PROJECT 5 — BASIC STORYTELLING
Engaging Through Narrative
Because Facts Inform, But Stories Move People
Introduction
People Forget Information. People Remember Stories.
Throughout human history, stories have shaped civilizations.
Stories built cultures.
Stories carried wisdom.
Stories inspired movements.
Stories preserved memories.
Long before presentations existed.
Long before books existed.
Long before formal education systems existed.
People gathered and shared stories.
Why?
Because stories connect with people naturally.
At The Global Speakers’ Circle, Project 5 introduces one of the most powerful tools in communication:
Storytelling.
Because audiences may forget statistics.
Audiences may forget bullet points.
But audiences rarely forget a meaningful story.
Why Project 5 Exists
Because Information Alone Rarely Creates Connection
Many beginning speakers communicate using facts only.
They explain.
They describe.
They provide information.
But something often feels missing.
The message sounds correct.
Yet it feels emotionally distant.
Why?
Because people connect emotionally before they connect intellectually.
Stories create:
- Curiosity
- Attention
- Emotional connection
- Memory
- Human relatability
Project 5 exists because communication becomes stronger when information becomes human.
Project Title
Basic Storytelling
Engaging Through Narrative
Storytelling is not acting.
Storytelling is not fiction.
Storytelling is not exaggeration.
Storytelling is simply:
Sharing experiences in ways that help people feel, understand, and connect.
Stories help audiences move from listening to imagining.
From imagining to feeling.
From feeling to remembering.
Objective
To Introduce Storytelling into Speaking
The purpose of Project 5 is simple:
To help members introduce storytelling naturally into communication.
Members learn to:
- Share personal experiences
- Organize narratives
- Build emotional connection
- Make speeches relatable
- Create stronger audience engagement
The goal is not dramatic storytelling.
The goal is authentic storytelling.
The Deeper Purpose of This Project
This project is not actually about stories.
It is about human connection.
Because audiences do not connect with perfect speakers.
Audiences connect with real people.
Stories reveal:
- Experiences
- Lessons
- Emotions
- Challenges
- Growth
And when audiences recognize themselves inside a story:
Connection happens.
Focus Area 1
Personal Experiences
The strongest stories often come from ordinary life.
Many members initially believe:
“I do not have interesting stories.”
But storytelling does not require extraordinary events.
Simple experiences can become meaningful:
- A childhood memory
- A mistake
- A success
- A lesson learned
- A difficult moment
- A surprising encounter
Members learn:
- Identify experiences
- Recognize lessons
- Extract meaning
Because meaningful stories often hide inside ordinary life.
Focus Area 2
Simple Narratives
Beginning storytellers often overcomplicate stories.
Too many details.
Too many directions.
Too many unrelated events.
Project 5 introduces a simple storytelling structure:
Beginning
What happened?
Middle
What challenge or experience occurred?
Ending
What changed?
What lesson emerged?
Simple stories create stronger impact.
Because clarity strengthens storytelling.
Focus Area 3
Emotional Connection
Stories become memorable because they create feelings.
People remember:
How stories made them feel.
Not every detail.
Project 5 teaches members how to create:
- Curiosity
- Surprise
- Empathy
- Reflection
- Emotional involvement
Because emotion creates memory.
What Members Will Learn
Upon completing Project 5 members begin understanding:
- How to tell simple stories
- How to organize narratives
- How to create emotional connection
- How to make speeches relatable
- How to engage listeners naturally
- How to communicate through experience
Common Challenges Members Experience
Members commonly struggle with:
- Giving too many details
- Forgetting story sequence
- Rushing important moments
- Missing emotional connection
- Ending stories weakly
Project 5 introduces structure to simplify storytelling.
Because stories become powerful when they become intentional.
Practical Story Framework
Members begin using:
Situation
What happened?
Challenge
What problem appeared?
Action
What did you do?
Result
What happened afterward?
Lesson
What did you learn?
Simple structures create memorable stories.
What Success Looks Like
Success in Project 5 does not mean telling dramatic stories.
Success means:
- People listened
- People connected
- People related
- People remembered
Because storytelling is not performance.
Storytelling is shared humanity.
Expected Outcome
Your Speech Becomes Interesting and Relatable
Upon completion of Project 5:
Members can:
- Share stories naturally
- Create audience engagement
- Organize experiences clearly
- Build emotional connection
- Deliver more memorable speeches
Most importantly:
Members begin hearing:
“That story felt real.”
And real stories create lasting impact.
Project 5 Evaluation Matrix
Structured Feedback for Stronger Storytelling
Project 5 is evaluated not on drama.
It is evaluated on clarity, connection, and audience engagement.
Because storytelling succeeds when people emotionally travel with the speaker.
Project 5 Scoring Areas
| Evaluation Area | What Evaluators Observe | Weightage |
|---|---|---|
| Completion & Participation | Did the member complete the storytelling activity? | 15% |
| Story Structure | Did the story have a beginning, middle, and ending? | 20% |
| Personal Experience Use | Was the story authentic and relatable? | 15% |
| Emotional Connection | Did listeners feel connected? | 15% |
| Narrative Flow | Did the story progress logically? | 10% |
| Audience Engagement | Did listeners remain interested and involved? | 10% |
| Delivery & Presence | Was storytelling delivered comfortably? | 10% |
| Growth Potential | Evidence of effort and storytelling development | 5% |
Total: 100%
Evaluator Feedback Framework
Observe. Appreciate. Recommend.
What Worked Well
Examples:
- Strong personal story
- Good emotional connection
- Clear narrative flow
- Audience engagement remained high
Areas for Improvement
Examples:
- Reduce unnecessary details
- Slow down important moments
- Strengthen ending lesson
- Improve emotional transitions
Recommended Next Action
Examples:
- Write stories from everyday experiences
- Practice storytelling aloud
- Focus on lessons and emotions
- Observe great storytellers regularly
Project 5 Performance Recognition
Story Connector Recognition
Created strong audience connection.
Narrative Builder Recognition
Structured stories effectively.
Relatable Speaker Recognition
Delivered authentic and memorable storytelling.
Final Message
At The Global Speakers’ Circle:
Stories are not decoration.
Stories are communication.
Because people may forget what you said.
But they rarely forget how your story made them feel.
