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3 Mistakes Most Storytellers Make (and How to Avoid Them)

  • Jan 20
  • 2 min read
Common mistakes of Storytellers

Storytelling is exciting. And intimidating!  


You want to entertain, connect with your audience, and communicate your message clearly. But most storytellers fall into the same avoidable traps that weaken their story and dilute their message.


The good news? These mistakes are easy to fix!


Here are the three most common mistakes most storytellers make, and how to avoid them so your stories are locked in.


1. Trying to Tell Every Detail

Trying to tell every detail

Most storytellers seem to feel the need to share every single part of the story...  what happened, when it happened, who was involved, what the room looked like, what they were wearing… all at once.


Too many details overwhelm the audience and bury your message!


Ask yourself:

  • Does this detail add to the story?

  • Does it add emotional depth?

  • Does it support my “message”?


If not, cut it. Clear storytelling beats complicated storytelling every time.



2. Forgetting the Message

Forgetting the message

A story without a message is just an anecdote, interesting, maybe… but not impactful. Most storytellers share what happened but fail to connect it to why it matters.


Before sharing a story, I ask:

  • What is the lesson I want them to walk away with?

  • How might this moment have changed me?

  • Why should my audience care?


When you lead with a message, your story becomes meaningful AND memorable.



3. Rushing Through the Story

Rushing through the story

Nerves make most storytellers talk fast, skip emotional beats, or rush past the most important part just to “get it over with.”




But powerful storytelling requires presence, not speed:

  • Pause intentionally

  • Slow down during key moments

  • Let the audience sit with the emotion

  • Breathe and own your story

  • Use silence as a storytelling tool


A well-paced story gives your audience time to experience the moment with you.


Final Thought

Every great storyteller was once a beginner. Mistakes aren’t signs of failure, they’re stepping stones to mastery. With clarity, intention, and practice, your stories can become powerful tools for influence, connection, and transformation.


Want to go deeper into using stories for impact? 

Read the next guide: Storytelling in Coaching: 10 Transformational Questions That Spark Breakthroughs.



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