Charm Offensive – Storytelling for Business & Social Media
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Know why the “Impossible is nothing” Adidas campaign was so successful? Most would say that it wasn’t because of the technology or the attractiveness of their shoes, nor was it due to a sexy model perfectly sweaty and disheveled, dribbling the ball and revealing his ultra worked quadriceps that allow him to kick the ball with his magical cleat tearing a piece of grass thats greener than green, just as the scene is crowned with a powerful goal.
No, that’s not why this commercial was so successful. It was because it told a true story. So real and authentic, that it managed to touch and light up a section of the brain associated with our emotions (which frankly I don’t remember the name of), and made us feel an “Idunnowhat” which left the story of Messi, the concept of the campaign, and the brand impregnated in our memory for years.
Everyone remembers even today, (7 years after the commercial was published) that Messi had a problem with growth hormones. We all retained the moral in our minds that sometimes the bad isn’t always that bad and can even result in something positive. We were left with the phrase: “Impossible is nothing” resonating like a scream of glory in our ears, and since then we associate Adidas with that spirit.
Good: THAT is storytelling. What we can remember today, reveals the power of the story. So, we have to harness the power of social networks, not just to “share” content, but to “tell it”, and to “narrate” the brand. Don’t take social media platforms as ANOTHER distribution channel, but rather as a conversation channel, a transmission of experiences, feelings, values , dreams, failures, successes, truths , etc. . , Always respecting the nature of each social network.
Sincerely, hand over heart, 90% of consumers and potential consumers are not interested at all in marketing. They care about what the brand promises, how the message of this brand makes us feel, and how we’ll see ourselves along with the rest of society, consuming that brand.
What is it and why should brands use social media storytelling?
We could say, without going into epistemological details of the word, its use in the construction of the social imaginary, or its impact on culture and religion from ancient times of humanity, that for all intents and purposes in which marketers are involved in, storytelling is:
the “art” of giving shape and meaning to a piece of information that’s dull and boring.
In advertising, it’s also one of the most powerful tools of persuasion, that is, to combine an idea with an emotion. As stated by Christian Salmon in his book, storytelling is what allows brands and products to ‘un-thing-themselves’ so that they can actually speak and captivate.
A fantastic example of the purpose of “un-thinging” and captivating, is given by the biggest product of all: The GOOGLE search engine.
Using a campaign from Google India, they accomplished to make an excellent demonstration of the product, the way we do it today: with storytelling. I didn’t understand a single word of the dialogue that progressed throughout the commercial, but the images, the characters and their actions, were enough to take me through the narrative journey, captivate me, and fill me with excitement (yes, yes, yes. I cried. I confess.)
Lessons in this Course:
- Module 1 – What Is Storytelling
- Module 2 – Why Stories Are Interesting
- Module 3 – The Charm Offensive Origin Story
- Module 4 – The 7 Types of Plot
- Module 5 – Additional Storytelling Tips
- Module 6 – The Day I Quit My Job to Start My Own Agency
- Module 7 – The Original “Drunk Cold Email” Story
- Module 8 – The Angriest Client I Ever Had the Misfortune of Dealing With
- Module 9 – The Day We Won Our First Gargantuan Client
- Module 10 – My First Day Working at an Agency
- Module 11 – How We Won Hewlett Packard as a Client
- Module 12 – The Morning I Got International PR Coverage for Our Gigantic Client
- Module 13 – The Time I Wrote a Completely Insane Job Advert to Successfully Generate PR
- Module 14 – A Post about the Best Sales Guy I Ever Met
- Module 15 – Sometimes in Life You Meet People who Impress You
- Module 16 – When I Went Client-Side for a Little While
- Module 17 – The Benefits of Working at a Chaotic, Disorganised Agency as Someone Just Starting Out
- Module 18 – The Time We Got Fired by a Client – But Ignored It
- Module 19 – My Profitable but Embarrasing Pitch Slip
- Module 20 – The Most Amusing Mistake I Made in a Client Meeting
- Module 21 – Humour-Enriched Stories
- Module 22 – Building an Audience on Facebook without Ads
- Ebooks
Business online course
Information about business:
Business is the activity of making one’s living or making money by producing or buying and selling products (such as goods and services).
[need quotation to verify] Simply put, it is “any activity or enterprise entered into for profit.
It does not mean it is a company, a corporation, partnership, or have any such formal organization, but it can range from a street peddler to General Motors.”
Having a business name does not separate the business entity from the owner, which means that the owner of the business is responsible and liable for debts incurred by the business.
If the business acquires debts, the creditors can go after the owner’s personal possessions.
A business structure does not allow for corporate tax rates. The proprietor is personally taxed on all income from the business.
More Course: BUSINESS MARKETING
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