The storyteller's secret From TED speakers to business legends, why some ideas catch on and others don't

Carmine Gallo

Book - 2016

Internationally bestselling author Carmine Gallo reveals the secrets to telling powerful, inspiring, and game-changing stories that will help you achieve any goal. --Publisher.

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Subjects
Published
New York : St. Martin's Press 2016.
Language
English
Main Author
Carmine Gallo (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xvii, 268 pages : illustration ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781250071552
  • Acknowledgments
  • Preface: Your Story Is My Passion
  • Introduction: Richard Branson, Dopamine, and the Kalahari Bushmen
  • Part I. Storytellers Who Ignite Our Inner Fire
  • 1. What Makes Your Heart Sing?
  • 2. From T-Shirt Salesman to Mega Producer
  • 3. Conquering Stage Fright to Sell Out Yankee Stadium
  • 4. A Rock Star Rediscovers His Gift in the Backstory of His Youth
  • 5. Change Your Story, Change Your Life
  • 6. The Power in Your Personal Legend
  • 7. A Coffee King Pours His Heart into His Business
  • 8. We're Not Retailers with a Mission, We're Missionaries Who Retail
  • 9. If You Can't Tell It, You Can't Sell It
  • Part II. Storytellers Who Educate
  • 10. How a Spellbinding Storyteller Received TED's Longest Standing Ovation
  • 11. Turning Sewage into Drinking Water
  • 12. What You Don't Understand Can (and Does) Hurt You
  • 13. The $98 Pants That Launched an Empire
  • 14. Japan Unleashes Its Best Storytellers to Win Olympic Gold
  • 15. A Funny Look at the Most Popular TED Talk of All Time
  • 16. Dirt, Cigars, and Sweaty Socks Put a Marketer on the Map
  • 17. A Burger with a Side of Story
  • Part III. Storytellers Who Simplify
  • 18. If Something Can't Be Explained on the Back of an Envelope, It's Rubbish
  • 19. The Evangelizer in Chief
  • 20. A Film Mogul's Granddaughter Cooks Up Her Own Recipe for Success
  • 21. The Storytelling Astronaut Wows a TED Audience
  • 22. "Dude's Selling a Battery" and Still Inspires
  • 23. An Entrepreneur Makes Shark Tank History
  • Part IV. Storytellers Who Motivate
  • 24. Find Your Fight
  • 25. The Hospital Steve Jobs Would Have Built
  • 26. A Hotel Mogul Turns 12,000 Employees into Customer Service Heroes
  • 27. A Revolutionary Idea That Took Off on the Back of a Napkin
  • 28. When Amy Lost Her Legs, She Found Her Voice
  • 29. From Hooters to the C-Suite-A Former Waitress Shares Her Recipe for Success
  • 30. Trading Wall Street Riches for the Promise of a Pencil
  • 31. The Ice Bucket Challenge Melts the Hearts of Millions
  • 32. His Finest Hour-180 Words That Saved the World
  • Part V. Storytellers Who Launch Movements
  • 33. Great Storytellers Are Made, Not Born
  • 34. Millions of Women "Lean In" After One Woman Dares to Speak Out
  • 35. The 60-Second Story That Turned the Wine World on Its Side
  • 36. From My Heart Rather Than from a Sheet of Paper
  • 37. Story, Story, Story
  • Conclusion: The Storyteller's Universe
  • The Storyteller's Toolkit
  • The Storyteller's Secrets at a Glance
  • The Storyteller's Checklist
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

According to communications coach Gallo (The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs), "You don't choose your passion; it chooses you." Successfully selling that passion to others, he confides in this helpful primer, means becoming a master storyteller. Gallo believes that the first step to finding your own story is answering the question of what makes you happy. He uses the stories of accomplished storytellers such as Richard Branson, Joel Osteen, Tony Robbins, and Oprah Winfrey to demonstrate the ways in which self-narrative informs self-confidence-and helps speakers convince others. Explaining how to help listeners comprehend a message, he reminds readers, "If you can't tell it, you can't sell it." Highly narrative and personality-driven, these stories, backed up by checklists and concrete tips, may not break any substantial new ground, but Gallo's enthusiastic and encouraging style is infectious. Readers with an idea to sell-whether for profit or for social justice-will find this an indispensable guide to articulating a sales pitch. Agent: Roger Williams, New England Publishing Associates. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Gallo (Talk Like TED) engages readers with a litany of stories and storytelling techniques for anyone looking to give better presentations, make better pitches, or run better meetings. If your work supports an idea, business, product, brand, or institution, you will find useful advice within these pages. Gallo's modus operandi throughout is to draw from the lives of rags-to-riches figures and explain their methods. Some are household names (Steve Jobs, Oprah Winfrey), while others are successful businesspeople (Sara Blakely, Charles Michael Yim). Each brief chapter begins appropriately with an attention-grabbing anecdote from the individual's life and then moves to brief second and third acts-with the headings "The Storyteller's Tools" and "The Storyteller's Secret." These sections are the meat in which Gallo digs into techniques such as infusing message with mission, using analogies, violating audience expectations, employing metaphor, and introducing relevant details. Many of the lessons-telling tales of trials and wrapping data with story, for example-come up repeatedly but for good reason. VERDICT This entertaining and informative overview of how famous storytellers build loyalty, sell products, and inspire others will appeal to general readers.-Paul Stenis, Pepperdine Univ. Lib., Malibu, CA © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A self-help book from a communications coach and respected keynote speaker. To achieve success and renown, Gallo (Talk Like TED: The 9 Public-Speaking Secrets of the World's Top Minds, 2014, etc.), who has consulted for Pfizer, LinkedIn, Coca-Cola, and other major brands, urges readers to tell a good story. In nearly every presentation, stories beat logic or evidence, so tell a captivating tale in every sales pitch or TED talk (the author's ultimate venue). To demonstrate, Gallo begins each chapter with a homily of someone's life-changing epiphany and ends with a quick summary, "the storyteller's secret." The inspiring accounts invoke such notable names as Gates, Jobs, Springsteen, and Sting. Also included in the narrative are tales of Churchill, Branson, Oprah, and Pope Francis. All of these figures are wonderful storytellers who have educated and motivated us. They simplify their messages, launch movements, and inspire the world. Promoting a personal brand takes significant work, but Gallo helpfully encapsulates a score of the leaders' secrets in briefe.g., "reframe the story you tell yourself" ("Joel Osteen, Darren Hardy), "make stories at least 65 percent of your presentation" (Bryan Stevenson, Sheryl Sandberg), "violate expectations" (Bill Gates, Elon Musk), "take every opportunity to hone your presentation skills" (Martin Luther King Jr.). For mastery of brilliant storytelling, Gallo provides an appended checklist for aspiring readers who may find the foregoing chapters too heavy with pop neuroscience and references to obscure experts. The take-away: your limbic brain, oxytocin, and good PowerPoint slides, coupled with a perfected story, can make you a billionaire or, if you like, a changer of the worldor maybe, just a bit more prosperous. The old pep talk by another proficient motivational master, updated with references to Twitter, YouTube, and, of course, TED. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.