1125: The Power of Tiny Signals

Here’s a puzzle… Most leaders agree that storytelling is powerful, but few can articulate why. Here’s a big clue >> In the New York Times bestseller, Pre-Suasion, Robert Cialdini demonstrates our vulnerability to tiny signals … His examples blow my mind: How writing down a big number makes us more likely to buy an expensive box of chocolates. How hearing French music makes us more likely to buy a bottle of French wine. How asking whether someone is adventurous makes it more likely that they will try an untested product. How handing someone a hot drink can make them feel more warmly towards us. In each of these cases, the unconscious 'landscape’ bleeds out into the decision making brain. Small things can make a big difference. Which hints at why storytelling can be so powerful. Well-crafted stories aren’t small … they command, direct and focus attention. That’s why they can reshape reality. Tomorrow, I’ll reveal the 3-line story that launched my web agency in the late 1990s. It’ll be right here at 7.17AM, London time. ------------------- The Stories Mean Business podcast with Nick Warren. One Idea A Day, Every Day. Get deeper into business storytelling: https://storiesmeanbusiness.com/storybusiness/ https://storiesmeanbusiness.com/podcast

Om Podcasten

One idea a day from a geek business builder. After 1,000 episodes, the jury is in – this is the world's slackest podcast. 5-minutes a day on story, strategy or whatever's yanked my chain. No guests. No ads. No apologies. This is me thinking out loud, putting things together, going down dead ends and making mistakes. ——— www.StoriesMeanBusiness.com/podcast