00:00:00You don't need to be a great communicator
00:00:02to be a great storyteller.
00:00:03But if you want to be a great storyteller,
00:00:05then you need to avoid these five traps
00:00:08that 99% of people fall into without even realizing.
00:00:11What I'm sharing with you today,
00:00:13I've tested in one-on-one situations
00:00:15to audiences of up to 30,000 people.
00:00:18And after a decade of coaching thousands of people
00:00:21on communication, I keep seeing the same five mistakes
00:00:24repeated over and over and over again.
00:00:26Mistakes that make you unlikable, forgettable,
00:00:29and worst of all, invisible.
00:00:31And once you stop doing them,
00:00:32start to watch how differently people respond to you.
00:00:35Trap number one, audience blindness.
00:00:38This is when you get so caught up in telling the story
00:00:40that you don't even realize the audience
00:00:42have completely checked out
00:00:43and they're not listening anymore.
00:00:45We all have that one friend
00:00:47where every time they share a story, you sigh out loud
00:00:51because they take you on all these tangents
00:00:53that don't even matter to the point of the story.
00:00:56This is the most common way the audience blindness shows up.
00:01:00You drown the listener in way too much irrelevant context
00:01:03causing them to feel confused, overwhelmed.
00:01:06And as a result, they stop listening to you.
00:01:08But there are two more ways audience blindness shows up.
00:01:11See if you can spot them in this next interaction.
00:01:14So anyway, I'm sitting there and out of nowhere,
00:01:16Caroline just walks in with this giant box
00:01:18and you know what Caroline's like,
00:01:19and everybody's looking at me
00:01:20like I'm supposed to do something about it.
00:01:22And it's weird because it's a Tuesday
00:01:24and no one even likes avocado in the building, right?
00:01:28Wait, hang on, who's Caroline
00:01:30and what thing about the printer?
00:01:31And why are you telling me this?
00:01:33I'm just here to deliver your package.
00:01:34Can you just sign for this so I can get out of here?
00:01:37Did you catch what it was?
00:01:39You see, the second symptom of audience blindness
00:01:41is when you leave out essential context and details.
00:01:45So the story stops making any sense to the listener.
00:01:47And the third symptom, if you noticed,
00:01:49was he didn't have a clear point.
00:01:52He didn't know how to land the plane.
00:01:54He just kept on rambling and rambling.
00:01:57And if you go off on tangents like that,
00:01:59if your story doesn't have a clear point,
00:02:01and if you don't give key bits of context
00:02:03to make your story make sense,
00:02:05then they will mentally check out.
00:02:07You have to paint a clear picture for them
00:02:09by giving them the right context, the details,
00:02:12and you have to make it relevant to them
00:02:14by having a clear point.
00:02:16So before you tell a story to anyone,
00:02:18ask yourself these two questions.
00:02:20Number one, what context and details are essential
00:02:23for this story to make sense?
00:02:25Question number two,
00:02:26what's the one thing I want them to walk away with?
00:02:29Then tell your story around that
00:02:31and cut out everything else.
00:02:33Trap number two, achievement dumping.
00:02:37This is when you're sharing your wins, your successes,
00:02:40and your achievement, and your highlights,
00:02:42but you leave out the part
00:02:43that makes people actually relate to you.
00:02:45- Yo, Vin.
00:02:46- Dude, cabbage. - Good to see you.
00:02:48Haven't seen you since Boy Scouts.
00:02:49- What's been happening?
00:02:50- Well, I just closed a small $6 million sponsorship deal.
00:02:54It's no biggie.
00:02:55It's just chump change.
00:02:56- Cool, what is the-
00:02:57- Oh, and I finally turned my one-pack into a six-pack.
00:03:00Check it out.
00:03:02(dramatic music)
00:03:05- Oh man, you must've worked really hard.
00:03:12- And I finally got my dream watch.
00:03:15- Ah, that's really nice, man.
00:03:17- To add to my collection.
00:03:19- Look at them.
00:03:20Look at them, Andy.
00:03:22Look how shiny they are.
00:03:24- Okay, let's be real.
00:03:26I don't have a six-pack.
00:03:27I have all of them combined into one, a one-pack,
00:03:29and I don't have six watches,
00:03:31and I don't have a $6 million sponsorship deal yet.
00:03:35Apple, if you're listening,
00:03:36I'm looking at you for that $6 million sponsorship deal.
00:03:39But notice what's missing from the example I shared before?
00:03:42It was the struggle, the cost, the human part.
00:03:46This doesn't necessarily make you unlikable,
00:03:49but people are gonna roll their eyes at you.
00:03:51People can't connect with your success.
00:03:53They connect with your struggle,
00:03:55and that's a key point that you've got to remember.
00:03:57When you only share the highlights with you
00:03:59without sharing the messy part,
00:04:00the human part that came before the success,
00:04:03you don't come across as inspiring.
00:04:05You come across as unapproachable, unrelatable.
00:04:08Think about the best movies you've ever watched in your life.
00:04:11You don't fall in love with the hero
00:04:13because they win straight away.
00:04:14You fall in love with them
00:04:15because they went through the struggle.
00:04:18You fell in love with them
00:04:20because of what they had to go through
00:04:21in order for them to win.
00:04:23So here's how to avoid falling
00:04:25into the achievement dumping trap.
00:04:27When you share a win, pair it with a cost.
00:04:30Instead of, I closed a $6 million brand deal,
00:04:33try this instead.
00:04:35I closed the $6 million brand deal,
00:04:37but it almost didn't happen.
00:04:39I pitched three times, got rejected twice,
00:04:42and had to completely rework my approach.
00:04:44And then by the third pitch, I was terrified,
00:04:46but I knew that if I didn't try again,
00:04:48I'd regret it.
00:04:49One is an example of me sharing just the outcome,
00:04:52and the other one is me sharing the journey
00:04:55that I had to take to get to the outcome.
00:04:57That's what people connect with.
00:04:59But here's the thing.
00:05:00Trap two is just the surface.
00:05:02Traps three and four and five, they're way more invisible.
00:05:06And they're the ones that are quietly
00:05:08killing your connection, even without you realising it.
00:05:11Trap number three, speaking from a wound instead of a scarf.
00:05:16I know this doesn't make sense right now,
00:05:18so let me explain.
00:05:19This trap is about when you share more vulnerable stories.
00:05:23Most people fall into the trap of speaking from the wound,
00:05:25meaning the pain when it's still raw,
00:05:28things that are still bleeding
00:05:29and then you haven't yet processed them
00:05:31and done the work to heal
00:05:33and understand what that pain even means.
00:05:35And this makes it difficult to share these vulnerable stories
00:05:39because you will become overwhelmed by the emotion.
00:05:42Whereas when you speak from the scar,
00:05:44meaning wounds have already healed,
00:05:46you can share with clarity, with perspective
00:05:49and with emotional control most importantly.
00:05:52You're able to guide the audience through the lesson
00:05:54without reliving the trauma in the moment
00:05:56and then making it a traumatic experience
00:05:57for everybody who was there to experience the story.
00:06:00Let me share with you a story about when I got this wrong.
00:06:04A few years ago,
00:06:05when I was teaching my communication skills workshop,
00:06:07I decided to share a vulnerable story about my grandmother.
00:06:09But here's the problem.
00:06:11I hadn't yet processed the emotions yet.
00:06:13It was still completely raw.
00:06:16And halfway through the story, I completely broke down.
00:06:19I fully, ugly cried.
00:06:21I couldn't breathe properly.
00:06:23I was hyperventilating.
00:06:24I had to leave the class.
00:06:26And while the students were really empathetic, sure.
00:06:30But as a teacher, I'd failed them in that moment
00:06:33because instead of teaching them something
00:06:35and then being able to learn something from that experience,
00:06:37they now felt responsible for comforting me.
00:06:40And the lesson that I was trying to teach
00:06:42was completely lost because I lost control of my emotions.
00:06:46It was supposed to be an inspiring story of love and triumph,
00:06:50but instead I turned the whole classroom
00:06:51into a therapy session.
00:06:53Vulnerability is powerful,
00:06:55but unprocessed vulnerability feels like a burden to others.
00:06:58When you share a story you haven't healed from yet,
00:07:02three things happen.
00:07:03Number one, the audience feels responsible for your healing.
00:07:07If you are still bleeding,
00:07:08people feel the pressure to comfort, fix, and rescue you.
00:07:11And because you haven't processed it,
00:07:13when you share a story without meaning,
00:07:15the only thing people get from that story is the heaviness.
00:07:18I mean, you've experienced this before.
00:07:19Have you ever spoken to a friend who's feeling sad
00:07:21and when you walk away,
00:07:22the only thing you got from that was you now feeling sad?
00:07:26And the third thing, now all of a sudden,
00:07:28the person that's listening to you
00:07:30feels like they have to be your therapist.
00:07:32Whereas the intention of you sharing that story
00:07:34was for connection.
00:07:35And people didn't sign up to be your therapist.
00:07:37Can you see why when you share vulnerable stories,
00:07:40you've got to do it in the right way.
00:07:41You've got to heal from them first
00:07:43and share it from a place of control.
00:07:46So Vin, how do you do that?
00:07:48Well, I use a simple three-step framework I call TSL.
00:07:52Test, stabilize, and then lead.
00:07:55Now test, this part of it,
00:07:57you test in a safe environment first.
00:07:59Share the story with your trusted friends
00:08:01in low-stakes settings to gauge your emotional comfort level.
00:08:05Can you tell it without breaking down?
00:08:07Test, stabilize, stabilize your emotions.
00:08:11Practice telling the story until you can deliver it
00:08:14without being overwhelmed by the emotions.
00:08:16It's okay to feel the emotion,
00:08:18but you should be in control of it
00:08:20and not the other way around.
00:08:22L, lead with the lesson.
00:08:24Make sure when you tell the story,
00:08:26don't put the emotional experience itself on the pedestal,
00:08:29but rather make the lesson you learned from the experience
00:08:32the focus of your story.
00:08:33Put that on the pedestal instead.
00:08:35Think, what do I want them to take away when I tell these stories?
00:08:38So again, with the wounds and scar metaphor,
00:08:41scars tell better stories than wounds.
00:08:44And look, if you want to go deeper
00:08:46into the structure of your stories
00:08:47and communicate under pressure well,
00:08:49I've recorded a free two-hour training
00:08:50where I teach you three powerful communication frameworks
00:08:53to help you speak with more clarity and structure
00:08:56and confidence so you can stop rambling and start connecting.
00:08:59The link's in the description,
00:09:00or you can scan the QR code to access it.
00:09:03Alrighty, trap number four,
00:09:05making it all about you, you, you, you, you, and you.
00:09:09That's right, you.
00:09:10Most people don't realise this.
00:09:12When you tell a story,
00:09:14your audience isn't just listening to see you in the story.
00:09:18They're also trying to see themselves in the story.
00:09:22They're asking themselves, can I relate to this story?
00:09:24What can I learn from this story?
00:09:26How does this story apply to me?
00:09:30If your story only shows your experience
00:09:33without giving them space to connect with it,
00:09:35they won't hate you for it, but they'll mentally check out.
00:09:39Let me show you exactly what I mean.
00:09:41So I went skydiving last month and for me,
00:09:44it was the most insane experience I've ever had in my life.
00:09:49- Wow, I can't imagine what that's like.
00:09:53- Well, of course you can't imagine it, Peter.
00:09:54Were you falling through the sky with me
00:09:56at a terminal velocity of between 55 to 65 metres per second?
00:09:59- This is so nauseating.
00:10:00I have no idea what he's talking about.
00:10:02- I can't even relate to what he's saying.
00:10:04What are those hand gestures that he's doing?
00:10:05This is so confusing.
00:10:06- And then my cheeks were all like.
00:10:08(clapping)
00:10:10Oh man, my life is amazing.
00:10:12That's why I can't connect with any of my team members
00:10:14because their lives are not amazing.
00:10:17But you see in that example, it's not a relatable moment.
00:10:20Nothing is in it for them.
00:10:22And they can't really see themselves in that situation.
00:10:25Now, if you're just sharing that story
00:10:27to make your friends jealous or to relive a fun moment,
00:10:31sure, go for it.
00:10:33Sometimes stories are just for fun.
00:10:35But if you're trying to truly deeply connect and inspire
00:10:38and influence the people around you,
00:10:40you need to include them in the story
00:10:42and help them see themselves in the story.
00:10:45So here's the fix.
00:10:46When you tell a story,
00:10:47make sure you include these three things.
00:10:49You in the story, your experiences, your identity.
00:10:53Them in the story, the universal human moments
00:10:56that they can relate to.
00:10:57What they can take from it,
00:10:59the value and the lessons and the insights from the story.
00:11:02So let's redo that whole skydiving storytelling incident.
00:11:07- Wow, I can't imagine what skydiving's like.
00:11:09- Honestly, man, I almost didn't do it.
00:11:11You know that sinking feeling you get
00:11:13when you're about to do something scary?
00:11:14But then I remembered when you told me
00:11:17how important it is in life to do the things that scare you.
00:11:20So that's what made me have the courage to jump.
00:11:23And brother, you know that feeling of adrenaline?
00:11:25You of all people would love it.
00:11:28- Wow, now I can imagine what skydiving's like
00:11:30because you included me in the story.
00:11:32Thanks, Vin.
00:11:33Don't do it.
00:11:36Don't do it.
00:11:37- Isn't that so much better?
00:11:39Now there's a payoff.
00:11:41Now there's something that they can feel and take with them.
00:11:44Your audience doesn't just wanna see you in the story.
00:11:47They wanna see themselves.
00:11:49And they want to be able to walk away with something
00:11:52that they can then apply to their own lives.
00:11:54Traps one through four, those make people zone out.
00:11:56But this next one makes you unlikable.
00:11:59Preaching instead of sharing.
00:12:02This is when what you share with others
00:12:05feels like a bloody lecture.
00:12:07Trust me, they hate it.
00:12:09Here are three ways it shows up.
00:12:11You lecture instead of relating to others.
00:12:13You tell people what they should do
00:12:15instead of showing them how you struggled
00:12:17and how you figured it out.
00:12:19Next, you literally become a parrot.
00:12:21You repeat the lesson so many times
00:12:22that people just start to roll their eyes
00:12:24and go, oh my God, I've heard this 100 times
00:12:26Just take a look at which version makes me more unlikable.
00:12:30The first version, where I'm just becoming a parrot
00:12:32and trying to shove a lesson down your throat
00:12:34and make you listen to me for the sake of listening to me,
00:12:36or the version of me where I use a story
00:12:40and let the storytelling do the heavy lifting,
00:12:42where I let the storytelling do the influencing.
00:12:45You should exercise more because it's healthy for you.
00:12:47And if you don't, you're gonna be unhealthy
00:12:49and that's not good for your health.
00:12:50Get a gym membership, be healthy, don't be unhealthy.
00:12:53Healthy, healthy, healthy, healthy, healthy, healthy.
00:12:55There was a period of my life
00:12:57where I wasn't exercising for a whole year.
00:13:00And I remember playing with my kids
00:13:01and just running around the garden with them.
00:13:02And then somehow as I lifted my son, I twisted my back.
00:13:05And then my son was saying, "Dad, let's keep playing."
00:13:08And I couldn't because I was in physical pain.
00:13:10And you know what that made me realise?
00:13:11It just made me realise that far out as I get older,
00:13:14if I wanna be there for my kids,
00:13:15if I wanna play with my kids more,
00:13:17I'm gonna have to start looking after my health.
00:13:18I'm gonna have to start going to the gym.
00:13:20I'm gonna have to start doing some weights.
00:13:22And I share this with you specifically
00:13:24because you've got three kids too.
00:13:26And as we both get older,
00:13:28I think it's so important for us
00:13:29to start protecting our health more
00:13:30and taking it more seriously.
00:13:32You see that?
00:13:33In one example, the first one in particular,
00:13:35I became an exotic bird.
00:13:37- While I still looked bloody marvellous,
00:13:39I was just trying to squawk the idea at the person nonstop.
00:13:43- In the other version, the influence there felt natural.
00:13:47It felt organic.
00:13:48And the next one, guru energy.
00:13:50This is where you talk to people
00:13:51as if you're a mere God speaking among mortals.
00:13:55This is when you start to believe
00:13:57that your farts don't even stink.
00:13:58And the worst thing about this
00:13:59is when you start to believe you're the best
00:14:02and this is when you become arrogant, you talk different.
00:14:04Whereas there's a massive difference
00:14:05between someone who's confident who speaks
00:14:07versus someone who's arrogant.
00:14:09An arrogant person thinks they're better than everybody else.
00:14:12Whereas a confident person believes
00:14:14that everybody and me included,
00:14:16we're all in the same playing field.
00:14:18There's something I can learn from you
00:14:19just like there's something you can learn from me.
00:14:21And when you come from a place that's confident
00:14:23instead of arrogant, it has an impact to your delivery.
00:14:27So keep the mindset of,
00:14:28hey, there's always something I can learn from others.
00:14:31And that keeps us in confident delivery mode
00:14:33as opposed to absolute wanker delivery mode.
00:14:36Knowing these storytelling traps
00:14:38is just one part of the equation.
00:14:40The other part of the equation,
00:14:42you actually got to go practise the skill of storytelling.
00:14:44This is the part that requires you to lean in.
00:14:47This is why I recorded an exclusive coaching session
00:14:50where I break down seven powerful storytelling secrets
00:14:53with real students.
00:14:55So click the video here
00:14:56if you wanna level up storytelling now.