Agent skill
brand-storytelling
Help users craft compelling brand narratives. Use when someone is defining brand strategy, writing company positioning, creating pitch narratives, developing messaging frameworks, or trying to make their company story more memorable.
Install this agent skill to your Project
npx add-skill https://github.com/RefoundAI/lenny-skills/tree/main/skills/brand-storytelling
SKILL.md
Brand Storytelling
Help the user craft compelling narratives that make their brand memorable using techniques from 30 product leaders and storytelling experts.
How to Help
When the user asks for help with brand storytelling:
- Understand the context - Ask who the audience is (investors, customers, employees) and what action they want to inspire
- Find the core story - Help identify the transformation, movement, or unique insight at the heart of the brand
- Structure the narrative - Apply proven frameworks to organize the story effectively
- Make it memorable - Help craft specific phrases, metaphors, and moments that stick
Core Principles
Lead a movement, don't just solve a problem
Andy Raskin: "This structure is about defining a movement—that's very different from 'I'm going to solve your problem.'" Frame your brand as the leader of a shift toward a new way of winning.
Story before product
Brian Chesky: "One of the first things we do is figure out what the story is. The story often dictates the product. A story is a helpful way to develop a cohesive product." Define the narrative before finalizing features.
Find the five-second moment
Matthew Dicks: "Every story is about a singular moment—I call it five seconds. A moment of transformation or realization. 98% of the story provides context to make that moment clear." Identify the single moment of change.
Start in the middle of the action
Merci Grace: "Every pitch should start in the middle of the action, like Mission Impossible. Tom Cruise is always doing crazy shit before the actual mission. It gets attention." Skip the boring setup—hook them immediately.
Problems beat successes
Jason Feifer: "Success stories aren't interesting. Problem-solving stories are. Frame your story around a specific challenge you faced and the counterintuitive way you solved it."
You're Obi-Wan, not Luke
Mike Maples Jr: "The customer is the hero (Luke Skywalker), the founder is the mentor (Obi-Wan) providing the tools. Position your product as the lightsaber—the tool the hero needs."
Make it repeatable
Lulu Cheng Meservey: "Make it memorable. Make people want to say it of their own volition. Use analogies, colorful mental images, jokes. Replace adjectives with anecdotes people can repeat at dinner."
Paint emotional pictures
Camille Ricketts: "Effective storytelling paints an emotional picture of the vision. Convey the emotional quality of the mission, not just technical details, to enlist hearts and minds."
Hook, message, celebration
Christina Wodtke: "A beginning, middle, and end. Intrigue with a hook—a mystery, secret, or surprise. The middle delivers the message. Always end with success and celebration."
Memify your insights
Yuhki Yamashata: "The goal is 'memification'—synthesize insights so they're catchy enough for execs to cite in meetings. Use metaphors to explain complex concepts."
Questions to Help Users
- "Who is your audience and what do you want them to do after hearing this?"
- "What's the transformation or realization at the heart of your story?"
- "What problem did you face that others can relate to?"
- "Can someone repeat your core message at a dinner party?"
- "Are you the hero of this story, or is your customer?"
Common Mistakes to Flag
- Starting with your company - Start with the audience's problem or the world's change, not "We are..."
- Feature lists instead of stories - Stories are about change; lists are forgettable
- Hero syndrome - Position yourself as the mentor, not the hero
- Vague vision - "Making the world better" isn't a story; be specific
- No stakes - If nothing's at risk, there's no tension
Deep Dive
For all 50 insights from 30 guests, see references/guest-insights.md
Related Skills
- Positioning & Messaging
- Giving Presentations
- Fundraising
- Media Relations
Recommended Agent Skills
Expand your agent's capabilities with these related and highly-rated skills.
defining-product-vision
Help users create compelling product visions. Use when someone is writing a vision statement, defining a long-term product direction, aligning teams on the future state, or distinguishing vision from strategy.
fundraising
Help founders raise capital and build investor relationships. Use when someone is preparing a pitch deck, deciding whether to raise venture capital, meeting with investors, or asking about fundraising strategy.
giving-presentations
Help users create and deliver compelling presentations. Use when someone is preparing a talk, building a slide deck, dealing with presentation anxiety, practicing for a keynote, or asking how to be more engaging when presenting.
personal-productivity
Help users manage their time and tasks more effectively. Use when someone is overwhelmed with work, struggling with focus, trying to balance multiple responsibilities, or asking how to get more done.
media-relations
Help users build relationships with journalists and get press coverage. Use when someone is pitching reporters, preparing for media outreach, trying to get press coverage, or managing ongoing journalist relationships.
prioritizing-roadmap
Help users prioritize product roadmaps and backlogs. Use when someone is deciding what to build next, sequencing features, allocating resources across projects, handling stakeholder requests, or struggling with too many competing priorities.
Didn't find tool you were looking for?