There are only two ways to tell your stories

导读

世界上看上去讲故事的方式千差万别,本文告诉我们要讲好自己的故事只有两种方法:让其他人讲述你的故事;将自己的故事告诉其他人. 在现在的互联网产品世界里,所有事物之间到头来都是你的故事和我的故事的结合,说的专业点,就是公共关系. 要想成为一个优秀的讲故事的人,真的很难,有趣吸引人有内涵还得鸡汤,所以,先努力活成一个有故事的人,那么,等到那个时候,你的浮光掠影里就会充满了各种桥段,也许那个时候brand的意义才能强大.
还有就是,难道你以为只有长难句才能表现出逻辑么?本文是典型的博客体文章,句子简短明了,却把逻辑表现的极其清楚,请学习.

更多剧透

第一步:解决高频单词

diagram [ˈdaɪəˌɡræm]

n.图表

attention [əˈtɛnʃən]

n.注意力

revenue [ˈrevue:]

n.收益 财政收入

relevant [ˈrɛləvənt]

adj. 相关的

foundation [faʊnˈdeʃən]

n.基础

control [kənˈtroʊl]

v.控制

purpose [ˈpɜ:rpəs]

n.目的

rarely [ˈrerli]

adv.很少地

consistency [kənˈsɪstənsi]

n.一致性

withstand [wɪθˈstænd]

v.承受

aspiration [ˌæspəˈreʃən]

n.强烈的愿望;吸气

60p

第二步:精读重点段落

(Tips: 双击文中单词可以查释义并加入你的生词本哦)

Getting others to tell your story

Brands don’t make stories, they make products.

So to get stories made, they need to find a storyteller.

When a brand finds that storyteller, the storyteller wants to tell the brand’s story in the storyteller’s own way.

That’s the challenge.

But storytellers have large audiences, and that’s the opportunity.

Storytellers reach large audiences because the storyteller tells stories their audience wants to hear.

To the audience, those stories are timely or relevant or interesting.

The audience feels like the storyteller understands their needs.

Between the audience and the storyteller there is trust, which is the foundation of any good relationship.

Which means: when you get others to tell your story, you are renting their audience’s trust.

85p

第三步:攻克必学语法

非谓语动词的被动语态

1. 不定式的被动语态
由“to be+过去分词”构成。如:
He needs to be taken care of. 他需要人照顾。
Not a sound was to be heard. 听不到一点声音。
It’s better to be prepared than unprepared. 有准备比没有准备好。
【注】有时用不定式的完成体被动式(to have been+过去分词):
I should like to have been told the result earlier. 我本想让人把结果早点告诉我。
 
2. 现在分词的被动语态
由“being+过去分词”构成。如:
The building being repaired is our library. 正在维修的那座楼是我们的图书馆。
Being protected by a wall,he felt quite safe. 有一堵墙保护,他感到很安全。
He was seen being taken away by the police. 有人看见他被警察带走了。
【注】有时用现在分词的完成体被动式(having been+过去分词):
Having been invited to speak, I’ll start making preparations tomorrow. 因为邀请我去讲话,我明天就得做准备。
 
3. 动名词的被动语态
由“being+过去分词”构成。如:
She likes being looked at. 她喜欢被人瞧。
He objected to being treated as a child. 他反对被当成孩子看待。
This question is far from being settled. 这个问题远没解决。
 
4. 过去分词没有被动式
过去分词本身可以表示被动意义,但它没有相应的被动语态形式。如:
The door remained locked. 门仍然锁着。

100p

加分任务:精读全文

在之前的三步后,你已经完全具备了精读全文的能力。再多花半个小时,让你的学习效果达到120%!

查看/展开全文


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(Tips: 双击文中单词可以查释义并加入你的生词本哦)

“There are only two ways to tell your story.”

A Venn Diagram for brands.

Getting Attention

A brand does not want attention.

A brand wants revenue.

A brand acquires revenue by selling its product.

But in order to sell its product for revenue, the brand must first get people to pay attention to that product.

So every brand needs to be in the business of getting attention whether they want to be or not.

At the end of the day, everything is PR.

There is only one way to get attention

The only way to get attention is to tell stories.

Brands should know this well, for what is a brand but a story itself.

There are only two ways to tell these stories:

You can get others to tell your story, or you can tell your story yourself.

Getting others to tell your story

Brands don’t make stories, they make products.

So to get stories made, they need to find a storyteller.

When a brand finds that storyteller, the storyteller wants to tell the brand’s story in the storyteller’s own way.

That’s the challenge.

But storytellers have large audiences, and that’s the opportunity.

Storytellers reach large audiences because the storyteller tells stories their audience wants to hear.

To the audience, those stories are timely or relevant or interesting.

The audience feels like the storyteller understands their needs.

Between the audience and the storyteller there is trust, which is the foundation of any good relationship.

Which means: when you get others to tell your story, you are renting their audience’s trust.

Pic1

[Large & Rented Audience: The storyteller can reach a large audience because the storyteller tells stories the audience wants to hear. The brand rents the audience.]

Telling your story to others

When you tell your story to others you have control of that story, but you reach a smaller audience.

You reach a smaller audience because the story is about yourself.

Instead of understanding the audience, you are asking them to understand you.

Sadly for our purposes, but luckily for humans in general, there are fewer people who care about you than there are people who care about themselves.

That’s one challenge.

Another challenge is brands, despite being stories themselves, aren’t very good at telling more stories.

A brand is good at products, and meetings about products, and sometimes products that help you have more meetings.

But the production line for a story rarely moves at the speed of a production line for a product or a meeting, or has the same incentives.

Nobody’s bonus is tied to making stories.

All that said, when you tell your own story, you create trust with your smaller audience.

That’s the opportunity.

Trust over time equals a growing audience. But of course, there is no trust without consistency.

Pic2

[Small & Dedicated Audience: The brand reaches a small (but dedicated) audience by telling stories about itself. The brand owns the audience.]

The third way

Misleading titles of Medium posts notwithstanding, there is actually a third way to tell your story—and that’s not to tell your story at all.

The third way is to tell an audience a story about themselves.

That is, to tell a story about an aspirational topic that exists between you and your audience and is born of mutual interest.

This is, for example, is how Vanity Fair works, and WIRED works, and whatever publication you read works.

The editors are experts in celebrity, or technology (or whatever) and they tell stories about celebrity, or technology (or whatever) to an audience who is already interested in those topics.

For the editors, the topics are an expression of their expertise.

For the audience, the topics are an expression of their aspirations.

Brands, you’re probably already aware, do this too.

GE is in the business of several industries, and GE Reports covers the future of innovation in those industries.

Autodesk in the business of 3D software, and AutoDesk’s Redshift covers the future of creative building.

Google in the business of selling information, and Google’s Think Quarterlycovers the future of marketing.

The editors and their audience form a venn diagram.

In the middle are the topics they have in common.

Pic3

[Large & Aspirational Audience: The brand can reach a larger audience if the brand tells aspirational stories about a mutual interest, thus positioning itself as that Ozymandian of things, the “thought leader”.]

Funnily enough, you may have noticed Facebook and Instagram and Google and anything that’s customized to your interests works like this, too.

They’re all expert in telling you stories that you‘re likely to be most interested in.

Which is just to say, pay attention to the stories people want to hear. There’s money in that banana stand.

And stop it with the meetings.

Nobody likes those.

200p

diagram [ˈdaɪəˌɡræm]

n.图表

attention [əˈtɛnʃən]

n.注意力

revenue [ˈrevue:]

n.收益 财政收入

relevant [ˈrɛləvənt]

adj. 相关的

foundation [faʊnˈdeʃən]

n.基础

control [kənˈtroʊl]

v.控制

purpose [ˈpɜ:rpəs]

n.目的

rarely [ˈrerli]

adv.很少地

consistency [kənˈsɪstənsi]

n.一致性

withstand [wɪθˈstænd]

v.承受

aspiration [ˌæspəˈreʃən]

n.强烈的愿望;吸气

不要一时兴起,就要天天在一起

明天见!


下载音频

“There are only two ways to tell your story.”

A Venn Diagram for brands.

Getting Attention

A brand does not want attention.

A brand wants revenue.

A brand acquires revenue by selling its product.

But in order to sell its product for revenue, the brand must first get people to pay attention to that product.

So every brand needs to be in the business of getting attention whether they want to be or not.

At the end of the day, everything is PR.

There is only one way to get attention

The only way to get attention is to tell stories.

Brands should know this well, for what is a brand but a story itself.

There are only two ways to tell these stories:

You can get others to tell your story, or you can tell your story yourself.

Getting others to tell your story

Brands don’t make stories, they make products.

So to get stories made, they need to find a storyteller.

When a brand finds that storyteller, the storyteller wants to tell the brand’s story in the storyteller’s own way.

That’s the challenge.

But storytellers have large audiences, and that’s the opportunity.

Storytellers reach large audiences because the storyteller tells stories their audience wants to hear.

To the audience, those stories are timely or relevant or interesting.

The audience feels like the storyteller understands their needs.

Between the audience and the storyteller there is trust, which is the foundation of any good relationship.

Which means: when you get others to tell your story, you are renting their audience’s trust.

Pic1

[Large & Rented Audience: The storyteller can reach a large audience because the storyteller tells stories the audience wants to hear. The brand rents the audience.]

Telling your story to others

When you tell your story to others you have control of that story, but you reach a smaller audience.

You reach a smaller audience because the story is about yourself.

Instead of understanding the audience, you are asking them to understand you.

Sadly for our purposes, but luckily for humans in general, there are fewer people who care about you than there are people who care about themselves.

That’s one challenge.

Another challenge is brands, despite being stories themselves, aren’t very good at telling more stories.

A brand is good at products, and meetings about products, and sometimes products that help you have more meetings.

But the production line for a story rarely moves at the speed of a production line for a product or a meeting, or has the same incentives.

Nobody’s bonus is tied to making stories.

All that said, when you tell your own story, you create trust with your smaller audience.

That’s the opportunity.

Trust over time equals a growing audience. But of course, there is no trust without consistency.

Pic2

[Small & Dedicated Audience: The brand reaches a small (but dedicated) audience by telling stories about itself. The brand owns the audience.]

The third way

Misleading titles of Medium posts notwithstanding, there is actually a third way to tell your story—and that’s not to tell your story at all.

The third way is to tell an audience a story about themselves.

That is, to tell a story about an aspirational topic that exists between you and your audience and is born of mutual interest.

This is, for example, is how Vanity Fair works, and WIRED works, and whatever publication you read works.

The editors are experts in celebrity, or technology (or whatever) and they tell stories about celebrity, or technology (or whatever) to an audience who is already interested in those topics.

For the editors, the topics are an expression of their expertise.

For the audience, the topics are an expression of their aspirations.

Brands, you’re probably already aware, do this too.

GE is in the business of several industries, and GE Reports covers the future of innovation in those industries.

Autodesk in the business of 3D software, and AutoDesk’s Redshift covers the future of creative building.

Google in the business of selling information, and Google’s Think Quarterlycovers the future of marketing.

The editors and their audience form a venn diagram.

In the middle are the topics they have in common.

Pic3

[Large & Aspirational Audience: The brand can reach a larger audience if the brand tells aspirational stories about a mutual interest, thus positioning itself as that Ozymandian of things, the “thought leader”.]

Funnily enough, you may have noticed Facebook and Instagram and Google and anything that’s customized to your interests works like this, too.

They’re all expert in telling you stories that you‘re likely to be most interested in.

Which is just to say, pay attention to the stories people want to hear. There’s money in that banana stand.

And stop it with the meetings.

Nobody likes those.

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