How to tell better stories | Matthew Dicks (Storyworthy)

Dec 15, 2023 1h 42m 34 insights Episode Page ↗
Matthew Dix, author of Storyworthy and a 59-time Moth Story Slam winner, shares tactical advice on how to tell better stories in life and work. He emphasizes centering stories around a five-second moment of transformation, building engagement through stakes and humor, and developing a personal story bank.
Actionable Insights

1. Speak in Story to Be Remembered

Tell stories in business and life, as minds are designed to remember imagery and narratives, not just facts or statistics. This ensures you are memorable and avoid being forgotten in a world of forgettable communication.

2. Center Stories on a 5-Second Moment

Identify a single, brief moment of change (transformation or realization) as the core of your story. This moment provides clarity and allows the audience to experience the change with the storyteller, making the story resonate.

3. Start Storytelling at the End

Before telling a true story, identify its ‘five-second moment’ of change, as knowing the end helps shape the entire narrative. This ensures you have something important to say and helps structure the story effectively, with a clear beginning and end in opposition.

4. Ensure Universal Appeal Through Change

Focus your stories on moments of change or transformation. Change has universal appeal, allowing a broader audience to connect emotionally with your story, even if the specific content isn’t directly relevant to them.

5. Tell Your Own Stories

Center your stories on your own experiences, even if they involve others, by focusing on how their experiences impacted you. This allows you to express vulnerability and share your heart and mind, which helps the audience connect with you more deeply.

6. Apply the “Dinner Test”

When telling a story, ensure it sounds natural and conversational, like something you’d share at a dinner party (slightly elevated). This helps avoid unnatural performance art elements and makes your communication more authentic and engaging.

7. Start as Close to End

Begin your story at the latest possible point, focusing directly on the moment leading up to the core change or realization. This keeps the story concise and impactful, avoiding unnecessary context and immediately drawing the audience into the most relevant part.

8. Start Every Story with Location, Action

Begin your stories by immediately establishing a specific location and describing an action taking place there. Location activates the audience’s imagination, and immediate action signals that a story is beginning, capturing attention and creating space for you to speak.

9. Continuously Build Story Stakes

Introduce elements that make the audience wonder, worry, or hope for the storyteller throughout the narrative, rather than front-loading all the stakes. This keeps the audience engaged and listening, constantly anticipating what will happen next.

10. Use “Elephant” to Hook Audience

Start your story with an immediate, compelling event or situation that clearly establishes something is at stake. This immediately grabs the audience’s attention and makes them wonder what will happen next, even if it’s not the central plot.

11. Use “Backpack” to Share Hopes

Clearly state your character’s (or company’s) plan or goal early in the story. This allows the audience to invest in your aspirations and feel the stakes when the plan encounters difficulties.

12. Use “Breadcrumbs” to Hint

Strategically drop subtle hints or details that suggest future developments without revealing the full picture. This creates anticipation and keeps the audience wondering how these hints will eventually connect to the story’s resolution.

13. Use “Hourglass” to Slow Down

When approaching a pivotal moment of discovery or climax, deliberately slow down the narrative and add rich details. This builds tension and keeps the audience on the edge of their seat, prolonging their anticipation for the outcome.

14. Use “Crystal Ball” for Stakes

Describe a potential (even if not actual) future outcome, especially a negative one, to heighten the audience’s concern. This creates a sense of worry and increases the perceived stakes for the storyteller or situation.

15. Aim for Surprising, Inevitable Endings

Structure your story so that the conclusion, while surprising, feels perfectly logical and unavoidable in retrospect due to earlier, subtly placed information. This delivers the most satisfying and impactful experience for the audience.

16. Use Surprise, Suspense, Humor

Actively incorporate elements of surprise, suspense, and humor into your business communications and stories. These elements are crucial for holding an audience’s attention, making your message more engaging and memorable.

17. Dare to Be Funny

Be willing to take calculated risks by incorporating humor into your presentations, even if it feels uncomfortable or different from others. Humor is a powerful differentiator that can make you stand out and connect with an audience more effectively.

18. Use Nostalgia for Humor

Leverage nostalgia by referencing past technologies, trends, or societal norms when introducing new products or concepts. This can generate humor, make your message relatable, and subtly demonstrate your deep understanding and expertise.

19. “One of These Things” Humor

Create humor by presenting a series of three items, where two are expected or similar, and the third is unexpectedly different. This simple comedic structure can effectively generate laughs and highlight contrasts in a memorable way.

20. Become a “Brick Builder”

Proactively collect and refine a bank of personal stories that can be adapted and deployed for various business contexts. This approach makes you a better, more self-sufficient storyteller, rather than just seeking stories to solve immediate problems.

21. Personalize Business Narratives

Find strategic ways to insert personal anecdotes or elements of your own life into business presentations and narratives. This humanizes your message, makes you more relatable, and fosters deeper connections with your audience, making your communication more memorable.

22. Develop a “Personal Interest Inventory”

Identify aspects of your personal life (e.g., married, hobbies, unique experiences) that could create connection points with others. Knowing these ‘inventory items’ allows you to strategically weave them into conversations or presentations, making you more memorable and relatable.

23. Answer Questions with Personal Touches

When asked a question, try to incorporate a relevant personal detail or aspect of your ‘personal interest inventory’ into your answer. This helps reveal your personality and creates connection opportunities without making the conversation solely about yourself.

24. Match Story Themes, Not Content

When using a story to illustrate a business point, focus on finding a story that aligns with the theme, meaning, or message you want to convey, rather than direct content. This ‘speaking with adjacency’ creates a powerful ‘snap’ moment of realization for the audience.

25. Avoid Most Vacation Stories

Refrain from recounting entire vacations unless a specific, transformative ‘five-second moment’ occurred during them. Most vacation stories lack a central point of change and are often perceived as self-indulgent, failing to engage the audience.

26. Implement “Homework for Life” Daily

Every day, record at least one moment that touched your heart or mind, using a simple spreadsheet (date + brief description). This habit trains your brain to recognize potential stories, builds an endless bank of material, recovers lost time, and reveals life patterns.

27. Record Moments Throughout Day

Don’t wait until the end of the day; capture potential ‘Homework for Life’ moments as they happen using your phone or laptop. This prevents forgetting valuable details or observations that occur throughout the day, ensuring a richer collection of moments.

28. Practice by Listening to Yourself

Record yourself telling your story or giving your talk and listen to it repeatedly, even while doing other tasks. This helps the material sink into your memory, making it easier to recall and deliver naturally, reducing reliance on memorization.

29. Focus on Memorizing Transitions

When practicing, pay special attention to the transitions between different sections or scenes of your story/talk. Mastering transitions helps maintain flow and confidence, as forgetting these points is a common source of nervousness.

30. Avoid Word-for-Word Memorization

Instead of memorizing your talk verbatim, aim to remember key points, themes, and transitions. Memorization can lead to increased anxiety and a stilted delivery; understanding the flow allows for more natural and adaptable speaking.

31. Say “Yes” to Opportunities

Embrace opportunities, even if they seem daunting or undesirable, with the understanding that you can always opt out later. Saying ‘yes’ opens doors to unexpected, extraordinary experiences and growth, challenging preconceived notions and leading to new paths.

32. Confront Things That Scare You

Actively pursue opportunities or challenges that induce fear or discomfort. These experiences often lead to the most significant personal growth and valuable outcomes.

33. Cultivate a Positive Mental Attitude

Consciously choose to frame your experiences and approach life with a positive mental attitude. This mindset is presented as a key to success and significantly influences how you perceive and navigate life’s challenges.

34. Practice Active Listening, Encourage Stories

Actively listen to others and create opportunities for them to share their own stories, especially when they hint at wanting to share. This fosters connection, enriches conversations, and creates a more storytelling-friendly environment.