When Telling Your Story is a Big Mistake


Photo by Picsea on Unsplash

Advisor Perspectives welcomes guest contributions. The views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives.

Click here to watch a video and learn more about Evidence Based Advisor Marketing.

Sales coaches emphasize the importance of storytelling, especially when you can seemingly entertain others with a tale about yourself. While doing so has a role in establishing trust and rapport with a prospect, it’s far more limited than you think.

The benefit of telling your story

There are many articles that extoll the benefit of telling your story. The best ones are based on neuroscience research. Well-known psychologist and researcher Paul Zak explored the reasons we’re attracted to stories in this article.

Good stories capture and hold our attention, according to Zak. They can also cause us to emotionally connect with the characters in the story, which Zak terms “transportation.” It means you experience the same emotions as the characters in the story, like fear or anxiety.

Zak notes that listening to a story causes oxytocin to synthesize in the brain. Oxytocin is the neurochemical responsible for empathy and “narrative transportation.” Its impact is powerful.

According to Zak, “[W]hat we know is that oxytocin makes us more sensitive to social cues around us. In many situations, social cues motivate us to engage to help others, particularly if the other person seems to need our help.”

Clearly, there’s a role for telling stories that have this positive impact.

But there’s a big caveat.