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// framework

StoryBrand Framework

Donald Miller, 2017

StoryBrand casts the customer as the hero and your brand as the guide — stop talking about yourself and start talking about their transformation.

// description

The StoryBrand Framework applies narrative structure to marketing by casting the customer as the hero of the story and the brand as the guide. The seven-part formula: A Character (the customer) has a Problem, meets a Guide (the brand) who gives them a Plan, calls them to Action, which helps them avoid Failure and ends in Success. The framework argues that most companies make the mistake of positioning themselves as the hero, when the customer should occupy that role.

// history

Donald Miller, an author and speaker, published the framework in his 2017 book Building a StoryBrand: Clarify Your Message So Customers Will Listen. Miller drew on Joseph Campbell's monomyth (the Hero's Journey) and Robert McKee's screenwriting principles, adapting narrative theory for business communication.

// example

A creator rewrites her course sales page using StoryBrand. Character: "You're a creative person who keeps hearing about KDP but doesn't know where to start." Problem: "The online information is contradictory, overwhelming, and mostly outdated." Guide: "I've been publishing on KDP full-time for eight years and built a business that let me leave my nine-to-five" (authority + empathy). Plan: "My three-step framework: find your niche, build your first product, get it live in 30 days." Action: "Enrol in KDP from Scratch." Failure: "Don't spend another year watching others build the business you could be building." Success: "Imagine waking up to royalty notifications every morning from a business you built on your own terms." Every element serves the customer's story, not the creator's credentials.

// katharyne's take

The single most impactful change you can make to your course sales page or Etsy product description today is to stop talking about yourself and start talking about your customer's transformation. "I have 10 years of experience and eight certifications" is hero-positioning. "You've been putting this off for months and I'm going to help you get your first product live by the end of the month" is guide-positioning. Customers don't care about your credentials until they believe you understand their problem. Lead with the problem. Then bring in your credibility as evidence that you can guide them through it.

// creative uses
// quick actions
// prompt ideas
Rewrite my [course sales page / Etsy listing description / lead magnet opt-in] using the StoryBrand framework. Here's what I currently have: [paste your copy]. Position my customer as the hero, reframe my brand as the guide, clearly state the problem, articulate the plan, name the call to action, and include both failure stakes and success vision.
My [product / course / service] is [describe it]. Write a StoryBrand one-liner: a single sentence that names the character, their problem, and the happy ending — under 20 words. Then give me 3 variations I can test as an email subject line, a social bio, and an Etsy shop tagline.
Help me write the "failure" and "success" sections of my [course / digital product] sales page using StoryBrand principles. My customer is [describe your buyer] and my product helps them [describe the outcome]. Write failure stakes that are emotionally resonant without being manipulative, and a success vision that's specific and believable.
See also: AIDA Model · Cialdini's Six Principles · STP Framework
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