Stories can sell anything.
Advertising is all about telling your marketing story: a story that your audience can relate to, so that it builds confidence and credibility in your ability to deliver your product or service. A well-crafted business story invites your audience to open a dialogue with you, a line of communication that will ultimately lead to a customer and sale for you, and a sense of satisfaction and accomplishment for your new client.
Effective marketing stories are about universal truths and primal needs; they provide a cathartic emotional experience for your audience. There is no point in spending a lot of monëy on advertising until you have identified that fundamental change your product or service provides to your audience.
Once you have isolated that hidden quality in what you do, you can then develop a video, audio, or print campaign that delivers your message in a memorable, meaningful manner that audiences will respond to.
There are only so many stories you can tell and the art of advertising, or corporate storytelling, is the ability to present that story in fresh new ways.
Where’s Your Product On The Hierarchy of Needs
A noted psychologist Abraham Maslow in his Hierarchy of Needs identified seven basic human motivations that guide peoples’ conduct: physical needs, safety needs, social needs, self-esteem needs, cognitive needs, aesthetic needs, and self-actualization needs.
Develop a marketing campaign consisting of stories that satisfy one of these motivational triggers and you have a campaign that your audience will respond to and consider relevant.
Physical Needs - “Dude With a Problem”
Before people can concern themselves with intellectual or spiritual matters, they must first satisfy their physical needs: water, food, shelter, and procreation. If individuals cannot satisfy these basic needs they have a problem, hence your marketing story can be delivered using the tried and true “Dude With A Problem” scenario.
If you are in the business of selling bottled water, packaged food, physical fitness, real estate, or vitamins you are supplying your audience with a solution to one of life’s most basic needs.
Safety Needs - “Monster In The House”
The need to be safe, to protect your family and yourself from harm, is fundamental to how people behave and what they deem important. The marketing of products and services that fulfill safety needs requires the audience understand the dangers that your product or service is designed to eliminate.
The “Monster In The House” scenario is your standard monster movie featuring some scary, frightening entity. This kind of scenario is based on our need to secure a safe and secure environment and life-style.
From a marketing perspective this approach is how you sell insurance, tires, health care products, alarm systems, or anything that protects you and yours from harm. Instead of some imaginary boogeyman or alien, your monster is disease, fire, accidents and crime.
If your product protects, then it can be sold by showing how it safeguards your audience from the “Monster In The House.”
Social Needs - “Buddy Love” & “Rights-of-Passage”
We are social animals, we live in communities, we förm family units, and we crave meaningful relationships with others. These types of basic needs are played out in scenarios that are commonly referred to as buddy and rights-of-passage movies.
If you run a dating service, nightclub, restaurant, or bar, or if you sell products like beer or wine that involve social gatherings and interaction, then you can use the buddy movie scenario to tell your story.
If you sell products that clear-up acne or solve other kinds of teen related problems relating to becoming an adult, then perhaps the rights-of-passage scenario is the story to tell.
Self-esteem Needs - “Fool Triumphant” & “Superhero”
We all need to feel good about ourselves. If you sell a product that allows people to overcome some insecurity then you have a sure-fire hit if you tell your story in a convincing, compelling fashion.
The “Fool Triumphant” scenario delivers the message that no matter what your short-comings you to can be a wínner. The “Superhero” tale tells the story of ordinary people who have been transformed into extraordinary achievers through some incident or action. In either case, if your product or service supplies that conversion from loser to wínner then that’s the story you want to tell.
Prime examples of businesses that could use these storytelling scenarios are exercise equipment suppliers, nutritional supplement companies, and self-help and motivational product and service businesses.
Cognitive Needs - Institution
The “Institution” scenario is the story of ‘Everyman’ versus ‘Big Brother:’ how we cope, or don’t cope, with the demands of a complex society where we are worn down by bureaucracy, incompetence, and arbitrary rules and red tape.
Dealing with Big Brother, the government, or large oligopoly businesses can be traumatic and in some cases seemingly impossible. Telling this story is the bread and butter issue for companies that provide solutions to dealing with ‘The Institution.’
Whatever the rules were yesterday you can be sure that they’ll be different tomorrow. The skills you learned in school or on the job are no longer in demand, no longer relevant, and no longer work. Whether you’re a homemaker, entrepreneur, accountant, or doctor, you have to keep pace with changing technology, and an ever increasing demand to know just about everything.
Knowing what you need to know in order to compete, comply, and to accomplish in a world dominated by remote, faceless institutions governed and managed by petty officials is a significant impediment to success.
As a result, products and services like private schools, self-help programs, and books and DVDs for self-confessed nincompoops can be sold by delivering a message that solves the “Institution” scenario.
Aesthetic Needs - “Out Of A Bottle”
Once we have satisfied our more basic needs, our desires move on to more aesthetic concerns. We all want to feel good and one of the best ways to feel good is to look good.
The “Out Of A Bottle” scenario provides the marketing message for cosmetic, beauty and health care products and services, weíght loss and exercise products and programs, or any aesthetic issue that can be resolved with a pill, potion, or patch.
Self-actualization - “Golden Fleece” & “WhyDunit”
In an affluent society the basic needs of most people are for the most part available, but affluence doesn’t mean happy. People need more than food, shelter, companionship, and a small waistline. They need to be the best they can be and they need to find some meaning in their lives.
The “Golden Fleece” scenario is about the search for personal recovery, while the “WhyDunit” story is about the search for insight and meaning. These approaches are similar, but one deals with personal salvation, while the other deals with more metaphysical concerns.
Self help and motivational businesses can deliver their messages using the “Golden Fleece” perspective, while religious and charitable institutions can deliver their message through the “WhyDunit” approach.
Conclusion
There is more monëy wasted on bad advertising than on any other business function. The reason is we try to apply rational, factual, and statistical criteria to a fundamentally emotional and psychological hierarchy of needs. Determine the appropriate need your product or services fulfills, apply a suitable storyline to its presentation, and your audience will sit-up and take notice.
About The Author
Jerry Bader is Senior Partner at MRPwebmedia, a website design firm that specializes in Web-audio and Web-video. Visit www.mrpwebmedia.com/ads, www.136words.com and www.sonicpersonality.com