Note: This skill is independent analysis and commentary, not a reproduction of the original text. It synthesizes the book's core ideas with modern startup practice, surfaces where frameworks are outdated or incomplete, and integrates perspectives from adjacent disciplines. For the full argument and context, read the original book.
StoryBrand
"If you confuse, you'll lose." - Donald Miller
Should You Use This Skill?
Is your marketing underperforming despite a good product?
|-- YES --> Can customers explain what you do in one sentence?
| |-- NO --> THIS SKILL. You have a clarity problem.
| +-- YES --> Do they understand why they should care?
| |-- NO --> THIS SKILL. You're not connecting to their story.
| +-- YES --> Problem is elsewhere. Try Traction (channels) or
| Obviously Awesome (competitive positioning).
+-- NO --> Is your product actually good?
|-- NO --> Fix product first (Lean Startup / Four Steps).
+-- YES --> Are customers finding you?
|-- NO --> Use Traction. Distribution problem, not messaging.
+-- YES but not converting --> THIS SKILL.
The Core Insight
Customers don't buy the best products. They buy the products they can understand the fastest.
The human brain is a survival processor. It has two jobs:
- Help us survive and thrive
- Conserve calories (mental energy)
If a customer hits your website and burns too many calories trying to figure out what you offer, they leave. It doesn't matter how good your product is. Noise kills sales.
Story is the antidote to noise. Story is the most powerful tool for organizing information because the human brain is hardwired for narrative. The SB7 Framework forces your messaging into a story structure that every brain already knows how to process.
The Mistake Every Brand Makes
WHAT BRANDS DO: WHAT BRANDS SHOULD DO:
Position themselves as the HERO Position themselves as the GUIDE
Talk about their own journey Talk about the customer's journey
Lead with features and history Lead with the customer's problem
Use insider jargon Use simple, clear language
Make the customer work to understand Make the offer obvious in 5 seconds
The customer is the hero. The brand is the guide. Every great story follows this pattern: a CHARACTER who wants something encounters a PROBLEM before they can get it. At the peak of their despair, a GUIDE steps into their life, gives them a PLAN, and CALLS THEM TO ACTION. That action either ends in SUCCESS or FAILURE.
The SB7 Framework
Seven story elements. Get them right and your marketing works. Get them wrong and you're burning money.
1. A Character (The Customer)
The hero wants something. You must define what.
Rules:
- Choose ONE desire related to your offering (not twenty)
- The desire must be a survival-related need (physical, emotional, or aspirational)
- Open a "story gap" between where they are and where they want to be
The 7 survival categories (all desire maps to these):
| Category | Example |
|---|
| Conserving financial resources | Save money, build wealth |
| Conserving time | Efficiency, automation, less hassle |
| Building social networks | Community, belonging, status |
| Gaining status | Recognition, respect, credibility |
| Accumulating resources | Tools, knowledge, assets |
| The innate desire to be generous | Give back, legacy, meaning |
| The desire for meaning | Purpose, self-actualization |
Test: Can you fill in: "Our customer wants ___________"? If you can't say it in one phrase, you haven't identified it yet.
2. Has a Problem
This is where most brands fail. They talk about solutions before establishing the problem. The deeper you define the problem, the more the customer trusts you as the guide.
Three layers:
| Layer | What It Is | Example (Financial Advisor) |
|---|
| External | The tangible, surface-level problem | "I don't have a retirement plan" |
| Internal | How the problem makes them FEEL | "I feel confused and overwhelmed" |
| Philosophical | Why this is WRONG or UNJUST | "Retirement shouldn't be this complicated" |
The Villain: Every problem needs a villain - a root cause. Not a person necessarily, but a force: complexity, inefficiency, frustration, wasted time, unfair pricing.
Critical insight: Companies sell solutions to external problems. Customers buy solutions to internal problems. The internal problem is where the sale happens.
3. And Meets a Guide (You)
The brand enters the story not as another hero but as the guide - the Yoda to their Luke Skywalker.
Two qualities of a guide:
| Quality | What It Communicates | How to Demonstrate |
|---|
| Empathy | "I understand your pain" | "We know what it's like to..." |
| Authority | "I can actually help" | Testimonials, stats, logos, awards |
Authority without empathy = arrogance. Empathy without authority = weakness. You need both.
Four ways to show authority:
- Testimonials (strongest)
- Statistics ("helped 10,000+ businesses")
- Awards and recognitions
- Logos of clients served
4. Who Gives Them a Plan
Customers don't take action when they're confused. A plan removes confusion.
Two types:
| Plan Type | Purpose | Format |
|---|
| Process Plan | Shows the path from here to there | 3-6 numbered steps |
| Agreement Plan | Removes fear of doing business with you | List of commitments/guarantees |
Process plan rule: 3-6 steps maximum. If it takes more, you're overcomplicating it. Name the plan something catchy if possible.
Agreement plan examples: Money-back guarantee, "No spam ever," "Cancel anytime," satisfaction pledges.
5. And Calls Them to Action
Without a clear call to action, nothing happens. Most brands are too passive.
| CTA Type | Purpose | Examples |
|---|
| Direct | The sale. The thing you want them to do. | "Buy Now," "Schedule a Call," "Get Started" |
| Transitional | For people not ready to buy yet. | Free PDF, webinar, trial, assessment |
Rules for direct CTAs:
- One primary CTA, everywhere, always visible
- Use a different color button than everything else on the page
- Repeat it multiple times on every page
Three powers of transitional CTAs:
- Stakes a claim to your territory (establishes expertise)
- Creates reciprocity (free value = goodwill)
- Positions you as the guide (delivers a quick win)
6. That Helps Them Avoid Failure
People are more motivated by fear of loss than desire for gain (loss aversion = 2-3x stronger). Your messaging must answer: "What happens if they DON'T engage with you?"
The "salt in the recipe" rule: Use just enough failure/stakes to create urgency, but don't overdo it. Too much fear = paralysis. Too little = no urgency.
Four-step fear appeal:
- Make the reader know they're vulnerable to a threat
- Make them know they should take action to reduce vulnerability
- Make them know a specific call to action that protects them
- Challenge them to take that specific action
7. And Ends in a Success
Paint the picture of life AFTER they use your product. Be specific.
Three story endings that resonate:
- Power/Position - Status, authority, winning ("Become the leader your team needs")
- Union/Wholeness - Completeness, reduced anxiety, connection ("Everything in one place")
- Self-Realization - Reaching potential, identity shift ("Become who you were meant to be")
+ Identity Transformation (the most powerful element):
| FROM (before your product) | TO (after your product) |
|---|
| Confused | Confident |
| Overwhelmed | In control |
| Amateur | Professional |
| Stressed | At peace |
Test: Can you fill in: "Before us, our customer felt ___. After us, they feel ___"?
The BrandScript (One-Page Summary)
Fill this in and use it to generate ALL marketing materials:
CHARACTER: [Customer] wants [desire].
PROBLEM: Villain: [root cause]. External: [tangible problem].
Internal: [how it feels]. Philosophical: [why it's wrong].
GUIDE: Empathy: [we understand...]. Authority: [proof].
PLAN: Step 1: [___]. Step 2: [___]. Step 3: [___].
CALL TO ACTION: Direct: [___]. Transitional: [___].
FAILURE: If they don't act: [specific negative outcomes].
SUCCESS: If they do act: [specific positive outcomes].
TRANSFORMATION: From [___] to [___].
Detailed templates and worked examples: see examples.md.
The One-Liner
A single statement that makes people want to know more. Use it everywhere: email signatures, social bios, elevator pitches, website headers.
Formula:
[PROBLEM] + [SOLUTION] + [RESULT]
Examples:
- "Most small businesses waste money on marketing that doesn't work. We created a framework that clarifies your message so customers listen. Companies that use our framework see dramatic revenue growth."
- "Planning a wedding is stressful. We've created a comprehensive online tool to make planning a wedding simple and fun. Enjoy your engagement."
Website: The 5-Second Test
A visitor should be able to answer three questions within 5 seconds of landing on your site:
- What do you offer?
- How will it make my life better?
- What do I need to do to buy it?
Five things every website needs:
| Element | Placement |
|---|
| An offer above the fold | Header area, with image of success |
| Obvious calls to action | Two buttons: direct CTA (bold color) + transitional CTA (less prominent) |
| Images of success | Show end state, not process. Happy outcomes, not product screenshots. |
| Bite-sized revenue breakdown | Break complex offerings into simple categories |
| Very few words | Ruthlessly cut copy. If it doesn't serve the story, kill it. |
The Marketing Roadmap (5 Tasks)
After completing the BrandScript, execute these five tasks to build a complete marketing system:
- Create a One-Liner - Your elevator pitch. Use everywhere.
- Create a Lead Generator - Free resource that solves a small problem (PDF, quiz, video series, webinar). Gate it with an email capture.
- Create an Automated Email Drip Campaign - Nurture sequence: deliver value, then make an offer. Mix nurture emails (tips, stories) with sales emails.
- Collect Transformation Testimonials - Not "great product!" testimonials. Before/after stories: "Before I was [problem]. After working with [brand], I am [transformation]."
- Create a Referral System - Give existing customers a reason and a mechanism to refer others.
Detailed implementation guides: see frameworks.md.
Scope and Limitations
What This Framework Gets Right
- Simplifies messaging with a universal narrative structure
- The customer-as-hero principle eliminates self-centered marketing
- The BrandScript is immediately actionable - one page drives all copy
- Website framework alone can dramatically improve conversion rates
- Works across industries, company sizes, and channels
What's Dated or Limited
- Assumes awareness exists. StoryBrand helps you convert attention into action. It doesn't help you GET attention. Use Traction for channel selection.
- Weak on competitive positioning. SB7 tells you how to talk about yourself, not how to position against specific competitors. Use Obviously Awesome for competitive context.
- B2C bias. Many examples are small business / consumer-facing. The framework works for B2B but requires adaptation for complex, multi-stakeholder sales (add SPIN Selling).
- No pricing guidance. Great messaging with wrong pricing still fails. Use Monetizing Innovation.
- Oversimplifies for complex products. If you have multiple buyer personas with different problems, you may need multiple BrandScripts. The book doesn't address this well.
- "Guide" positioning can conflict with category creation. If you're creating a new category (Blue Ocean Strategy), the "guide" framing may not fit - you may need to be the visionary, not the mentor.
The Honest Assessment
The SB7 Framework is best understood as a messaging and copy framework, not a complete marketing strategy. It's the "what to say" piece. You still need:
- Traction: where to say it
- Obviously Awesome: how to position it against competitors
- $100M Offers: how to package the offer itself
- Monetizing Innovation: how to price it
Framework details, deep dives, and implementation guides: see frameworks.md.
Case studies with results: see cases.md.
Templates and worksheets: see examples.md.
Cross-skill integration: see integration.md.