An action-orientated review model to convert past experience into practice.
For understanding how great leaders and orgs inspire action by starting with a clear sense of purpose.
A simple practice to accept the anxiety, anger or sadness and start embracing them.
Your presence speaks louder than your words.
Make your pitch or message clear, logical, and action-oriented.
Apply five communication elements to make ideas memorable and repeatable.
Change up the content every two minutes to keep people engaged.
Reveal your points step by step.
Deliver clear, structured arguments by stating your point first, proving it, and closing with clarity.
Separate facts from interpretations to respond to feedback calmly and solve the real problem.
Allows you to handle challenges with clarity, whether you need to see the big picture or focus on the details.
Help individuals and groups connect personal stories to collective action.
Aim to eliminate confusion and miscommunication in both verbal and written forms
Turn complex ideas into clear cause-and-effect stories people remember.
A storytelling framework that makes your message relatable, memorable, and impactful in any context.
Narrate how an idea was born, built, and scaled to demonstrate its real-world impact.
Help people to deliver strong messages or express complex ideas.
Capture feedback, act on it, make changes stick, and report back with clarity.
Help you persuade effectively, build trust, and gain support in any professional setting.
Helps communicators control emotional rhythm and attention over time.
Resolve complications with concise, executive-ready solutions.
Structure complex messages into a clear narrative that leads the audience to your conclusion.
Structured communication framework which is supporting your point with logically organized details and effective information delivery.
A storytelling framework that makes your message relatable, memorable, and impactful in any context.
No application mappings are available for this framework yet.
Humans remember stories more than facts.In business and personal life, stories inspire, persuade, and build trust.
The Hero’s Journey offers a timeless storytelling framework that strengthens communication skills and makes workplace communication more engaging.
The Hero’s Journey was popularized by Joseph Campbell in his book The Hero with a Thousand Faces. It outlines a universal storytelling pattern where a character leaves the familiar, faces challenges, and returns transformed.
Today, it is used in movies, leadership talks, and presentations to create impact through effective communication.
Though it’s powerful, the initial version of this framework is complex. Most of us aren’t professional writers, nor do we need to remember all the intricate details of every stage. That’s why we’ve created a simpler version of the Hero’s Journey.
It’s stripped down to the essentials, making it easy to use for anyone who wants to inspire, connect, and captivate their audience.
What to do:
Why It Matters:
This step engages the audience by setting expectations and making them curious about what’s to come.
Example:
Imagine a startup founder with a dream to revolutionize an industry but no resources. They are at the starting point of their journey.
What to do:
Why It Matters:
Conflict is the emotional heart of the story—it makes the audience care and keeps them engaged. A similar approach is also used in The Pixar Formula.
Example
The founder faces rejection from investors, technical failures, and a skeptical market. He is about to give up, but finally persists, learning and adapting with each setback.
What to do:
Why It Matters:
A satisfying resolution leaves the audience inspired and reinforces the story’s impact.
Example
After relentless effort, the founder secures funding, launches a successful product, and builds a thriving company. They emerge stronger, wiser, and ready for future challenges.