Lawyer bios don’t do that.
Attorney biographies are a forest of bullet points,
citations, and facts and figures- almost indecipherable from one another. But
as any good trial lawyer will tell you: Facts don’t persuade, people do. And
people are stories.
An experiment by psychologist Paul Slovic of the
University of Oregon demonstrated the motivational power of stories over facts.
In his experiment, he asked people for donations after giving them $5 to
participate in his study. To one group he showed a photo of Rokia from Malawi,
an emaciated child with pleading, wet, fly infested eyes. The photo was
accompanied by a description of the child’s life and the difficulty to survive
in such harsh conditions. The second group was shown statistics about the
famine in Malawi, including the fact that more than three million malnourished
children were affected and the rate of death per thousand children each year.
The first group gave, on average, $2.83 to the charity. The second group gave, on average, $1.40.
How can that be? Fifty percent less! Shouldn’t people be
moved to give more knowing the extent of the disaster?
We don’t function that way. Our brains don’t respond to
facts the way they respond to stories. The media knows this, charities know
this and ministers know this. Move people with stories. Cause facts won’t do
it.
Since the first campfires in caves, we have passed our most
important information from generation to generation through the telling of
stories. Somehow our brains are wired to comprehend and remember stories better
than facts. Maybe it’s because facts and figures just don’t intrigue us. They
leave nothing to our imaginations. They are two dimensional. Facts don’t engage
or heighten our curiosity or leave us wanting more. But stories do.
This is the power of relating to people through stories. And
lawyers, outside of the courtroom, must do a better job of it if they are to
catch up with the rest of the world in the effectiveness of their business
development and client relations activities.
Our opportunity to engage and inspire is in just about every
communication we put out, from bios, website content and presentations to cocktail
party banter, email exchanges and practice group meetings. We have an
opportunity to make an indelible impression. If we can just say ‘no’ to the
comfortably ingrained habit of facts and begin to relate to others with
authentic stories about who we are.
If I can help you tell better stories, give Eric a call at 502-693-4731. You'll find that I am an eager resource and that it costs nothing to talk.
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