Every message you send is a hero waiting to be cast. Every decision you need is a call to adventure. This is where communication stops informing and starts moving people.
Eight quick questions to find the archetype your stories naturally gravitate toward — and the real-world figure who tells them best.
If people understand your message, that's good.
If they act on it, that's storytelling.
The Hero's Journey isn't a literary trick. It's the oldest user interface in human history — and it's hiding inside every message you're already trying to send.
Shift participants from seeing communication as information to seeing it as impact. Don't explain it — let them feel it.
A professional actor delivers the same message twice, back-to-back.
Five short snippets, framed like thumbnails on a streaming menu. Participants choose what pulls them in.
Extract the pattern together: a person, a situation, a tension, a shift.
"Most workplace communication already has all of this. It's just buried under information."A simple, repeatable structure — then a live transformation that proves it works.
The whole framework in three lines:
Start with a flat corporate line: "Level crossing removal reduces average delay times by 2 minutes." Then rewrite it — with a human, with stakes, with a consequence that lands.
The same message, performed three ways:
Positioned plainly: "AI helps you sharpen the story. It doesn't replace your thinking."
Move from understanding to behaviour. By the end, each participant has a story they've told out loud — and been heard.
Each participant picks a real message they need to deliver soon — a change initiative, a project update, a safety moment — and shapes it into 60–90 seconds using the three-act structure (with AI as an optional co-pilot).
Small, fast, generous loops:
One question lands the room: "What will you do differently tomorrow?"
Everyone leaves with a digital story kit — template, examples, AI prompts, and a quick-reference checklist to keep the practice alive.