Is Brand Storytelling Similar To Marketing?

Brand storytelling is an aspect of marketing. In this guest post from Dominic de Souza, we talk about the importance of telling your story digitally...

Brand storytelling is an aspect of marketing. Depending on who you ask, it can be said to precede marketing.

Its part of the ongoing, deeper narrative happening between the brand and the client.

Since stories tap into the deep psychology of what it is to be human, it’s a simpler and more universal selling tool than trending marketing techniques that change based on available tools.

What is marketing?

Anything you do to create awareness, experience of, and education about your response to a specific client’s pain points is marketing. It’s the process of promoting your service and engaging with your audience.

Marketing also includes the process of solving the problem, and how you treat your customer. Marketing involves how a client feels working with you.

Sounds like marketing becomes so broad, where does it stop?

You’re right. You’re always marketing.

Marketing isn’t a one-and-done thing you do, putting up a poster, or passing out a business card.

Marketing is a mindset, something you do with customers, not at them.

So what about storytelling?

Stories are instantly and inherently about community. About connections. About meaning.

If marketing is something you do with customers, stories are the best vehicle for that action.

Stories are the oldest and simplest method of communication.

They’re an out-of-body experience, a chance to see the world through someone else’s eyes and culture. A chance to live someone else’s choices, to be present in their pain and joys and questions.

And it’s like catnip to the human soul.

It does more than activate the logical, fact based part of your mind.

A story engages the emotive, creative, and attention of the person. It invites more of the whole human into engagement.

That’s why using stories are a far faster method of communicating, because it allows us to stand alongside the listener and point at a common idea. Instead of drumming our reality into them.

Brand storytelling functions similar to your Netflix feed.

They don’t hit you over the head with calls to action. They aren’t about impressing you with a service. They aren’t about prettifying data, or leading with facts.

They are a celebration of a moment, an experience, a person. The fact that you made their success possible is almost secondary. Important, but secondary.

If your story can show how deeply someone enjoyed their experience, or how complete the transformation was, or how they now tell themselves a more empowering narrative, then you are being convincing.

Then you have allowed the story to do the work for you. You are showing, not telling.

So in a nutshell, stories are a far older communication technique, that involves far more of the person.

Ads and conventional marketing target distinct problems, and distinct life moments. Obviously, those have value.

But they aren’t shareable. Because they are instants isolated from a larger narrative.

Leading with stories gives us all something to share and talk about.

And if there’s anything as valuable in the realm of ‘social currency’, it’s the ability to drop cool stories in a discussion.

Everyone loves a cool story.

About Dominic

Dominic is Enable’s design and brand specialist. He thoroughly enjoys helping businesses find meaning in their brands and define their distinction. Coffee, cooking and binge-researching are his hobbies. When not building websites, he is delving into projects to find the boundaries of his imagination. He hasn’t found them yet.

Jesse Flores

Jesse is the Chief Web Pro at SuperWebPros. When he's not trying to see the future, you can find him in quiet contemplation, spending time with his family, or finding an excuse to be outside (in good weather).

Also from the Pros...

man sitting on floor writing on computer with SuperWebPros Logo and text: “3 Reasons Why Businesses Don’t Blog, Even Though They Know They Should”

3 Reasons Why Businesses Don’t Blog (Even Though They Know They Should)

If content marketing is so huge, why don’t we see more small business blogs? Check out the 3 reasons why companies don't start a business blog...
Read More
HIT Template - Square (15)

Tip #8: SEO Isn't JUST About Keywords

When you think SEO, you probably think about keywords. While choosing the right keywords can be an important element in a good search engine optimization strategy, it isn't the only...
Read More
Your Business Website Needs A Blog. Here Are 5 Reasons Why.

Your Business Website Needs A Blog. Here Are 5 Reasons Why.

Yes, you need a blog. Well, if you care about these 5 things. (You do!)
Read More
HIT Template - Square (36)

Tip #7: Site Pages vs Landing Pages

Site pages exist to inform. Landing pages exist to convert. Make sure you're using both effectively in order to drive meaningful traffic to your site, and grow your business!..
Read More
Two computers in the dark with SuperWebPros logo and text: Website vs Web Application: Whats the Difference, Anyway?

What’s The Difference Between A Website And A Web Application, Really?

Website Vs Web Application: what’s the real difference? It all comes down to whether it functions to inform or to interact… and, of course, how we choose to define a website altogether...
Read More
HIT Template - Square (17)

Tip #6: Make Your Content Skimmable

Your business website isn't a novel. Don't bog your visitors down with unwieldy chunks of text: give them compelling content that they can understand by skimming...
Read More
HIT Template - Square (18)

Tip #5: Put Search On Your Site

You're not a mind reader. It's impossible to know what precisely brought a visitor to your website, or to know what they came there for. That's why it's important to...
Read More
HIT Template - Square (19)

Tip #4: Use Lead Magnets

Lead Magnets are all about a simple principle: you have to give to get. If you want your customer to provide something of value to you, make sure you're able...
Read More