Hi, friend.
What's the value of storytelling in marketing? Let's dive in...
Jason Miller is a marketing strategist who has worked for lots of name-brand companies (LinkedIn, Microsoft, Marketo). He's also a concert photographer—the kind who travels with his gear and is always up for a live
show.
Whenever I see Jason at a marketing event, he talks about his plans that night to go see whatever band happens to be in town. Usually a metal band at a venue I don't know but feel like I should.
Jason always tells me about the band as if I'm as cool as he is, getting extra animated and referring to them by their first names—the "them" being band members. (Or do they call them players? Or are they all musicians even if they don't play an instrument? I don't even know. This is who Jason is dealing
with.)
Still, he tries so hard to get me on board. "You know Stig," he'll say. "Visionary bassist? Two-stringed bass?"Â
I nod as if I know. I do not know.
"Wanna come?" he'll ask. "They're going on at 11."
Eleven. I always say no, thanks. Because anything after 9 requires a permission slip from that part of me that needs to be in the hotel bed watching Love It or List It by 9 PM.
* * *
Late in 2019, Jason goes to a show at a small venue in
London, where he lives. The headliner is Sinead O'Connor, the legendary Irish-born singer-songwriter who, as you probably know, rose to fame in the 1980s. What really put her on the map was her 1990 cover of Prince's song Nothing Compares 2 U.
In the years before the 2019 show, Sinead had faded from public view. She was still making music, but she'd quit performing live. She also struggled with mental health issues—struggles she shared openly.
But here in London, she's rebooting her career.
She has new management. She has two new records planned for 2020 release. And Jason goes to photograph one of Sinead's first times on stage since 2014.
On December 18, 2019, he posts this photo on Instagram:
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