Chapter 2. Lessons from Myths and Movies

Incorporate Story

All types of writing, including presentations, fall somewhere in between two extreme poles: reports and stories. Reports inform, while stories entertain. The structural difference between a report and a story is that a report organizes facts by topic, while a story organizes scenes dramatically.[8] Presentations fall in the middle and contain both information and story, so they are called explanations.

Incorporate Story
 

Documentation

Informational and factual, emphasizing accuracy and exhaustive details, facts, and figures

Oral Delivery

Persuasive and motivating, emphasizing explanation and making the meaning clear

Cinema and Literature

Experiential and emotional, emphasizing evocative and implied information

Structure

Topical, hierarchical

Dual, alternating between facts and storytelling

Dramatic (exposition, rising action, climax, denouement)

Activities

Survey, collect, record, evaluate, notify, update

Unfold, simplify, clarify, interpret, illuminate, elucidate

Experience, express, emote, sense

Result

Findings, evidence, facts, details

Motivation, activation, engagement

Memories, links, associations

Delivery

Communicate in a plain, direct, and precise manner

Communicate in a believable, credible, and engaging manner

Communicate in an expressive and theatrical manner

It's become the cultural norm to write presentations as reports instead of stories. But presentations ...

Get Resonate: Present Visual Stories that Transform Audiences now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.