Storytelling with Nancy Duarte: How to craft compelling presentations and tell a story that sticks
Nancy Duarte, best-selling author and CEO of Duarte Incorporated, shares tactical advice on improving presentations, telling better stories, laying out convincing arguments, and reducing nerves. She also discusses a simple communication framework to improve relationship dynamics.
Deep Dive Analysis
15 Topic Outline
Nancy Duarte's Background and Presentation Volume
Most Memorable Presentation: Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth
Landing Apple as a Client and Early Learnings
The Importance of Empathy in Presentations
Making the Audience the Hero of the Story
The Structure of Great Talks: Rise and Fall
Applying Story Structure in Everyday Communication
The Importance of Visuals: Can They See What I'm Saying?
Tactical Slide-Making Principles
The Duarte Process for Crafting Presentations
Communicating and Presenting in a Remote World
Strategies for Overcoming Stage Fright and Nerves
Torchbearer Leaders and the Five-Act Movement Structure
Informal vs. Formal Video Production Quality
Examples of Product Managers Using Storytelling
5 Key Concepts
Audience as the Hero
In presentations, the audience holds the power to accept or reject an idea, making them the hero of the story. The presenter's role is to be the mentor, coming alongside the audience to help them get unstuck or provide a 'magical tool' for their internal and external conflicts.
What Is, What Could Be, New Bliss
This is a story structure that creates longing for a future state by using contrast. It involves stating the current reality ('what is'), then moving to an imagined better future ('what could be'), and repeating this cadence until the final 'new bliss' which is a poetic or pragmatic picture of the world with the idea adopted.
Can They See What I'm Saying?
This principle emphasizes the importance of visual communication to ensure alignment and understanding. It involves using visual tools like presentation software, live sketching, diagrams, or even drawing on a napkin to help the audience literally 'see' the concepts being conveyed, especially for complex systems or processes.
Slide Doc
A type of presentation designed to be circulated via email without a presenter. It contains more words, stronger pictures, and potentially a lengthy appendix, functioning like a detailed memo with both text and visuals, allowing readers to fully grasp the content independently.
Torchbearer Leader
A leader who knows the general direction of a desired future state but might not see it perfectly clearly, similar to a torch illuminating only a few feet ahead in a cave. Their role is to dissipate fear and guide people through a larger movement by communicating the vision and providing emotional fuel at each stage.
6 Questions Answered
Empathy is foundational because the audience holds the power to accept or reject your idea. A presenter acts as a mentor, guiding the audience (the hero) through their internal and external conflicts, which requires understanding their perspective and challenges.
Great talks often follow a 'rise and fall' cadence, moving between 'what is' (current problem/state) and 'what could be' (solution/imagined future). This contrast creates longing and helps the audience envision and desire the proposed future state.
Each slide should make only one point in support of the overall big idea. Before opening software, think and plan by sketching or storyboarding. Tailor slide density and content to your specific audience and their communication culture, even if it means using denser slides for internal, technical teams.
It's important to look directly into the camera to simulate eye contact and maintain engagement. Be aware that non-verbal cues like hand gestures and body language are often lost, requiring more intentional presence and clear verbal communication to ensure remote participants are heard and understood.
To combat the fight-or-flight instinct, try sitting in the audience seats to visualize friendly faces. Develop a pre-talk ritual that shifts your chemistry, such as deep breathing exercises or watching short, funny videos right before going on stage to induce laughter and calm nerves.
Product managers can use storytelling to understand customer journeys (e.g., 'day in the life' scenarios), align teams around a product vision, and effectively communicate the 'why' behind product features or choices, transforming a simple product description into a compelling narrative.
28 Actionable Insights
1. Make Audience the Hero
Adopt an empathy-first mindset by understanding your audience’s internal conflicts and challenges, positioning yourself as a mentor to help them get unstuck, as they hold the power to accept or reject your ideas.
2. Structure with “What Is, What Could Be”
Frame your talk using a “what is, what could be” cadence, starting with the current reality, moving to a potential future, and ending with a “new bliss” vision to create longing and persuade the audience to adopt your idea.
3. Visualize Your Message
Use visual tools like presentation software, live sketching, diagrams, or even napkin drawings to help your audience literally “see” what you’re saying, ensuring alignment and preventing misunderstandings, especially for complex ideas or processes.
4. Practice Presenting with Passion
To become a better presenter, choose a topic you are deeply passionate about and practice delivering a talk on it, as this experience will teach you to present from your soul and allow you to tap into that passion for future business presentations.
5. Manage Nerves with Visualization & Humor
Combat public speaking nerves by visualizing a friendly, delighted audience from their perspective, practicing calming breathing techniques, and chemically shifting your state with a playlist of funny videos right before going on stage.
6. Turn Off Visuals Strategically
In powerful moments, turn off supporting visuals to ensure the audience’s full attention is on your verbal narrative, body language, and the words coming out of your mouth, allowing your words to paint the pictures in their minds.
7. Look Directly into Camera Remotely
When presenting remotely, train yourself to look directly into the camera lens, not at the faces on your screen, to create a sense of direct eye contact with your audience and enhance engagement.
8. Sketch & Storyboard First
Before opening presentation software, take time to think, sketch, and storyboard your narrative (analog or digital) to ensure the message flow and key points are right, rather than building slides linearly.
9. One Point Per Slide, Tailored
Ensure each slide makes only one point that supports the overall big idea of your talk, and always modify content based on your specific audience and their communication culture, avoiding generic or recycled slides.
10. Prioritize Direct Interaction for High Stakes
For high-stakes requests or pitches, consider foregoing a full presentation deck in favor of direct interaction, using a mental model, whiteboard drawing, and maintaining eye contact to convey passion and build rapport.
11. Adopt “Pixar-like” Presentation Process
For high-stakes presentations, craft a narrative, big idea, and script, then visualize and chunk out key moments, developing revolutionary models that drive consensus and support the final delivery.
12. Implement Visual Slide Annotation System
To streamline presentation editing and version control, especially with multiple contributors, implement a visual annotation system that clearly indicates the status of each slide, allowing teams to quickly understand progress and focus areas.
13. Conduct Listening Tours & Rough Cuts
For internal presentations, especially those requiring goal alignment, start with a listening tour (surveys, interviews) to understand the audience’s current state, then create a rough-cut message (ugly slides are fine) and gather feedback from leaders before final delivery.
14. Use Slide Docs for Circulation
For presentations meant to be circulated via email without a presenter, create “slide docs” with more words, stronger pictures, and full prose, potentially including a detailed appendix, to ensure the audience understands your thinking independently.
15. Lead Movements with “Torchbearer” Approach
When leading a movement towards an alternate future, articulate the “dream,” guide people through the “leap,” “fight,” and “climb” phases, and use speeches, stories, ceremonies, and symbols at each stage to provide emotional fuel and dissipate fear, even if the path isn’t fully clear.
16. Seed a Groundswell for Impact
For significant impact, continuously seed an idea over an extended period, travel to plant seeds, and then scale by building training programs to sanction ambassadors, as Al Gore did with his presentation.
17. Enter Overlooked Market Gaps
Seek out and enter market gaps where existing professionals refuse to engage with new tools or methods, then actively learn and push the boundaries of what’s possible with those tools.
18. Thoughtfully Defer to Experts
When working with experts, pause, think, and consider their advice, often adopting their recommendations, as demonstrated by Al Gore’s approach with presentation specialists.
19. “Day in the Life” Storytelling for Product
For product development, use “day in the life” storytelling by walking in the customer’s shoes and illustrating each step of their journey to uncover strategic insights and identify critical areas for improvement, such as shifting to a mobile-first approach.
20. Articulate Product “Why” with Story
Product managers should develop the ability to unpack the “why” behind their product decisions and wrap it in a compelling story, conveying passion and meaning to move the product forward effectively.
21. Push Visual Boundaries for Impact
Challenge conventional presentation design by creating bold, unexpected visuals that evoke a strong audience reaction and return to principles that prioritize clarity and aesthetic appeal over common, poorly executed trends.
22. Align Visuals with Brand Essence
Ensure presentation visuals deeply align with and enhance the brand’s core identity, pushing creative boundaries to make the visuals an experience in themselves, rather than adhering to generic templates.
23. Prioritize Visual Clarity
Design visuals to be extremely clear, ensuring the audience immediately understands what they should focus on, which enhances their reception and enjoyment of the presentation.
24. Use Dense, Familiar Slides with Peers
When presenting to a team of peers who share a common shorthand and way of working, use dense or familiar slides, tables, or spreadsheets if they aid in aligning around a process, even if they might seem dense to outsiders.
25. Start with Conclusion for Execs
For specific audiences like executives or during fundraising, begin your presentation by stating the conclusion or “new bliss” first, as this audience type often prefers direct answers before diving into details.
26. Prioritize Content Over Video Production
For video content, prioritize the quality and informativeness of the message over high production value, as audiences often prefer authentic, content-rich videos even if they are less polished.
27. Apply “What Is, What Could Be” Daily
Use the “what is, what could be, new bliss” framework in everyday interactions, like asking for chores, by providing context on the current state and clearly articulating the desired future, tailored to the individual’s needs or “love language.”
28. Use Psychometrics & Storytelling in Hiring
In hiring, use psychometrics to understand candidates’ self-awareness and ask them to tell a story, as this helps assess their fit for a “systemic story culture” and their ability to adapt to others.
5 Key Quotes
Your audience is the hero.
Nancy Duarte
I can get my husband to do chores for me on the weekends with a real quick, what is, what could be new bliss.
Nancy Duarte
Putting the tool in the hands of the mass has kind of destroyed the medium itself.
Nancy Duarte
Story creates longing. It helps people long for something they'd never wanted before.
Nancy Duarte
Anyone who's like, and tells me I am a nervous presenter, I'm like, you have probably got gorgeous content in your heart that the world needs to hear.
Nancy Duarte
1 Protocols
Five-Act Structure of a Movement (Torchbearer Leadership)
Nancy Duarte- Dream: Verbalize the desired future state or new place.
- Leap: Inspire people to commit to the journey and jump in.
- Fight: Navigate challenges and overcome roadblocks encountered during the journey.
- Climb: Sustain effort through the long, exhausting slog towards the goal.
- Arrive: Reach the ultimate desired future state or realization of the idea.