The missing link to the true power of your story bank
What Tolkien taught me about brand storytelling
When it comes to storytelling, every marketing guru on the internet will tell you the same thing — build a story bank, collect your stories, keep them organised, so you have them ready to go.
And honestly? They’re right.
You absolutely should open a doc — call it “Story Bank” if you’re not feeling creative that day — and spend five to ten minutes writing down a story each day.
Do this. It’s genuinely good advice.
Telling stories will make you more charismatic, more memorable, and more entertaining. People will like listening to you (which, in a world full of boring repeated content, is saying something).
And it’ll help you with customer retention, because repeat customers cost less than new ones — yes, thank you, we’ve all sat through that slide in someone’s webinar.
Okay? Fine.
Agreed.
Filed away with all the other marketing truisms.
But – oh, come on. You knew I was going to say it.
A story bank is like a drawer full of loose Lego bricks. Each brick is perfectly good on its own, but a drawer full of bricks is just… a drawer full of bricks. The kind you inevitably step on barefoot first thing in the morning, which is a pain so specific it should have its own support group.
So let’s slow down and ask the real question:
What are you actually trying to build?
If the goal is just entertainment — being charismatic, being liked, being the guy at the networking event with a great anecdote for every conversation — then yes, the story bank is enough, and this is still a great way to use stories (I use them this way too).
If that’s you…
Stop reading.
Go build the file.
You’re done.
Enjoy it.
Send me a postcard.
But if you want something bigger — a brand that people trust, that makes competitors stare at the ceiling at 2 am, wondering how on earth we're going to compete with that — then a pile of unconnected stories won’t get you there.
The missing link to your story bank
To truly harness the power of brand storytelling, you need more, and it’s worth doing for one very good reason. (Okay, maybe three reasons.)
Prices, you can undercut.
Features you can clone in a product update.
Slogans, you can practically steal outright (we’ve all seen it happen).
But nobody can steal your story. It’s the one genuinely defensible thing you’ve got. Which is exactly why it’s worth doing properly, and not just… collecting loose Lego bricks.
The twist most brands miss, is that having a good story bank isn’t actually the hard part. Plenty of founders can tell you, over a coffee, exactly why they started their business and what they were trying to prove, and the transformation their customers experience.
The hard part is telling these same stories in different places without sounding like a broken record or five different companies.
You know the type: the website promises a slow, thoughtful transformation — “we walk with you every step of the way”— the Instagram is all urgency and hustle, hinting you’ll be a changed person by Thursday, and the newsletter — several emails deep — has somehow pivoted into selling you a completely unrelated bundle deal.
Which movie is the prospect watching exactly?
You see, having cool stories is one thing, but you also need to know how to connect them.
This is especially true if you’re selling something premium, high-consideration, or high-ticket. Nobody buys that sort of stuff on impulse. Buyers circle these decisions — reading the website today, opening an email next week, watching a founder’s interview a month later, then finally getting on a call or clicking “buy.” If the story doesn’t progress every time, neither does their confidence in their decision.
For these buyers, consistency of meaning matters — but so does variety of delivery. They need to encounter the same brand truth again and again, but in different forms, without ever feeling like they’re being sold the same pitch twice.
An email is not a website. A website is not an Instagram caption. An Instagram caption is definitely not a VSL. Copy-pasting the same version of the “About Us” story into every channel won’t convince anyone of anything.
Narrative architecture to hold the stories together
For this next part — before we get to channels — I want you to think less like a marketer and more like Tolkien.
Yes, we’re talking Lord of the Rings. Stay with me — this is either the best marketing analogy you’ll read this month, or the moment you close the tab. Fifty-fifty, really.
I want you to still think of your story bank as that same drawer of Lego — yes, the one that’s been plotting against your feet — but instead of grabbing a brick at random, you’re going to choose specific ones to build an actual world.
Every story has a job to do inside the bigger one.
Back to Tolkien to show you what I mean…
Middle-earth works as a setting because it’s a whole, coherent world — its own geography, history, languages, and rules — long before any particular story gets told inside it. The Shire, Rivendell, and Mordor are wildly different in tone and detail, but they’re never inconsistent with each other. They’re all governed by the same underlying logic.
Your brand needs the same thing: a whole world, not just a single message. Each marketing channel, then, is less like a repeated advertisement and more like a chapter, or a map fragment. Some channels introduce a region of the world the audience hasn’t seen yet. Others go back and describe an existing region in far more detail. Neither is more important than the other.
Whatever your underlying story is. The thing that made everything into the company and what you offer today, the world needs to be felt in every channel and every smaller story, but without being repeated over and over.
What you want to avoid is showing the same map fragment everywhere, or worse, drawing a slightly different map each time.
Marketing channels and the stories each one tells
The added challenge is that these days companies have more than one touchpoint with the prospect. There is, of course, the website, and then the email list. Let’s not forget about the whole sea of social media channels, too.
How do they all fit into the story-world you create?
Let’s look at each channel one at a time.
Social Media: A peek into your world
Social is a glance, not a sit-down. Nobody will read your full origin story in a caption — but they will absorb it in fragments over weeks of scrolling.
In world-building terms, social is mostly an introduction: a quick glimpse of something the audience hasn’t fully explored yet, enough to make them want the map.
Think of it as the Shire on a normal afternoon — A single Instagram post doesn’t need to explain the entire quest; it just needs one vivid, specific detail (a doorway, a letter, or something stirring in the shadows) that makes someone pause mid-scroll and think “wait, what’s that about?”
On a more authority-driven platform like LinkedIn or YouTube, you can go a layer deeper — closer to a council scene than a passing glimpse. This is where you start explaining why the journey matters, not just teasing that one exists.
Email and Nurture: Slow-Burn Storytelling
Email is the one channel where someone has actually invited you into their inbox. That earns you room to slow down, and to properly detail territory that social only hinted at.
This could be letting your audience get to know the main characters of the story a bit better, or your equivalent of the Fellowship setting out from Rivendell: a long journey told in stages, not all at once.
Email one might linger in familiar, comfortable territory, gently signalling that something is about to change. A few emails later, you’re deep in the harder middle chapters — the Mines of Moria stretch, so to speak — where the stakes and detail both increase. By the final email in a sequence, you’ve earned the right to arrive somewhere that feels like a payoff, because the reader has walked the whole path with you rather than being teleported straight to the ending.
Website and Sales Pages: The Story as Structural Spine
If email is a slow reveal, the website is the point of reference — the place people return to, sometimes several times, before deciding. This is the map itself: the one place where every region gets shown in relation to every other, the way the front pages of the books lay out all of Middle-earth in one view before a single step is taken.
The About page is where the full legend can be told. The way Elrond’s council finally lays out the full history of the ring for anyone patient enough to sit through it.
A sales or product page borrows the same structure but compresses it into something more functional: establish the world as it currently stands (the problem), introduce the turning point (your answer to it), and describe the world as it could be (the transformation on offer) — all without needing the reader to have read every appendix first.
Sales Conversations and Live Touchpoints
For anything high-consideration, the story doesn’t stop once someone leaves the website — it continues into calls and consultations.
This is where the world gets walked through in person — less like reading the map, more like having Gandalf beside you explaining which path to take and why, adjusted in real time to whatever the traveller is actually worried about. (and just so we’re clear, Gandalf never had to say “does that make sense so far?” four times on a Zoom call…)
Golden threads that build trust
Why is it important to build a world of stories?
The short answer is: because trust and coherence are close cousins, and they dictate the strength of your positioning.
Disjointed brand stories are confusing, and that makes them forgettable. If the website says one thing, the email sounds like a different company wrote it, and the Instagram reels show something else entirely, premium buyers in particular start to wonder what else is inconsistent.
And the result is…
They take longer to decide to buy, and that is the last thing anyone needs.
How to start with this?
Now, what if you read all this, had a good look at your stories, and found that perhaps your approach has been more unstructured than what you would have liked…
Don’t worry. We’ve all done it, myself included.
Here is a couple of things you can do to turn it all around and start building your story-world:
Periodically map every active touchpoint — website, email sequences, top-performing social posts, sales scripts, and so on — against your core story that shaped your world.
Ask one question of each: Does this still sound like us, and who we are? Would the stories we tell here help a prospect enter our world with ease?
If the answer is along the lines of, ‘no, it has drifted a fair bit’ — a common fate of “quick” emails written under deadline pressure — it doesn’t need a rewrite straight away.
Highlight how far this particular channel is off the mark and build an action plan to slowly get it back on track.
What you’re looking to find and build into your stories are golden threads that make all the pieces fall into place.
Nobody reads your About page, then your welcome email, then your Reel, and thinks “ah yes, structural narrative coherence.” What they feel, without being able to name it, is that they already know you. And that feeling is what makes them trust you enough to stop circling and actually buy.
That’s the whole trick.
One world, full of stories linked together, with your brand at the centre of it all.
Want more?
If this was useful and you’d like more of this kind of content — how-to implementations, frameworks, templates, or ways to track results (all with some great stories) — drop a comment or send me a message to let me know.
I’ve got a stack of these (yes, in a Story Bank, obviously) and I’m happy to keep sharing them if people want more.
If you enjoyed this, you might also like…
Nobody told you storytelling had homework
Most people trying to improve their storytelling are focused on the ‘telling’ part. The pacing, the protagonist, the emotions, the suspense… And yes, all of that matters, but the decisions that actually determine whether a story makes an impact happen before you write a single word.




This hits on a profound psychological truth about how we build trust. When a brand's Instagram sounds frantic but its website promises a slow, deep transformation, the human brain instantly registers that friction as a red flag. Premium buyers make decisions precisely because they are looking for structural integrity. Your concept of the 'golden thread' that ties channels together without sounding like a broken record is a necessary masterclass. Brilliant work.