In Chapter 10 of Building a StoryBrand 2.0, Donald Miller introduces a simple yet transformative principle: never assume your customers know how your brand can change their lives.
Instead, explicitly show them the journey and the destination your brand promises to deliver.
This chapter serves as a guide to crafting brand messages that resonate deeply with your audience by addressing their needs, challenges, and aspirations.
The importance of clarity cannot be overstated. Customers are inundated with noise in today’s market, and a brand that fails to provide a clear message risks losing its audience.
Chapter 10 emphasizes that clarity leads to trust, and trust leads to action. By using the StoryBrand framework, businesses can ensure their message cuts through the clutter and connects directly with the customer’s desires.
Understanding the Three Levels of Problems
Every effective brand story addresses three levels of customer problems:
- External Problems: The tangible, surface-level challenges customers face, such as finding a reliable product or service.
- Internal Problems: Emotional struggles like self-doubt, fear, or frustration that your product can help alleviate.
- Philosophical Problems: Broader societal or ethical concerns, such as fairness or justice, that your brand aligns with.
By solving all three, your brand becomes more than a product provider—it becomes a trusted guide.
For example, a fitness brand doesn’t just sell equipment (external); it offers a solution to the customer’s insecurity about their health (internal) and aligns with the belief that everyone deserves access to fitness resources (philosophical).
Crafting a Vision That Resonates
Brands must cast a clear and compelling vision for their customers. It’s not enough to sell a product; you need to articulate the transformation customers will experience. Ronald Reagan’s “shining city on a hill” and Nike’s commitment to “inspire every athlete” are examples of powerful visions that inspire action.
Use the “Before and After” framework to communicate your brand’s value:
- Before: Describe the customer’s struggles or unmet needs before discovering your brand.
- After: Highlight the transformation your brand delivers and how it makes life better.
Specificity is the key to success. Customers don’t resonate with vague promises; they need to see clear, tangible outcomes. For example, instead of saying, “Our software helps you save time,” show exactly how much time they’ll save and what they can do with that newfound freedom.
Resolving Story Loops
Great stories—and great brands—resolve conflicts. Chapter 10 explains how brands can act as guides, closing the “story loops” customers experience. By addressing external, internal, and philosophical problems, brands create a satisfying and memorable narrative. For example:
- External: A toothpaste brand solves the need for clean teeth.
- Internal: It alleviates concerns about harmful ingredients.
- Philosophical: It supports the belief that health should never be compromised for beauty.
To ensure your brand resonates, focus on the resolution. Customers need to know what life will look like after they engage with your brand. A successful brand paints a picture of the desired future and provides a roadmap to get there.
Connecting with Psychological Desires
The chapter outlines three universal psychological desires that brands can leverage to create deeper connections:
- Winning Status: Customers seek respect and recognition. Offer exclusivity, premium options, or scarcity to satisfy this desire.
- Creating Wholeness: Help customers feel complete by addressing their unmet needs, whether it’s reducing anxiety, saving time, or simplifying their lives.
- Self-Realization: Inspire customers to reach their potential. Campaigns like Dove’s focus on self-acceptance exemplify this approach.
For example, brands like TOMS Shoes appeal to the desire for transcendence by combining stylish footwear with a social mission. Customers feel they are part of something larger than themselves, which strengthens loyalty.
Practical Tips for Refining Your Brand Message
Here’s how to apply Chapter 10’s insights to your brand:
- Use sound bites or taglines that clearly summarize the resolution your brand offers.
- Make your messaging specific—vague promises fail to inspire.
- Reinforce your vision in every customer interaction, from ads to emails.
- Leverage visuals that depict the transformation you promise. Images of happy, engaged customers provide powerful cues.
At Teamly, we’ve found these principles invaluable in helping businesses align their internal workflows with their larger vision. Teamly software simplifies team management, ensuring that your business operates smoothly as you focus on creating a compelling brand story.
Consistency is crucial. A fragmented brand message confuses customers and erodes trust. Make sure every piece of communication—from your website to your social media—reinforces your core promise.
Bring It All Together
Chapter 10 of Building a StoryBrand 2.0 is a must-read for anyone looking to elevate their brand messaging.
By addressing your customers’ problems, crafting a clear vision, and connecting with their psychological desires, your brand can inspire loyalty and drive results.
When refining your brand message, don’t be afraid to start small. Identify one key problem your product solves and build your narrative around it. As you refine your message, you’ll find new ways to connect with your audience and create lasting impressions.