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Innovation Storytelling: Bridge Divides and Win Support for Your Breakthrough Ideas

April 30, 2026
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The guest for our April 2026 members’ meeting was Susan Lindner, the host of the podcast Innovation Storyteller, and a keynote speaker and trainer focused on storytelling skills.

Here are five tips she shared during this meeting with InnoLead members.

1. Make your audience the hero — not your innovation

What to do: Reframe your pitch so the listener is the protagonist, not your product.

  • Instead of: “Here’s our new tool…”
  • Try: “Here’s how you become the person who solves this problem / wins / looks great…”

2. Lead with context before content

What to do: Start by acknowledging what’s happening in your audience’s world right now before introducing your idea.

  • What pressures are they under?
  • What changes (layoffs, AI, strategy shifts) are influencing their mindset?

3. Define the “shift” before you pitch the solution

What to do: Get agreement that a meaningful change is happening — before you introduce your idea.

  • Macro shift: industry change (AI, regulation, competitors)
  • Micro shift: internal change (strategy, leadership, performance issues)

4. Use “pain, gain, and hidden cost” to shape your story

What to do: Go beyond benefits—explicitly address three things:

  1. Pain: What frustrations does your audience feel?
  2. Gain: What do they personally want (promotion, time savings, less stress)?
  3. Hidden cost: What do they lose by saying yes (time, expertise, comfort)?

5. Start with a vivid “imagine” moment…not a data dump

What to do: Open with a concrete, relatable scenario that helps people see the future.

Lindner’s example from the meeting: Instead of leading with technical specs, a team opened with: “Imagine… you get into your self-driving car and use your windshield as a screen…” This shifts people out of analytical mode and into imagination—making them receptive before diving into the details.

(Featured image by Emil Widlund on Unsplash.)

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