146 episodes

Strategic Storytelling blends together the magic of storytelling with practical strategies for copywriting and marketing, especially creating content, branding, and planning. Forget about movies, bedtime stories, and fairy tales: Cathy Goodwin, an online strategist and published author, show you how business storytelling will directly impact your bottom line. No fairy godmothers allowed!

Strategic Storytelling Cathy Goodwin, Ph.D.

    • Business

Strategic Storytelling blends together the magic of storytelling with practical strategies for copywriting and marketing, especially creating content, branding, and planning. Forget about movies, bedtime stories, and fairy tales: Cathy Goodwin, an online strategist and published author, show you how business storytelling will directly impact your bottom line. No fairy godmothers allowed!

    148 The Villain In Your Business Story: With Guest Michelle Mazur

    148 The Villain In Your Business Story: With Guest Michelle Mazur

    In this episode, I’m joined by Dr. Michelle Mazur, a communications coach and consultant. Her slogain is, "Make marketing suck less."
    Let's face it: Most of us didn't go into business to be marketers. But it's something we have to do. It will always suck for a lot of people...but she helps make marketing easier and more fun.
    Storytelling is one of the ways to make marketing more fun. For Michelle, that's am unusual way. to deal with the client's pain. Instead of magnifying the pain, she suggests we name a villain that the client can fight.
    You will learn:
    Why having a villain in your story makes you a better marketer Some especially evil villains in online marketing (including mine, Michelle's and some others) Why you should give your villain a name (like "web slubs" or "overlord") Why internal blocks cannot be true villains Where storytelling has gone off track  You can find Michelle at her website: Dr. Michelle Mazur
    Resources mentioned:
    bookshop.org
    Christina Hills - Website Creation Workshop
    Course: A Story That Sells
     

    • 21 min
    115 ENCORE: Business Storytelling: Your Mess Is NOT Your Message

    115 ENCORE: Business Storytelling: Your Mess Is NOT Your Message

    Business owners, especially those with small businesses that offer professional services, often get advised to, "Make your mess your message." 
    This is awful advice for marketing.
    In this packed-tight-with-information episode, I show how sharing your mess can actually harm your business.
    You will learn:
    1 - Where “Your mess is your message” really comes from (and how TV anchor Robin Roberts used that expression)
    2 - How my early message was seriously misunderstood: they read my story as a “mess.” It wasn’t.
    3 - How another story was misunderstood: a woman who turned down a scholarship to Juilliard and whose career is just about gone.
    4 - The importance of audience reaction to your story: when you put your story out there, they will judge you.
    5 - Why the advice to “be vulnerable” can lead to unexpected reactions (and sharing your mess can turn away your ideal clients)
    6 - Why anticipating your mess can become a self-fulfilling prophecy
    7 - How sharing your mess can lead to an energy drain among your followers (and why I decided NOT to share my cat story)
    8 - How sharing your mess can make you seem less likeable 
    9 - When it’s time to share your messy life (with a good example from Angela Duckworth)
    10 - How a marketing coach (Connie Ragen Green) turned a mess into a triumph (read her book about her cross-country trip)
    11 - How to recognize examples of good stories, with examples. 
    12 -What lessons I've learned from stories where people absolutely did not connect (and what really works)
    References: 
     The Road Trip, by Connie Ragen Green  
    My ebook on Amazon - Grow Your Business One Story At A Time.  Free with Kindle Unlimited.
    My consultation, the Strategic Intensive, which will help you identify a good story.

    How to tell a story that sells: a DIY home study course.

    • 20 min
    058 ENCORE: For a simpler path to course creation, begin with a story

    058 ENCORE: For a simpler path to course creation, begin with a story

    Online course creation has become a major industry. If you're a business owner, your course gives you new opportunities to grow your business, find clients and gain credibility. 
    Designing a course can be challenging. How do you know what to include? How do you figure out how to sequence the modules? 
    Explore a new way to design your course by starting with a story. You'll appeal to more students and have fun with the process. 
    My course on course creation is 
    http://mycopy.info/createyourcourse
    Use the code COURSE50 for a 50% discount as a thankyou for listening.
    Free guide: 17 surprising ways to grow your business with storytelling
    http://mycopy.info/17ways 

    • 14 min
    147 Where does your story take place?

    147 Where does your story take place?

    Your story's location may seem trivial or straightforward. 
    "It's a beach story." 
    "One day I was in my home office..."
    "Mary went home to apartment 3701..."
    Don't those locations bring a special vibe to your story? The story's location tells a lot about your characters and about you.
    If Mary lives in apartment 3701, she'll seem different from someone living in apartment 301. 
    She'll seem even more different from someone living on a farm.
    If she lives in the middle of a city, her whole life will be vastly different from someone living in the suburbs, let alone in the country.
    If you're working from a kitchen table you're very different from someone working from the patio of a large estate.
    In this episode we touch briefly on the power of a story's location.   
    Does your story's location fit your story archetype?
    What if you want to change the story's location? And why should you? 
    What are some mistakes people make when assigning a location to their story?
    Listen here for the answers.
    RESOURCES:
    FREE: What is a story archetype (and what's yours)? 
    COURSE: What is a story that sells - a selling story? How does that differ from a paid story?
    FREE PODCAST: What is a Role Model story archetype? Who's a good example?
    FREE PODCAST: Can your audience relate to your story?

    • 12 min
    146 A branding story or a Selling Story? 4 Examples

    146 A branding story or a Selling Story? 4 Examples

    Branding and selling are very different activities in business. 
    A branding story introduces you to your audience. It tells something about you and how you provide the service. 
    A selling story makes the audience say, "I want what she's having!" 
    In this episode I explain the difference and show that one story can be both. I illustrate with 4 powerful examples of good stories. 
    One story is purely a branding story.  The three others establish a brand and also help you sell.
    Resources:

    Episode 141: What makes a story relatable (or why your audience can't follow your story)
     
    Episode 117: What's a Role Model archetype? Interview with Cindy Bidar.
     
    Book: What's a good business story?
     
    Free report: What's the archetype system of branding?
     
    How do you tell a selling story? A self-study course.
     
    How do you brand with a story? A self-study course.
     
    My website: https://cathygoodwin.com
     
    Consultation: https://CathyGoodwin.com/storyconsult
     

    • 12 min
    145 Being Innovative Without Marketing as an Innovator

    145 Being Innovative Without Marketing as an Innovator

    It's really important to be innovative in your business. 
    Being innovative is one of the ways people realize you are credible. You've gone beyond the basics to develop your own framework or explain your ideas in a new way.
    But will you market yourself as an innovator? That's a different question.
    In this podcast we will ...
    ...explain the difference between innovation in business and innovation as an archetype
    ...show examples of business owners who are true innovators vs. those who innovate but brand differently
    ...explain why you may not want to market as an Innovator. 
    RESOURCES:
    The archetype framework (and how to decide which one is yours)

    My book on storytelling (available as an Amazon ebook)

    Another podcast: a Role Model archetype 

    Home study course: Brand yourself with storytelling

    • 10 min

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