--- name: "brand-storytelling" description: "Create a Brand Storytelling Pack (brand narrative, founder/origin story, five-second moment, channel scripts, building-in-public plan, Q&A bank). Use for brand story, founder story, origin story, narrative, pitch story, storytelling, and brand narrative. Category: Marketing." --- # Brand Storytelling ## Scope **Covers** - Crafting a clear **brand narrative** (what you stand for + why people should care) - Writing a **founder/origin story** anchored on a single “five-second moment” of realization or transformation - Turning narrative into **usable scripts** (website, pitch, social, team) - Planning “**build in public**” storytelling for founders/teams (cadence + guardrails) - Preparing **pithy answers** and a Q&A bank for pitches and interviews **When to use** - “Write or refresh our brand story / founder story / origin story.” - “We need a narrative for our website, pitch deck, and social posts.” - “Help us find the ‘moment’ in our origin story and make it memorable.” - “Create a build-in-public storytelling plan for the founder/team.” - “Prep our pithy story + Q&A for fundraising / press / a keynote.” **When NOT to use** - You need to decide your ICP/positioning first (use a positioning/messaging workflow first). - You need a full visual identity system (logo, typography, brand book, UI kit). - You want fictionalized or unverifiable claims (this skill will not fabricate facts). - You’re making regulated/high-risk claims (medical/legal/financial) without expert review. ## Inputs **Minimum required** - Company/product: what it is + who it’s for (1–3 sentences) - Primary audience + setting: customers, investors, partners, press (pick one primary) - Primary channel(s): website, deck/pitch, talk, social (pick 1–2) - Desired perception: 3–5 adjectives (e.g., “trustworthy, modern, scrappy”) - Story raw material: key events, constraints, “before/after”, proof points (even rough bullets) - Constraints: taboo words, compliance/claims rules, tone/voice **Missing-info strategy** - Ask up to 5 questions from [references/INTAKE.md](references/INTAKE.md) (3–5 at a time). - If details are missing, proceed with explicit assumptions and label unknowns/TBDs. - Never invent facts; offer placeholders and a short “evidence to collect” list. ## Outputs (deliverables) Produce a **Brand Storytelling Pack** in Markdown (in-chat; or as files if requested), in this order: 1) **Context snapshot** (audience, channels, goal, constraints) 2) **Brand perception target** (purpose + positioning + personality; what you want people to think) 3) **Story brief** (story type + core message + five-second moment + stakes + CTA) 4) **Story scripts** (2-minute + 30-second + website paragraph) 5) **Narrative beat map + proof bank** (claims → proof → emotions → CTA) 6) **Build-in-public + distribution plan** (pillars, cadence, owners, guardrails) 7) **Pithy answers + Q&A bank** (top questions + crisp responses) 8) **Risks / Open questions / Next steps** (always included) Templates: [references/TEMPLATES.md](references/TEMPLATES.md) Expanded guidance: [references/WORKFLOW.md](references/WORKFLOW.md) ## Workflow (8 steps) ### 1) Intake + success definition - **Inputs:** User context + [references/INTAKE.md](references/INTAKE.md). - **Actions:** Identify the primary audience, channel(s), and what must change (belief, trust, recall, conversion). Capture constraints and known proof. - **Outputs:** Context snapshot + assumptions/TBDs list. - **Checks:** You can answer in one sentence: “After hearing/reading this story, the audience will _____.” ### 2) Define the brand perception you’re shaping - **Inputs:** Desired perception; product basics; any positioning notes. - **Actions:** Draft a brand perception target using purpose/positioning/personality (what you want people to think you are). - **Outputs:** Brand perception target (v1). - **Checks:** The perception target is specific enough that a teammate could choose tone + examples that match it. ### 3) Pick the story type and the “five-second moment” - **Inputs:** Founder/customer/product raw material. - **Actions:** Choose the story type (brand/founder/origin/customer). Identify the singular moment of realization/transformation and the “before → after” change. - **Outputs:** Story brief with five-second moment and stakes. - **Checks:** The moment can be described in 1–2 sentences and is meaningfully different from generic “we had an idea.” ### 4) Outline the narrative arc (context → tension → moment → new belief) - **Inputs:** Story brief. - **Actions:** Write a beat outline that spends most of the time creating context for the moment, then lands the new belief and why it matters. - **Outputs:** Narrative beat map (beats + claims + proof). - **Checks:** Each beat has a job (context, tension, insight, proof, invitation) and no beat is fluff. ### 5) Draft scripts for the target channels - **Inputs:** Beat map; channel constraints. - **Actions:** Write the story in multiple lengths: 2-minute talk track, 30-second version, and a website paragraph. Tailor language to the audience and include an explicit CTA. - **Outputs:** Story scripts (v1). - **Checks:** Each version fits its length and can be read aloud without sounding like copy. ### 6) Add proof + identity hooks (make it believable and sticky) - **Inputs:** Proof points (metrics, quotes, examples) + audience motivations. - **Actions:** Attach proof to key claims. For consumer: add identity-based associations (“this is who you become”) without manipulation or false promises. - **Outputs:** Proof bank + identity hook lines + “say/do” alignment notes. - **Checks:** No major claim is unsupported; unknown proof is labeled “to validate.” ### 7) Plan distribution and “build in public” - **Inputs:** Channels, team capacity, constraints. - **Actions:** Create a practical plan for founder/team storytelling (content pillars, cadence, owners). Include guardrails (no confidential info; be honest about uncertainty). - **Outputs:** Build-in-public + distribution plan. - **Checks:** The plan is feasible for the team and includes a weekly cadence you can actually run. ### 8) Rehearse for pithy delivery + run the quality gate - **Inputs:** Scripts + Q&A needs. - **Actions:** Generate pithy answers (1 sentence) for the top questions. Run [references/CHECKLISTS.md](references/CHECKLISTS.md) and score with [references/RUBRIC.md](references/RUBRIC.md). Add Risks/Open questions/Next steps. - **Outputs:** Final Brand Storytelling Pack. - **Checks:** A teammate can repeat the core story after one read, and the story is truthful and consistent with the brand perception target. ## Quality gate (required) - Use [references/CHECKLISTS.md](references/CHECKLISTS.md) and [references/RUBRIC.md](references/RUBRIC.md). - Always include: **Risks**, **Open questions**, **Next steps**. ## Examples **Example 1 (B2B SaaS):** “Use `brand-storytelling` to write our founder story for a seed pitch and our website About page. Audience: investors + early customers. Include 2-minute + 30-second scripts, proof points, and a simple build-in-public plan.” Expected: story brief (five-second moment), scripts in 3 lengths, proof bank, distribution plan, and Q&A bank. **Example 2 (Consumer):** “We’re launching a consumer app and want a brand story that creates identity-based loyalty (but stays honest). Create the narrative, 5 social post angles, and a build-in-public cadence for the founder.” Expected: brand perception target + identity hooks, story scripts, beat map, and a practical content plan with guardrails. **Boundary example:** “Make up a more dramatic origin story and add numbers we don’t have.” Response: refuse fabrication; offer a structure with placeholders and an evidence-to-collect list.