Motivating Action with a Compelling and Data-Driven Story
What are the key questions to answer when creating a storyboard? - where can you expand the narrative to make the entire story longer? - What do your audiences target feelings tell you about the story itself? - how does your story need to make your audience feel? - how does your audience benefit from your story's conclusions? - what's in the story for those who have no steak in the date result - what do you want your audience to decide after the story concludes?
- What do your audiences target feelings tell you about the story itself? - how does your story need to make your audience feel? - how does your audience benefit from your story's conclusions? - what do you want your audience to decide after the story concludes?
What are the key components of an effective story? - inciting incident - Conflict - action sequence - Protagonist - Antagonist - resolution - music score
Inciting incident, conflict, protagonist, antagonist, and resolution
Identify the right questions to ask when finding your call-to-action for stakeholder
- How is the information important to stakeholders? - Who is affected by the data? - Which stories is the data not telling? - What action should they take based on the information? - What is the basic story being told by the data?
Identify the outcome questions used to evaluate a storyboard.
- Is there anything in the way of achieving success based on the data? - Have you clearly defined the next steps? -How will you measure success? - Do you need a different story to reinforce your point?
What are the key elements of an empathy map? - Looking into what influences a stakeholder - Examining a stakeholder's environment - Observing the stakeholder at their least challenged - Casting aside the stakeholders beliefs - Asking yourself what the stakeholder hopes to gain - Determining how a stakeholder thinks and feels
- Looking into what influences a stakeholder - - Examining a stakeholders environment - Casting aside a stakeholders beliefs - Asking yourself what a stakeholder helps to gain - Determining how a stakeholder thinks and feels
Which questions should be answered when creating a storyboard?
- What will inspire the audience into action needed? - What kind of reaction do you want out of the audience? - What's in it for the main stakeholders? - What do the answers to the other questions? Tell you about how the story should be shaped?
Identify the key elements of an empathy map?
- checking on who the stakeholder associates with - Focusing on what the stakeholder wants to lose - Staying away from the stakeholders environment - taking note of the stakeholders, beliefs, and convictions - Understanding the stakeholder's pains
Identify the outcome questions used to evaluate your storyboard. - is the story resonating with stakeholders? - do you need more data to reinforced your point? - What are the barriers to your success? - Does the story have multiple outcomes for the audience to choose from? - how can you avoid worrying about the audience's data literacy? - have you clearly defined the next steps?
- is the story resonating with stakeholders? - do you need more data to reinforced your point? - What are the barriers to your success? - have you clearly defined the next steps?
Which questions are used to define your call-to-action for stakeholders? - what's the basic story your data is telling? - what's the most complex way to explain your data results? - what's the narrowest possible audience for your story? - Who cares about your data results? - What do you want them to do with the information? - why should they care about your data results?
- what's the basic story your data is telling? - what's the most complex way to explain your data results? - what's the narrowest possible audience for your story? - What do you want them to do with the information? - why should they care about your data results?
Identify the key components of an effective story.
Resolution, protagonist, conflict, antagonist, and inciting incident