{"id":65215,"date":"2011-04-14T15:01:00","date_gmt":"2011-04-14T22:01:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/customerthink.com\/once_upon_a_time_converted_leads_into_customers_by_telling_a_story\/"},"modified":"2011-04-14T15:01:00","modified_gmt":"2011-04-14T22:01:00","slug":"once_upon_a_time_converted_leads_into_customers_by_telling_a_story","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/customerthink.com\/once_upon_a_time_converted_leads_into_customers_by_telling_a_story\/","title":{"rendered":"Once Upon A Time"},"content":{"rendered":"

“1960, playground fight, not involved, unjustly caned.”<\/strong><\/p>\n

Thats a one line story, I read on a site called Onlineflashfiction.com<\/a>.<\/p>\n

I was born almost 20 years after the referred incident took place, but the story still managed to send me down the memory lanes of my childhood and reminded me of another incident where I was unjustly caned <\/imgx> . That’s what stories do, they help you connect with an emotion, a memory or a thought.<\/p>\n

Stories unfold all around us, on billboards, on television sets, on youtube, in movie theaters, in books, during conversations, almost everywhere, everyday most of our waking hours and sometimes even when we are deep in sleep.<\/p>\n

Everyone loves a good story, if that was not the case, film and publishing industries around the globe would have perished and our social conversations would have turned mundane.<\/p>\n

<\/imgx><\/p>\n

A good story has the power to inspire, to motivate and to involve its reader. Stories also help a person to relate and retain the information shared. Unlike data, statistics and scientific equations which require time and effort to register, good stories are capable of traversing the depths of our mind and staying there for a long time.<\/p>\n

This is why storytelling is a very popular concept in the B2C world. Advertisers and marketers have used storytelling effectively in their campaigns to build brand awareness and customer loyalty. In a B2C scenario it works because you have to relate to someone at an individual level, if your story appealed to this person, he will in all probability buy your product.<\/p>\n

But can the same be replicated in a B2B scenario, where it is usually a group of individuals who decide on wether to buy that packaging machine or software subscription? Longer sales cycles also make story telling difficult, it is no mean task to grab someone’s interest and then keep entertaining them for months together.<\/p>\n

So can this effective marketing technique be used within the B2B marketing limitations? Well the answer is yes, as long as you keep one thing in mind,<\/p>\n

“If a story is not about the hearer he [or she] will not listen . . . . The strange and foreign is not interesting–only the deeply personal and familiar.”<\/em> — John Steinbeck (East of Eden)<\/strong><\/p>\n

Below are<\/span> 5<\/span> steps to storytelling if you are a B2B company<\/span><\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n

Include all characteristics of a good story<\/strong><\/p>\n