Leading with Narrative: Crafting Your Company’s Future Through the Power of Story
For a business leader looking to make an impact on the market in 2025 and beyond, a compelling vision is a must…but it’s not nearly enough. To truly unite a company behind that vision—to make it sing in tune for a large and disparate group of people—a leader must first be a great storyteller.
This means more than being sharp with an anecdote or good on the microphone at the next company gathering. It means having the ability to recognize the narrative threads that situate a company within a broader narrative of industry and time, and then to use that vision to write a new and better story—one that guides individuals and markets alike.
So how can you develop this sort of true storytelling ability, and put it to work for your company in 2025?
Narrative Intelligence
Recently, Everhouse’s own John Severance was able to sit down with Harris III, master illusionist and curator of the Annual STORY Conference, wherein brand leaders and creatives from across industries gather to explore the importance of story to the human world and heart (you check out their full conversation here).
According to Harris, story and narrative themselves make up the actual “operating system of the human mind,” the inescapable framework through which we view every aspect of the world around us—and within us. Our thoughts, our motivations, the approach we take to our lives and work—all of these are influenced, consciously or not, by the stories we’re told by ourselves and others. They are, quite literally, how we understand meaning itself. “Every problem we face starts as a story problem,” Harris explained. “Which means every solution to every problem we face begins with a new story.”

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This isn’t some sort of touchy-feely sentiment; it’s nuts-and-bolts psychology. Throughout history, all the truly great business leaders have recognized this, and shared a keen sense of Narrative Intelligence—the wisdom to see beyond the surface level facts, figures, and raw data that so often get posited as the most important information in a given industry, and to sense the real and powerful current of narrative that flows constantly beneath, influencing everything and everyone above—including themselves. Narrative Intelligence is much more than just some romanticized, Walter Mitty-esque tendency to see yourself as the star of your own private, epic saga. On the contrary, it’s simply a recognition of a defining human reality—that story itself is always at work, all around us.
It’s a sort of story-centric “second sight”—and if you, as a leader, want to do more than simply preside over things as the current sweeps you along through the future business landscape, it’s a sight you need to develop.
Narrative Agency
But understanding the story around you is only half the battle. The second (and just as important) step comes with actually doing something about it. Like Narrative Intelligence, Narrative Agency is a key trait that the truly great business leaders have possessed in spades, and it all begins with courage—the courage to recognize the flaws, gaps, and opportunities inherent in the story currently being told, then seizing on them to tell a new one.
Take Phil Knight, and his “everyone is an athlete” story that compelled the average Joe to get just as interested in a pair of fresh running kicks as the elite athletes he watched on TV. More than working as a simple marketing slogan, it carved out an entirely new market segment which his company was perfectly ready and situated to serve. He told the world a new story about the possibilities of physical fitness for the average person, and changed sportswear history in the process.
Stories, when properly and courageously told by those who understand and believe in them wholeheartedly, do more than influence people—they craft and narrate the future, moving entire markets in the process.
That said, not just any halfhearted and hollow attempt at “once upon a time” is going to work.
People, by and large, are remarkably discerning—always looking for something compelling and true to throw their efforts behind. Lead with pretty-sounding catchphrases and vague platitudes, and they’ll land on justifiably deaf ears. But invite people into a narrative driven by creative thinking and imagination—one that points your values, services, and goals in a clear direction toward a worthwhile destination—and you’ll see engagement like never before.
Less Analysis, More Authorship
That said, your job isn’t done when the big talk is given, or when the new company narrative documents are finalized. On the contrary: once the truly compelling story of your brand is written, you become the keeper of that story—there to recognize when new developments, communications and products diverge from the narrative, and there to bring them back into line.
“The story that the leader tells is what people key off of,” Harris explained. “But it’s got to align with everything else—the culture, the behaviors, the environment.”
Your story can’t be something that gets polished up and tucked away in a file somewhere to be forgotten. It has to be a living, breathing ethos, one that impacts and transforms at every level.
With time, consistency, and belief in the story you’re telling, you’ll find yourself gaining new investment and deeper understanding from those around you—you’ll become a unified force, operating in a common how toward a common why. Ultimately, this stage is the end goal of any great executive storyteller—to create storytellers at every level of the company, capable of going out into the world to make connections for your brand.
Harris III explained it this way:
“Story’s greatest power is not in its ability to convert, it’s in its ability to connect.”