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David Mann is an expert storyteller. He helps companies identify who their customer is and how to communicate with that customer. So many businesses make the mistake of making their marketing and sales pitch about themselves. David proves that a potential client wants to know how you can help them and advance their business.
We talk about how to craft your company’s story so that you have a clear vision of the company’s future. If you don’t know how you help the client, how can you help them? This approach also helps with potential exit strategies and finding strategic partners who will carry the business into its new phase without you.
David’s technique sounds simple but it is a complex way of thinking that leads to some heavy conversations. If you are struggling to find your audience, David Mann can offer some clarity.
Bottom line, figure out what your customer wants. Once you know what they want, you can meet that need and create a story that will show them that is what you do. If you understand their problem, you can be the solution to that problem. When you decide to exit your business, the problem will help you identify the right buyer for your company and offer a new era of success for the business after you are gone.
GEXP Collaborative
David Mann brings his unique array of talents to every engagement. He’s a playwright, an actor, and a director. He has taught performance skills for 25 years. And for the past decade, he has made professionals across the nation more successful by sharing performance secrets with them.
David has spoken at events for many Fortune 500 companies, he has conducted training seminars for corporations nationwide, and he has helped lawyers win millions for their clients – all by using principles he learned as an actor, director, and playwright. David has directed and performed in plays at such internationally recognized theaters as the Guthrie, the Children’s Theater Company, and the Great River Shakespeare Festival. He is a recipient of the Bush Artist Fellowship for Storytelling, and he currently directs classic plays for theaters in the thriving Twin Cities theater scene.
A former high school te
David Mann is an expert storyteller. He helps companies identify who their customer is and how to communicate with that customer. So many businesses make the mistake of making their marketing and sales pitch about themselves. David proves that a potential client wants to know how you can help them and advance their business.
We talk about how to craft your company’s story so that you have a clear vision of the company’s future. If you don’t know how you help the client, how can you help them? This approach also helps with potential exit strategies and finding strategic partners who will carry the business into its new phase without you.
David’s technique sounds simple but it is a complex way of thinking that leads to some heavy conversations. If you are struggling to find your audience, David Mann can offer some clarity.
Bottom line, figure out what your customer wants. Once you know what they want, you can meet that need and create a story that will show them that is what you do. If you understand their problem, you can be the solution to that problem. When you decide to exit your business, the problem will help you identify the right buyer for your company and offer a new era of success for the business after you are gone.
GEXP Collaborative
David Mann brings his unique array of talents to every engagement. He’s a playwright, an actor, and a director. He has taught performance skills for 25 years. And for the past decade, he has made professionals across the nation more successful by sharing performance secrets with them.
David has spoken at events for many Fortune 500 companies, he has conducted training seminars for corporations nationwide, and he has helped lawyers win millions for their clients – all by using principles he learned as an actor, director, and playwright. David has directed and performed in plays at such internationally recognized theaters as the Guthrie, the Children’s Theater Company, and the Great River Shakespeare Festival. He is a recipient of the Bush Artist Fellowship for Storytelling, and he currently directs classic plays for theaters in the thriving Twin Cities theater scene.
A former high school te