Do you have a powerful story?
Great! That’s an advantage.
Now tell your story about the audience!
What does that mean?
Make your story a metaphor for the audience’s story.
In my storytelling speech, I share a time when I was out in a storm at night in a small sailboat in big seas. I had to dodge three ships that I was sure couldn’t see me.
It’s a dramatic, true story, and audiences enjoy it but it’s a story about ME and MY adventures.
If I go on too long, the audience will begin to wonder why I’m telling the story. They all have Netflix at home and if they want an adventure story, all they have to do is switch on the TV.
So I tell my story about the audience—just like I’m doing for you now.
I dodge the final ship and then I ask my audience a question:
My story becomes a metaphor for their story.
Tell your story about the audience!
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