| name | storytelling |
| description | Use when writing story-driven landing pages, pitch decks, brand messaging, case studies, founder stories, About pages, sales emails, presentations, or any content that needs narrative structure. Use when user asks to make copy more compelling, engaging, or persuasive through storytelling. Trigger phrases - "tell a story", "make it more compelling", "narrative structure", "story-driven", "brand story", "founder story", "customer story", "pitch narrative". Do NOT use for fiction writing, creative writing workshops, or screenplays. For general copywriting routing use copywriting-orchestrator instead. |
| metadata | {"author":"Petr","version":"1.0.0"} |
Storytelling
Overview
Every effective story has a transformation moment and tension. The audience is the hero, you are the guide.
Core principle: Stories work because they trigger oxytocin (trust, empathy) and neural coupling (listener's brain mirrors storyteller's brain). A story without conflict is just a report.
Announce: "I'm using storytelling to craft a narrative structure for this content."
When to Use
USE this skill:
- Landing pages / product pages (story-driven structure)
- Pitch decks and investor presentations
- Brand messaging and About pages
- Sales emails and outreach sequences
- Case studies and customer stories
- Founder stories
- Content marketing (blog, newsletter, social)
- Any copy that feels flat, features-heavy, or unengaging
DON'T use this skill:
- Fiction writing or creative writing
- Pure technical documentation
- General copywriting routing (use
copywriting-orchestrator)
- UVP definition (use
uvp-optimization)
Quick Router
| User says | Best framework |
|---|
| "Write a landing page" | SB7 StoryBrand |
| "Create a pitch deck" | Strategic Narrative |
| "Write a presentation" | Sparkline |
| "Tell our brand story" | SB7 StoryBrand + Founder Story |
| "Make this copy more compelling" | ABT + Storytelling Techniques |
| "Write a case study" | Customer Story (Four Story Types) |
| "Write a sales email" | ABT + Value Story |
| "Write an About page" | Founder Story + Purpose Story |
| "Blog post / newsletter" | ABT + SUCCESs |
| "Social media content" | ABT (shortest format) |
Framework Selection
digraph framework_selection {
"What are you creating?" [shape=diamond];
"Brand messaging / LP?" [shape=diamond];
"Pitch / sales deck?" [shape=diamond];
"Presentation?" [shape=diamond];
"Short-form content?" [shape=diamond];
"SB7 StoryBrand" [shape=box];
"Strategic Narrative" [shape=box];
"Sparkline" [shape=box];
"ABT" [shape=box];
"Four Story Types + ABT" [shape=box];
"What are you creating?" -> "Brand messaging / LP?" [label="website/brand"];
"What are you creating?" -> "Pitch / sales deck?" [label="pitch/sales"];
"What are you creating?" -> "Presentation?" [label="keynote/talk"];
"What are you creating?" -> "Short-form content?" [label="email/social/blog"];
"What are you creating?" -> "Four Story Types + ABT" [label="case study/about"];
"Brand messaging / LP?" -> "SB7 StoryBrand" [label="yes"];
"Pitch / sales deck?" -> "Strategic Narrative" [label="yes"];
"Presentation?" -> "Sparkline" [label="yes"];
"Short-form content?" -> "ABT" [label="yes"];
}
Core Frameworks
1. ABT โ And, But, Therefore
The smallest storytelling unit. Use everywhere as building block.
[Setup/context] AND [additional context]...
BUT [conflict/problem/tension]...
THEREFORE [resolution/action/CTA]
Example (SaaS):
Small businesses love connecting with customers AND social media makes it possible...
BUT managing 5 platforms while running a business is overwhelming...
THEREFORE Buffer lets you schedule everything from one dashboard in 10 minutes a day.
Rules:
- Never use "and then" โ always causal ("but", "therefore", "because of that")
- The BUT is the most important part โ no conflict = no story
- Works at paragraph level AND full-page level
2. SB7 StoryBrand (Donald Miller)
Best for: brand messaging, landing pages, website copy.
7 elements in order:
| # | Element | Question | Example |
|---|
| 1 | Hero | Who is the customer? | "Busy founders who..." |
| 2 | Problem | External, internal, philosophical | External: no time. Internal: feels overwhelmed. Philosophical: shouldn't be this hard |
| 3 | Guide | How do you show empathy + authority? | "We've helped 10,000 founders..." |
| 4 | Plan | What are the 3 simple steps? | 1) Sign up, 2) Connect accounts, 3) Schedule |
| 5 | Call to Action | Direct + transitional CTA | "Start free trial" + "Watch demo" |
| 6 | Failure | What happens if they don't act? | "Keep losing 10hrs/week to social media chaos" |
| 7 | Success | What does transformation look like? | "Reclaim your evenings, grow 3x faster" |
Critical rule: Customer = Hero. Brand = Guide. Never make yourself the hero.
Three layers of Problem:
- External โ tangible problem (no time to manage social media)
- Internal โ how it makes them feel (overwhelmed, behind)
- Philosophical โ why it's wrong (small businesses deserve growth too)
3. Strategic Narrative (Andy Raskin)
Best for: pitch decks, investor presentations, sales decks.
5 elements โ never start with your product:
- Name a big shift โ "The old game is over" (industry change happening now)
- Show stakes โ Winners and losers in this new reality
- Paint the Promised Land โ Future state for those who adapt (not your product features)
- Introduce obstacles โ Why the Promised Land is hard to reach without help
- Present your solution โ NOW introduce your product as the path
Example structure for a pitch deck:
Slide 1-3: "E-commerce changed. Customers expect personalization."
Slide 4-5: "Companies that personalize grow 40% faster. Those that don't, die."
Slide 6-7: "Imagine: every customer gets a unique experience, automatically."
Slide 8-9: "But building personalization in-house takes 18 months and $2M."
Slide 10+: "That's why we built [Product]. Personalization in 2 weeks."
4. Sparkline (Nancy Duarte)
Best for: presentations, keynotes, long-form content.
Alternate between "what is" (current reality) and "what could be" (better future):
What Is โ What Could Be โ What Is โ What Could Be โ NEW BLISS
(problem) (possibility) (deeper) (bigger vision) (call to action)
Each swing increases emotional intensity. End with irresistible "new bliss" โ the transformed state.
Used by: Steve Jobs (iPhone launch), Martin Luther King Jr. ("I Have a Dream").
5. Four Story Types (Kindra Hall)
Best for: business storytelling across contexts.
| Story Type | Purpose | Use When |
|---|
| Value Story | Why should I buy? | Product pages, sales calls |
| Founder Story | Why should I trust you? | About page, investor pitch |
| Purpose Story | Why should I work here? | Hiring, culture pages |
| Customer Story | Social proof | Case studies, testimonials |
Each story needs: Identifiable character + authentic emotion + specific moment + detail
6. Five-Second Moment (Matthew Dicks)
Best for: personal storytelling, founder stories, keynotes.
Every story is about a single moment of transformation โ the instant where the character changes. Everything in the story serves this moment.
Rules:
- Start at the opposite of where you end (sad โ happy, lost โ found)
- Find the 5-second moment โ the specific instant of realization/change
- Dinner Test โ would you tell this story to a stranger at dinner?
- Homework for Life โ daily practice of capturing your story of the day
7. SUCCESs (Chip & Dan Heath)
Best for: making any message memorable and shareable.
| Principle | Meaning | Technique |
|---|
| Simple | Core message, stripped down | Find the lead. One sentence. |
| Unexpected | Break patterns, surprise | Gap theory โ open curiosity gaps |
| Concrete | Specific, sensory details | "A man on the moon" not "space exploration goals" |
| Credible | Believable and trustworthy | Statistics, anti-authority, testable credentials |
| Emotional | Make them feel something | Individual > statistics. Identity appeal. |
| Stories | Narrative structure | Challenge plot, connection plot, creativity plot |
Storytelling Techniques
From Matthew Dicks โ use these to enhance ANY framework:
| Technique | What it does | How |
|---|
| Elephant | Hook attention in first 30 seconds | State the problem/mystery/stakes immediately |
| Backpack | Build anticipation before key moment | Load the audience with hopes and fears |
| Hourglass | Create tension at climax | Slow down time at the critical moment โ detail every sensation |
| But/Therefore | Maintain causality | Never "and then" โ always "but" or "because of that" or "therefore" |
| Dinner Test | Filter bad stories | "Would I tell this at dinner?" If no, don't write it. |
| Begin at opposite | Create transformation arc | Happy ending? Start sad. Success? Start with failure. |
Neuroscience: Why Stories Work
- Oxytocin (Paul Zak): Emotional stories release oxytocin โ trust, empathy, willingness to act. Character-driven narratives with tension work best.
- Neural coupling (Uri Hasson, Princeton): Listener's brain activity mirrors the storyteller's. Stories literally synchronize brains.
- Cortisol + Dopamine: Tension produces cortisol (attention). Resolution produces dopamine (reward). Together = engagement + memory.
Implication: Facts tell, stories sell. A story with data beats data alone every time.
Standard Workflow
- Identify context โ What are you creating? (use Quick Router)
- Select framework โ Match to content type (use Framework Selection)
- Research the story elements โ Who is the hero? What's the conflict? What transforms?
- Draft using ABT as backbone โ Even within larger frameworks, each section should follow And-But-Therefore
- Apply techniques โ Elephant (hook), Hourglass (slow at climax), Begin at opposite
- SUCCESs check โ Is it Simple, Unexpected, Concrete, Credible, Emotional?
- Dinner Test โ Would you actually tell this story at dinner?
Common Mistakes
- No conflict โ Story without tension is a Wikipedia article. Always have a BUT.
- Brand as hero โ Customer is ALWAYS the hero. Brand = guide/mentor (Yoda, not Luke).
- Starting with product โ Start with the customer's world, their problem, the shift happening. Product comes last.
- Too abstract โ "We help businesses grow" vs "Sarah was losing 3 customers a day until..."
- No transformation โ Beginning and end should be different. Character must change.
- Information dump โ Story is not a list of facts. Pick ONE moment, ONE transformation.
- Skipping internal problem โ External problem gets attention. Internal problem (how it FEELS) drives action.
- Generic opening โ "In today's fast-paced world..." is the kiss of death. Start with a specific, concrete moment.
Social Media Storytelling Frameworks
9 frameworks optimized for social media posts, threads, and short-form content.
Platform Router
| Framework | Best for | Length | Difficulty | Platforms |
|---|
| 7-Sentence | Daily posts, threads | Short | โญ | LinkedIn, Twitter/X, IG caption |
| Before-After-Bridge | Product launches, how-to | Medium | โญ | LinkedIn, email, FB Ads, LP |
| Problem-Agitate-Solve | Sales content, retargeting | Short | โญโญ | FB/IG Ads, email funnels, sales pages |
| Hero's Journey | Case studies, testimonials | Long | โญโญโญ | LinkedIn long-form, YouTube, blog |
| Three-Act Structure | Brand stories, campaigns | Medium | โญโญ | FB/IG Stories, TikTok, LinkedIn |
| Pixar Formula | Emotional stories | Long | โญโญ | IG Reels, TikTok, LinkedIn carousel |
| Golden Circle | Brand positioning, values | Medium | โญโญ | LinkedIn, About pages, pitch decks |
| Star-Chain-Hook | Lead generation | Short | โญ | FB/IG Ads, Twitter/X, email |
| V Formula | Transformation stories | Medium | โญโญ | LinkedIn, IG story highlights, YouTube |
Difficulty key: โญ easy (just fill the slots) ยท โญโญ medium (needs setup + restraint) ยท โญโญโญ hard (long-form arc + character work)
Quick Selection
For daily content: 7-Sentence, Star-Chain-Hook
For sales: Problem-Agitate-Solve, Before-After-Bridge
For brand building: Golden Circle, Three-Act Structure
For emotional connection: Hero's Journey, Pixar Formula, V Formula
SM1. 7-Sentence Framework (Cyndi Zaweski)
Shortest storytelling unit for social media. Each sentence has a clear purpose.
1 sentence: Context (When, Who, What)
2 sentences: Problem
2 sentences: Reaction/Solution
1 sentence: Result
1 sentence: Lesson
Example:
"Today I had a call with a client who said my services are too expensive." (context) "He wanted a 50% discount. I spent a year working to not need such clients." (problem) "Instead of lowering my price, I sent him a case study. I showed him that a 100K investment generated 500K in revenue." (reaction) "The client apologized and paid full price." (result) "Never compete on price. Compete on value." (lesson)
SM2. Before-After-Bridge (BAB)
Creates contrast between painful present and ideal future, then bridges with your solution.
BEFORE: Describe the problem state
AFTER: Imagine a world where the problem doesn't exist
BRIDGE: How to get there (your product/service)
Example:
BEFORE: "You spend 3 hours daily in Excel, copying data from multiple systems." AFTER: "What if every morning everything was ready? A dashboard with real-time numbers, graphs even the CEO understands." BRIDGE: "That's exactly what our BI solution does. We connect all your systems โ you see real-time data in one dashboard."
SM3. Problem-Agitate-Solve (PAS)
More aggressive than BAB. Agitate the problem to make it more painful before presenting the solution.
PROBLEM: Present the problem
AGITATE: Make it worse (emotional language)
SOLVE: Present the solution
Warning: Can be manipulative if overdone. Use responsibly.
Example:
PROBLEM: "Your IG has 300 followers and zero engagement." AGITATE: "Your competitors with worse content have thousands of followers. Their Reels get 50K views while yours barely hit 200. Every day you don't fix this, you lose potential customers." SOLVE: "Our Growth System sets up the algorithm to show your content to 10x more people in 90 days."
SM4. Hero's Journey (Social Media Adaptation)
Customer = hero, you = mentor. The full arc condensed for social.
DEPARTURE: Hero gets a challenge, receives guidance, sets out
INITIATION: Series of challenges, but ultimately completes the mission
RETURN: Hero returns with new power/treasure and helps others
Best for long-form: LinkedIn articles, YouTube videos, podcast episodes, blog posts.
Example: "Jana had a small bakery in Prague. Her dream: own a cafe. Banks refused her loan." (departure) "During our accelerator she faced 3 crises: investors rejected her, supplier failed, COVID shut Prague down." (initiation) "Today Jana owns 3 cafes and mentors other entrepreneurs. Revenue: 500K+/month." (return)
SM5. Three-Act Structure
Basic film structure adapted for social. Less aggressive than PAS, universally understood.
ACT 1: Setup โ introduce the scene and characters
ACT 2: Confrontation โ problem and rising tension
ACT 3: Resolution โ problem solved (with your product/service)
Example: ACT 1: "Martin launched an outdoor clothing e-shop. First month: 5 orders. Solo operation โ phone-shot product photos, WordPress theme for โฌ20." ACT 2: "After 3 months still 30 orders/month. Burned 50K on FB ads. Site loaded in 8s, mobile checkout broken, 85% bounce." ACT 3: "Hired an e-commerce agency. 6 weeks later: new site, pro photos, optimized checkout. First month: 150 orders. Six months later: 300K/month, team of 3, site loads in 1.2s."
SM6. Pixar Formula
The framework behind 13 Oscars. Works because people are wired for fairy tales since childhood.
Once upon a time...
Every day...
One day...
Because of that...
Because of that...
Until finally...
Key: The "because of that" chain shows cause-and-effect, mirroring how people naturally think.
Example: "Once upon a time there was a freelancer working 12 hours a day." "Every day he woke up feeling behind." "One day he got his biggest project โ 500K." "Because of fear, he refused. The competition took it." "Because of that, he watched them celebrate on LinkedIn." "Until finally he hired his first person. Today he has an 8-person agency and evenings free for family."
SM7. Golden Circle (Simon Sinek)
"People don't buy WHAT you do, they buy WHY you do it." Start with purpose, end with product.
WHY: Why do we exist (purpose, values)
HOW: How we do it (process, approach)
WHAT: What we do (products, services)
Best for: Brand positioning, About Us pages, company LinkedIn posts, pitch decks.
Example: WHY: "We believe work shouldn't drain you. It should energize you. We spend 1/3 of life at work โ why should it suck? We want people excited about what they'll create today." HOW: "That's why we build tools that make work easier and more enjoyable. No complex dashboards. No 100 clicks for one action. UX a junior or a CEO both understand." WHAT: "We make project management software. Not another Trello. A place where teams collaborate without friction. Where meetings aren't needed because everyone knows the work. Where feedback comes in context, not via email."
SM8. Star-Chain-Hook
Framework for fast conversion. Not storytelling per se, but highly effective for lead gen.
STAR: Catchy positive opening (attention)
CHAIN: Series of facts, benefits, reasons (desire)
HOOK: Strong call-to-action (action)
Example: STAR: "Build AI agents in 30 days โ even if you've never coded. โจ" CHAIN: "โ 50+ hours of video tutorials โ Private Discord (500+ students) โ Weekly Q&A with AI experts โ Templates for 10 common use cases โ Certificate on completion โ Lifetime access to updates" HOOK: "๐ฏ First 100 students: 50% off ยท โฐ Offer ends in 48 hours ยท ๐ Reserve your spot: [LINK]"
SM9. V Formula (Dave Lieber)
Visually makes the letter "V" โ start high, crash to bottom, dramatic comeback. Perfect for underdog stories.
Down: Introduce character
Down: Drop to lowest point
Up: Turn it around, end high
Example: "Lucka was a corporate copywriter for 15 years." (introduce) "At 45, restructuring โ fired. No savings, two kids in college. Three months of rejection." (lowest point) "A friend suggested freelancing. First week: 0 clients. Second week: first gig for 5K. Today: her own studio, 5 retainer clients, 150K+/month. 'Getting fired was the best thing that happened to me.'" (comeback)
Social Media Pro Tips
- Combine frameworks โ PAS for hook, then Hero's Journey for elaboration
- Test what works โ Track engagement per framework, find what resonates with YOUR audience
- Parachute in โ Skip preamble. "Today I lost a 500K client" beats "I'd like to tell you a story about..."
- Customer = Hero โ You are the mentor/guide, never the main character
- Less = more โ Shorter, punchier language wins on social. Cut every unnecessary word.
Related Skills
copywriting-orchestrator โ routes to the right copywriting specialist
web-copy โ landing page and website copy (apply storytelling frameworks here)
product-copy โ product descriptions and feature pages
uvp-optimization โ defining the value proposition (story wraps the UVP)
offer-creation โ creating compelling offers (story + offer = conversion)
Resources
Key books: Storyworthy (Dicks), Building a StoryBrand (Miller), Stories That Stick (Hall), Resonate (Duarte), Made to Stick (Heath brothers), Wired for Story (Cron)
Key people: Matthew Dicks, Donald Miller, Nancy Duarte, Andy Raskin, Kindra Hall, Park Howell, Randy Olson
NotebookLM: Query storytelling-research notebook for deep dives on any framework.