I like marketing, but I’m in love with storytelling. I think we all are, which is why the intersection of the two fascinates me. And right now there’s an interesting trend, especially in book publishing, to fuse technology with narrative. Some people call it “transmedia”. It’s a term that will be short-lived, but the concept is one that every storyteller should be thinking about and tinkering with because it opens the world of possibility to us.
What is Transmedia Storytelling?
Transmedia is basically weaving a narrative through multiple forms of media where each piece individually contributes to the overall story in a different way. Done well, it frees the participant from the restrictions of one POV. It lets them engage the story from many angles.
Many people think the idea of transmedia is new, but it isn’t. As far as anyone can tell, the word first showed up in 1991 in a book by Marsha Kinder called Playing with Power in Movies, Television, and Video Games: From Muppet Babies to Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. If you want to read about that, Wikipedia has a short, but good, entry about her and transmedia.
Transmedia is about blurring lines.
The best stories are those that fade the line separating the world of ImagineNation and our own. They make us believe that fiction doesn’t always mean untrue. At the least, their use of smoke and mirrors thrills and fascinates us. Transmedia stories that work well either invade our world or pull us into another. They blur lines.
Transmedia is about doors and windows.
You’re able to enter and exit them in many places. Sometimes they begin in the pages of a book and lead you to a website. Sometimes they begin with a video or a QR code on a mysterious poster hanging in the city. How a storyteller can engage her audience is limited only by her imagination and access to the right tools and media to reel people in.
Transmedia is about the rabbit hole experience.
Alice didn’t get what she expected down the rabbit hole. Neither did Neo. But both journeys were unforgettable. Transmedia storytelling, when done well, is about that: the experience. It’s not about marketing (not really) or selling something. It’s about immersion into the story itself. This is the one area where most brands will miss it, but one that I hope you and I don’t screw up. The story is first. Do it well, thrill them, and the audience will come back. Let’s use all the tools available, but keep the story first.
Right now, if you want you can call that transmedia storytelling. But soon it will simply be storytelling, period.
Have you encountered any stories that you’d define as “transmedia” experiences?