Imagine you had two options to write a story on the dangers of winter driving. You can start off by looking at the stats on the number of people killed on icy roads each winter. Or you can start by looking at a father killed on his way to work after losing control of his vehicle on black ice. A father who leaves behind a daughter starting university in the fall. What grabs your attention? If you think the version with the father is more interesting, you’re not alone. Humanizing storytelling has been around for thousands of years. We relate to the pain and joy of others. It gets us hooked. It gets us reading. Today, however, we have access to ample amounts of data and numbers in the mix. And many content marketers working in the B2B space have to deal with dense, convoluted content that often goes through one ear and out the other. What can content marketers do to humanize businesses through storytelling? Humanizing storytelling has been around for thousands of years. We relate to the pain and joy of others. It gets us hooked. It gets us reading. Here’s a hint: talk about people!
I’m sure your product or service is great and in demand if it continues to sell. But how can you take your inbound marketing strategy to the next level? Do what our cavemen ancestors did when they sat around fires telling each other stories: focus on the human angle. How does your product or service make the lives of your customers better? If you sell electrical safety equipment to electricians, for example, how has your product made your customer feel safer on the job? Showcasing the success of your product by writing about how it has helped a customer is more powerful than just listing product features, which can quickly make readers zone out. Other times we take ourselves too seriously. “So often, when we get stuck just thinking about the business results, we conflate really boring, dry stuff with the stuff that’ll actually work. This white paper; it has graphs, it uses academic language, we sound super serious, it’s authoritative. No, it’s not. It’s boring. No one’s going to want to read it,” said Joe Lazauskas, co-author of The Storytelling Edge. He's right. “Stories make us remember and they make us care. The reason content marketing works isn’t artsy-fartsy. It’s because our brains are programmed for stories,” Lazauskas added. Humanizing storytelling in the B2B space has a long way to go. But doing so is a necessity for businesses that want to scale with content marketing. Comments are closed.
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