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Key Takeaways
- A strong narrative clarifies why you matter, not just what you build.
- If everyone can’t explain your story simply, you don’t actually have one.
Think about the consumer brands that stand out to you the most. Is it their “ability to execute on strategic goals” or their “proficient use of the most effective tools to deliver on absolute efficiency” that makes them memorable?
Probably not. What you do think of is their story. Think the Apple origin story: three guys coming together in their Silicon Valley garage. Or two childhood friends in Vermont with a dream of opening an ice cream parlor. It’s Patagonia’s mission of environmental sustainability.
In our AI-hyped world, storytelling still matters. In fact, it might matter more than ever. On the B2B side, that storytelling might look a little different than on the consumer side, but its core is the same and its necessity doesn’t change.
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Evaluating the narrative
Many companies think they have a narrative, but in reality, it’s just a bunch of marketing buzzwords strung together. It doesn’t excite or inspire. It doesn’t really mean anything.
A strong narrative creates clarity and consistency, helping people quickly understand what the company does and why it matters.
How do you know it works? A strong signal is when customers, employees and industry pundits start using the same language to describe the business. Another indicator of storytelling success is seeing the key messages in articles.
However, a few patterns emerge when you examine companies’ struggles with their narrative, which can exist even if they have strong products or growth. One pattern I’ve seen is that success can mask confusion.
Companies with strong product traction or rapid growth assume the story is self-evident, so they never articulate it clearly. Internally, teams understand the value, but externally, the message fragments across marketing, sales, PR and leadership.
Another is overly focusing on features instead of why those features matter. Some companies chase every proof point at once, leading to crowded positioning and diluted narratives. The result sounds impressive, but nothing is memorable.
The companies that struggle most are the ones that want to be everything to everyone, even when the product is clearly differentiated.
Striking the right chord
A strong narrative stakes out one or two clear ideas, articulated in plain language and builds momentum through consistency over time and across channels. Companies often assume they need a new story for every audience or moment. But sticking to a small number of ideas and reinforcing them until they’re understood and trusted is the better option. When storytelling works, it feels like the truth. The most effective narratives are the simplest.
When entering a new market or category, it’s crucial to create a narrative that carves out strategic separation. Mapping narrative white space starts with listening. I look closely at how incumbents, analysts, customers and creators are already talking about the category. White space usually shows up in the gaps between what companies claim and what audiences experience.
The goal is to find a point of difference that no one else in the market owns yet. That means pressure-testing the narrative against reality: product truth, customer proof and the company’s ability to sustain the position over time. Over-positioning happens when companies try to occupy too much territory at once. White space is about saying the right thing at the right time.
Ensuring a narrative resonates inside the organization is essential before it gets pushed out to external audiences. It begins with looking for coherence. If people across functions like product, sales and comms leadership can explain the narrative in their own words and land on the same core ideas, that’s a strong signal it’s taking hold.
Look for disconnects. The questions, pushback and moments of discomfort are often more revealing than agreement. If the narrative sparks productive debate but still feels directionally clear, it’s usually ready to be pressure-tested externally.
Here’s a real-world example. A company I worked with was being covered as a niche tool, despite having platform-level adoption. The product was strong and revenue was growing, but the narrative anchored the company to what it did, not what it enabled.
Customers were buying it to solve a broader operational problem, not for the features. Once the company reframed its narrative around the customer pain point and backed it up with customer behavior and use cases, it moved from “nice-to-have software” to “a critical platform.”
That change unlocked a new audience (buyers with budget authority), reframed analyst coverage and gave investors a clearer lens on scale. The narrative clarified the category and the company’s leadership position.
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Building the founder/executive story
The CEO, founder(s) and other executives play a key role in not just shaping a narrative but “selling” it. The insights that travel best are the ones that create clarity across contexts. Founder and executive perspectives work when they articulate a clear point of view about the market, why it’s changing, what the challenges are and what matters now. Explaining how the world is shifting translates easily across media, sales conversations and investor discussions.
But beware: insights that are either too abstract or too self-promotional tend to fall flat. Audiences across media, sales and investor relations are looking for perspective, not overly promotion self-aggrandizing. When executives focus on earning trust through specificity and authenticity, their insights tend to resonate much more.
Honing your story
In a crowded market, the most memorable companies win. As storytelling regains strategic importance in 2026, business leaders must treat narrative development with the same rigor as product, GTM and operational planning.
Use the above information as a practical framework for crafting an executive narrative that earns trust, aligns teams and positions the company for long-term differentiation.
Key Takeaways
- A strong narrative clarifies why you matter, not just what you build.
- If everyone can’t explain your story simply, you don’t actually have one.
Think about the consumer brands that stand out to you the most. Is it their “ability to execute on strategic goals” or their “proficient use of the most effective tools to deliver on absolute efficiency” that makes them memorable?
Probably not. What you do think of is their story. Think the Apple origin story: three guys coming together in their Silicon Valley garage. Or two childhood friends in Vermont with a dream of opening an ice cream parlor. It’s Patagonia’s mission of environmental sustainability.



