| name | four-foundational-stories |
| description | When building or auditing a brand's narrative foundation, ensure all four foundational stories exist and are coherent — Origin (how it began), Personal (why the founders), Group (the movement), Story of Now (how others join today). Missing any of the four creates a brittle narrative that depends on the others to compensate. |
| composition_level | atom |
| extraction-lens | capability |
| source_attribution | Matt Bond (Hivemind Library) |
| license | pending-consent |
| status | candidate |
Four Foundational Stories
When to use
- Pre-launch narrative architecture
- Repositioning or rebrand
- Auditing why a brand's narrative feels thin
- Building a narrative for a community-led project (these four stories are especially load-bearing for community brands)
- Onboarding a new founder/team to align on the brand's narrative spine
When NOT to use
- Pure tactical content work (the four stories are upstream of campaigns)
- Sub-product or feature launches (use
get-to-by-brief-generation instead)
- Highly technical B2B where narrative isn't load-bearing
Core procedure
For a given project, fill in all four stories. If any is missing, the brand's narrative is brittle.
1. Origin Story (Genesis Myth)
Question: How did this begin?
A compelling origin creates believers. The genesis moment becomes the reference point for every subsequent decision — "we started this because X" gives the project an anchor when it drifts.
Test: does the origin contain a specific moment, person, or insight — not a generic "we saw a problem in the market"?
2. Personal Story (Hero's Journey)
Question: Why are the founders doing this?
The founders' personal stake. What they gave up, what they risked, why this problem in particular. Without this, the project feels mercenary — built for an exit, not a mission.
Test: can you state, in one sentence, what would have to happen for the founders to walk away from this?
3. Group Story (Movement Narrative)
Question: How is this bigger than individuals?
The "we" beyond the founding team. The community, the movement, the shared belief. This is what turns a product into something people want to be part of.
Test: does the project have a "we" that includes people outside the company? If only employees use "we," the group story is missing.
4. Story of Now (Call to Adventure)
Question: How can others join today?
The on-ramp. What does someone do this week to participate? Without this, the first three stories are inspiration without an action — the audience is moved but doesn't move.
Test: can you point to a specific action a stranger could take in the next 24 hours to participate?
Output format
ORIGIN: [genesis moment + insight]
PERSONAL: [founder stake + why this problem]
GROUP: [the "we" beyond the team]
STORY OF NOW: [the 24-hour action]
Coverage check
Run the missing-story diagnostic:
| Missing story | Symptom |
|---|
| Origin | Brand feels generic; founders explain in different words each time |
| Personal | Brand feels mercenary; community can't articulate why founders are doing this |
| Group | Audience uses "they" not "we"; no movement language |
| Story of Now | High awareness, low participation; people admire but don't act |
If you can name the symptom but not which story is missing, run all four diagnostics — usually 2 are missing simultaneously.
Failure modes
- Origin without specificity. "We saw the problem with TradFi." Generic; not a story.
- Personal that's generic. "Founders are passionate about Web3." That's not a personal stake.
- Group story claimed but not real. Marketing says "we're a movement" but only employees use "we."
- Story of Now that requires too much. "Join the DAO and propose a governance change" is too high-effort for first contact. Story of Now needs a low-effort entry point.
Source context
This is one extraction from a broader meta-framework on bottom-up narrative building (memetics, viral mechanics, community roles, progressive decentralization). The four foundational stories are the load-bearing elements; the rest of the framework builds on top of them. Get these right first.
Related skills
narrative-health-audit — diagnoses anti-patterns within existing content; this skill defines the foundation upstream of content
positioning-strategic-choice — establishes the position; the four stories make the position narratable
strategic-tension-weaponization — provides the contradiction the brand resolves; can sit inside the Origin or Group story