Site icon The Musings Of An Opinionated Sod [Help Me Grow!]

If You Don’t Know The Heart Of The Story You Don’t Have A Story Worth Telling …

I recently saw this wonderful clip of Hans Zimmer talking about the soundtrack to the movie Interstellar.

I don’t just like it because of the story he tells, but how he talks about the music representing the ‘heart of the story’.

For all the ad industry bangs on – or has banged on – about storytelling, it seem to have forgotten what that actually means.

Far too often we talk about it in terms of a format rather than craft.

Tickboxes rather than nuance.

Disctation rather than imagination.

It shouldn’t be a surprise because this is the way the whole industry is going …

Immediacy.
Blatant.
Simplistic.
Overt.
Complicity.
Egotistical.

Now of course I appreciate a movie allows more space and time to tell a story than an ad, but storytelling seems to have become a lost art in our industry – regarded as superficial, rather than powerful.

Of course part of this is because we – as an industry – have sold creativity so far down the river, we like to pretend we’re ‘serious business people’ and so spout ecosystems, processes and practices while forgetting the commercially valuable and powerful skills we actually offer which is solving problems in creative ways that can capture the imagination of society in ways that pull people to us rather than rely on bombarding them with rational messages over and over and over again.

While our industry has never had the monopoly on storytelling, it seems crazy we have been so happy to walk away from it, even if so much of it has been driven by clients and procurement departments who have decided the only thing people need to know for them to make a fortune is the repetition of a logo and a single ‘brand asset colour’ … even though ironically there’s arguably less differentiation and aspiration in categories than at any point in the past 30 years.

Don’t get me wrong, there a lot of value in marketing practice, but what is being adopted these days is less practice and more pretending.

Going through the motions of over-simplistic dot-to-dot thinking that not only leaves everyone ending up in similar places, but encourages the relinquishing of responsibility from the very people who are paid to be responsible for where and how a brand grows.

So while I’d be skeptical of anyone who claims storytelling is the most important ingredient in brand building, I’d be even more worried about those who don’t value it, understand it or appreciate what you need to be good at it.

Exit mobile version