
Or look at IBM. They could bore you with specs about quantum computing. Instead, they tell stories about how they're tackling climate change, revolutionizing supply chains, even helping in the fight against cancer. They're not selling technology. They're selling progress, innovation, a better future.
These companies understand that B2B decisions, especially the big ones, are as much about managing risk as they are about maximizing returns. And what better way to assuage fears than with a story of others who've walked the path before?
But it's not just about big, inspirational brand stories. B2B storytelling can and should happen at every stage of the funnel:
The key is to make these stories relatable and human. Your audience should see themselves in these narratives.
Now, I know what you're thinking. "But my product is too complex for stories. We need to focus on specifications and features."
Well, if NASA can use storytelling to make people care about rocks on Mars, you can use it to make people care about your enterprise software solution.
In fact, the more complex your product, the more critical storytelling becomes. It's how you make the intangible tangible. How you turn features into benefits. How you transform a list of specs into a vision of success.
You must remember, at the end of the day, you're not selling to a business. You're selling to people who work for a business. People who have career goals, who face pressure from bosses, who worry about making the wrong decision.
Speak to those human needs and concerns. Tell stories that resonate on a personal level. Do this, and you won't just differentiate yourself in the B2B space. You'll build deeper, more meaningful relationships with your clients.
And in B2B, where the sales cycles are long and the contracts are big, those relationships are everything.
So, the next time someone tells you that storytelling is just for B2C, tell them they're missing out on one of the most powerful tools in the B2B arsenal. Because in a world of feature lists and spec sheets, a well-told story isn't just nice to have. It's a competitive advantage.
The Universal Language of Marketing: Storytelling
We've journeyed from ancient campfires to modern boardrooms, from consumer brands to B2B enterprises. And through it all, one force has shaped human experience and driven decision-making throughout history: the raw, transformative power of storytelling. It's not just a constant; it's the lifeblood of human connection and the catalyst for every great leap in business and society.
As marketers, we're not just in the business of selling products or services. We're in the business of selling stories. Stories that resonate. Stories that inform. Stories that inspire. Stories that compel. Stories that incite action.
Whether you're marketing sneakers to teenagers or enterprise software to CEOs, the fundamental principles remain the same. We're all human. We all respond to narratives that speak to our desires, our fears, our aspirations.
In the consumer world, storytelling is how we turn products into brands, and brands into movements. It's how we create emotional connections that transcend features and price points. It's how we make people feel something about a bottle of soda or a pair of jeans.
In B2B, storytelling is our secret weapon. It's how we make the complex simple, the intangible tangible. It's how we speak to the humans behind the business decisions, addressing their personal hopes and fears alongside their professional goals.
But here's the real magic: when we embrace storytelling, we don't just change how our audience sees our brand. We change how we see ourselves.
We stop thinking of ourselves as mere peddlers of products or services. We become meaning-makers. Relationship-builders. Agents of change.
We realize that our job isn't just to meet quarterly targets (though that's important too, trust me, I've sat in too many of those meetings). Our job is to create narratives that resonate, that stick, that spread.
In a world drowning in data and starving for meaning, we have the power to cut through the noise. To create connections. To inspire action.
Whether you're in B2C or B2B, whether you're selling soda or software, embrace the power of storytelling. Because at the end of the day, we're all human. And humans don't buy products. We buy stories.
The brands that understand this - that can weave compelling narratives across every touchpoint - are the ones that will always thrive. They're the ones that will create not just customers, but advocates. Not just transactions, but relationships.
Stories are the lifeblood of our existence in this world. They are everywhere, so long as we are curious enough to go looking for them and share them.
So, tell your story. Make it a must in your marketing strategy. Make it authentic. Make it resonant. Make it human.
Because in the ever-evolving world of marketing, storytelling isn't just a tactic. It's the strategy. It's not just how we communicate our value. It's how we create it.
And that, my friends, is a story worth telling.
?