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All the best info on storytelling to lead and grow your biz
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SonicPics - Tell Your Biz Stories By Giving Voice To Your Pictures!

SonicPics - Tell Your Biz Stories By Giving Voice To Your Pictures! | Just Story It | Scoop.it

SonicPics is a very easy to use tool for turning your images into custom slideshow movies that you can share with your friends online! SonicPics lets you add images from your iPhone's photo library or camera, arrange your photos, and then narrate the project to create an enhanced m4v video (complete with chapters).

 

This looks like a really cool tool for creating visual stories -- especially for Mac users. I'm a PC gal right now but it says I can load images from my camera to the site (and I do have an iTouch). Then I get to add my narration, and then post to my YouTube channel.  Sweet! So maybe even I can use this service. I'll try it out.

 

In the meantime, those of us wanting to leverage the wave of visual storytelling have another great tool to investigate that can help us share our stories digitally -- easily and inexpensively. Yeah! 


Thank you fellow curator Baiba for finding this!


Via Baiba Svenca
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What does your brand stand for? [infographic]

What does your brand stand for? [infographic] | Just Story It | Scoop.it
A brand is like the lead character of its own story.  And like any story character, brands  have values and beliefs that become associated with them through their actions.  The challenge for marketers is to characterize their brands first before...


Here's a terrific infographic from colleague Jim Signorelli that will help you create a persona for your business. Once you have a persona, it becomes much easier to target your storytelling and marketing/branding efforts. And connect more forcefully with customers.


There are 2 ways of finding your persona:

  1. Examine all of your stories and determine their common characteristics. Then look at Jim's infographic to refine and finalize those qualities. Create your persona based on your discoveries.
  2. Examine this infographic to determine which character/characters you think you/your business embodies most. Check it against your stories. Build your persona from there.

What is a persona? It is a descriptive profile of a typical customer that includes a character type/archetype, demographic info, and as much flesh and bones information you can collect to create a bit of a story about this customer -- their likes, dislikes, challenges, etc.


Thanks Jim for putting together this very helpful infographic.


And if you want to dig into this topic more -- and get even smarter about using archetypes for marketing/branding -- read The Hero and The Outlaw; Building Extraordinary Brands Through the Power of Archetypes by M. Mark & C. Pearson. It's one of my bibles :)


This review was written by Karen Dietz for her curated content on business storytelling at www.scoop.it/t/just-story-it 

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Apple, Victoria's Secret And IKEA All Fall Into The Same Brand Archetype

Apple, Victoria's Secret And IKEA All Fall Into The Same Brand Archetype | Just Story It | Scoop.it
What do the Apple, Victoria's Secret and IKEA brands have in common? They're all from the same archetype.

 

The brand are "Creators," according to a case study from marketing firm Added Value.

 

It's all about how consumers are able to use the brands to create their own identities. Creator brands allow people to "tap into their potential and re-invent themselves — their minds, personalities, environments, bodies, ambitions, and dreams," according to the report.


OK -- I curated this piece because it show how specific archetypes are reflected in organizations. It is a very brief article and starts to get us thinking about how this information can be used in marketing, branding, and advertising. But make sure to click through to Added Value http://www.added-value.com/culturaltraction/index.html and poke around their site for more info, case studies, and their tool.


But here is what I find disturbing about this short post and the Added Value website -- nowhere does anyone mention that these archetypes originally came from Carol Pearson's and Margaret Mark's book The Hero and The Outlaw: Building Extraordinary Brands Through the Power of Archetypes (2001) http://www.amazon.com/The-Hero-Outlaw-Extraordinary-Archetypes/dp/0071364153/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1337476690&sr=1-1 


Enjoy poking around the websites, but go read the book!! It contains a wealth of fabulous information and how-to tips you can use immediately for articulating your brand and targeting your communications (I'm not affiliated in any way with the authors).


Via Gregg Morris
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