How Charles Dickens Became the Accidental Content Marketer for Christmas

How Charles Dickens Became the Accidental Content Marketer for Christmas
Charles Dickens Became the Accidental Content Marketer for Christmas

I saw that the movie The Man Who Invented Christmas is on Hulu. That reminded me of some important content marketing lessons that I wrote about on one of my other websites back in 2017.

I think the lessons are still really important, so I want to share them with you here…

How Dickens Accidentally Helped Make Christmas Popular

Today, I want to show you how Dickens helped to make popular one of the most beloved holidays in the United States: Christmas.

And I want to show you how he did this by unintentionally taping into the power of content marketing.

In fact, as you’re about to discover, he wasn’t really intending to promote Christmas, but something else much nearer and dearer to his heart.

Today, I want to tell you how he did this. In the process, I want to reveal some important content marketing lessons that we can learn from Dickens.

And it all starts with a movie that I didn’t plan on watching.

(In case you’re worried, there are no real “spoilers” about the movie in this post!)

the man who invented christmas
Movie – The Man Who Invented Christmas

The Great Movie We Didn’t Plan on Seeing

It was the day before Thanksgiving and all through the house… Oh, wait. Wrong story. (Sorry! I couldn’t resist.)

But it really was the day before Thanksgiving. My wife and I, and our three sons, were all getting ready to see Thor Ragnarok.

My sons and I had already seen it, but we wanted to take my wife to see it, because we thought she would love it. (She loves to laugh. We love to hear her laugh.)

But we made a fatal error.

We didn’t think we had to show up that early to a 3:30 pm showing of the movie because it was the day before Thanksgiving, the movie had been out for a while, and we thought many people would still be working.

We were wrong.

When we got there, 10 minutes or so before it started, we found out that the only seats that were left were in the front row. We didn’t want to do that, so we asked them what other movies were playing soon.

They told us two movies would be playing in about 30 minutes. The movies were Murder on the Orient Express and The Man Who Invented Christmas.

Both of the movies were ones we had thought about watching at some point — before we were forced to make this choice —so we thought for a second and decided that we wanted to see a more light-hearted movie.

So, we chose The Man Who Invented Christmas.

The Man Who Invented Christmas – Official Trailer

I had seen the trailer, and I thought it could be good. But I wasn’t sure if it would be cheesy.

Well, it wasn’t cheesy at all!

In fact, I really loved the movie.

I thought that the screenwriter (Susan Coyne) and director (Bharat Nalluridid a REALLY great job at presenting a story that we all know in a new, entertaining, and very emotionally powerful way.

But it was what the movie revealed about how Dickens inspired the holiday of Christmas, as we know it today, that gave me the inspiration for this post.

Let me explain…

How Charles Dickens Unintentionally Harnessed the Power of Content Marketing to Make Christmas Popular 

Charles Dickens A Christmas Carol Title page First edition 1843
Image of Dickens’ original “A Christmas Carol” book via Wikipedia

Preface to the Original Edition
A Christmas Carol

I have endeavoured in this Ghostly little book, to raise the Ghost of an Idea, which shall not put my readers out of humour with themselves, with each other, with the season, or with me. May it haunt their houses pleasantly, and no one wish to lay it.

Their faithful Friend and Servant,
C. D.
December, 1843.

After watching the movie and researching Charles Dickens, I discovered that the way that we think about and celebrate Christmas is NOT the way it was in Dickens’ day.

In Dickens’ era, Christmas was not the popular holiday it is today.

Christmas was a second-class holiday in many peoples’ minds. Easter and Boxing Day were much more popular in that day and age.

It had been popular up until the late 1700s, back when people actually took 12 days to celebrate it. (Remind you of a certain song?)

By Dickens’ time, all of the old traditions and ceremonies had faded away.

It wasn’t a joyful time of the year. There were no decorations, carols, etc. People weren’t walking around with a sense of “the Christmas spirit.”

But Dickens loved Christmas. He had an affection and nostalgia for it. 

Why? Because when Charles was young, his father used to celebrate it, in the old ways that people used to, with Charles and his siblings.

Still, his purpose for writing the book wasn’t really to make Christmas popular. 

He had a much more basic and urgent need on his mind.

The Great Charles Dickens… Broke?

Oliver Twist
Original copy of Dickens’ “Oliver Twist”

Charles needed money! 

He had written several flops after the huge success of Oliver Twist.

He had many large expenses, a fifth child on the way, and his payment checks from his publisher were lagging. (Things haven’t changed much, have they? 🙂  )

So he NEEDED to write another book and it had to be a good one. His family’s survival depended on it. But the inspiration for the book wasn’t to make Christmas popular. 

He had a much more personal interest that he wanted to encourage/promote.

You see, he had gone to Manchester to deliver a speech in support of adult education for manufacturing workers there.

And when he saw the poor conditions of the children at the Field Lane Ragged School (a school for the poor), he remembered his own difficult childhood.

These events inspired him to go back home and write a story set during the Christmas season. A story about a struggling lower class family and a rich man who has a change of heart.

You see? His main goal – besides making money so his family wouldn’t be in the poorhouse themselves – was to have his readers walk away with a different view of and concern for the poor.

And he hoped that setting the story during Christmas would inspire his readers to become like the renewed and changed Scrooge at the end of the story.

(The way the movie portrays the process of coming up with this story is great!)

The Amazing Reception for “A Christmas Carol”

charles dickens s a christmas carol laden with christmas toys
Scrooge passing out toys

The public’s reaction to the book was unbelievable!

The book was released during the Christmas season of 1843 and it became an instant bestseller in England and eventually in the U.S. as well.

Charles Dickens would go on to gain so much fame from A Christmas Carol that he was like “The Beatles” of his day.

Now, I am NOT saying that his book is the only reason that Christmas became so popular and adored. There were other factors too.

But Dickens had such an influence on Christmas and was so connected to the holiday that when he died in 1870, it is said that when a young girl heard of his death she asked her mother…

“Mr. Dickens dead? Then will Father Christmas die too?”

CONTENT MARKETING LESSON #1:

Stories, the Secret Weapon of Powerful Content Marketing

Think about it.

If Dickens had just written a book about the plight of the poor in England and the need to care for them, the book would’ve never become a bestseller and the well-known work it is today.

But instead of just writing directly about the need to care for the poor, he wrapped the idea behind the veil of a powerful, relatable story.

Don’t miss the importance of this fact. In a great book called Winning the Story Wars by Jonah Sachs, he gives an interesting perspective about how stories have the power to persuade…

Winning the Story Wars
Winning the Story Wars by Jonah Sachs – the power of stories to influence people

Stories are a particular type of human communication designed to persuade an audience of a storyteller’s worldview. 

“The storyteller does this by placing characters, real or fictional, onto a stage and showing what happens to these characters over a period of time.

“Each character pursues some type of goal in accordance with his or her values, facing difficulty along the way and either succeeds or fails according to the storyteller’s view of how the world works.

As I said in a previous post (Content Marketers: This is Your Brain on Stories),…

Your brain enters and experiences stories! Your brain can ignore dry facts. It passively takes in data and stats. But when you tell a story (if you tell it well), then the brain wakes up and plays along!”

In other words, when you speak to people’s intellect you make them think. But when you speak to their heart, you inspire them to act!

Because Dickens wrapped his ideas up in stories, they not only changed peoples’ minds about the poor, they also changed their attitudes and hearts about the poor.

This caused them to see that Christmas (the time of the year when the book was released) was the best time to DO something about their new feelings and concerns for the poor!

A Strange Example from My Own Life

Action Comics 1 first appearance of superman

Recently, I watched a documentary about writer Jerry Siegel and artist Joe Shuster, the actual creators of Superman.

It told the story of their struggle to gain back their rights (and income) to the character they created for DC comics.

It was so heart-wrenching to see these guys try to get just a small piece of the financial rewards for their character, while they lived an almost penniless existence.

In the end, it was so rewarding to see that decades later they were awarded by Warner Bros. (the then owner of Superman) a significant amount of money to be paid to them annually until their deaths.

What does this have to do with the way that stories and feelings inspire us to act? Nothing at this point in my story.

It’s what happened next that shows the impact of this story in a very strange way.

After I watched the documentary, I went online to look something up. As I did, I ended up being led to Wikipedia and I found this message…

Wikipedia Donation Request

In case you can’t read it from this image, it says…

TITLE: We ask you, humbly, to help.

Hi reader in the U.S., it seems you use Wikipedia a lot. This Friday we ask you to protect Wikipedia’s independence. It’s December 1, we haven’t hit our goal, and time is running out in 2017 to help us. We depend on donations averaging $15, but fewer than 1% of readers give. If you donate just $3, the price of your Friday coffee, you would help keep Wikipedia thriving for years. Please take a minute to keep Wikipedia growing. Thank you. — Jimmy Wales, Wikipedia Founder

I’ve never given to Wikipedia before.

In fact, I have never even wanted to give to them before.

But after seeing the story of those two creators not getting the money due them, I saw a similarity in Jimmy Wales’s request.

I have gotten a lot of benefit from Wikipedia over the years, but Jimmy never got anything from me in return.

The story of Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster had impacted my emotions and so I decided to give.

And I decided to not just give $3. I decided to give $15. The amount isn’t an impressive amount. I only mention it because it was the higher amount they were asking for, not the minimum they were asking for.

Why did I do that? That’s how much of an emotional impact the story of the creators of Superman had on me!

It had so much impact that I gave to someone else who also seemed to be in a similar place. Because I didn’t want to be like DC Comics acted back in the day.

Did you catch that?

Their story had bled into the reality of my OWN life! I felt I was acting like DC Comics formerly acted. That made me want to change my ways.

Do you get it now? THAT’S what Charles Dickens’ story did.

People didn’t want to be like Scrooge (before his transformation), so they responded in the real world to the poor (and each other) with care and compassion.

It didn’t just change their attitudes about the poor. It changed their attitudes about Christmas… and it is still impacting people’s hearts today.

That’s the power that stories have!

Too many content marketers focus too much on getting the facts across and forget to share stories that will make those facts have more impact!

The Types of Stories You Can Use in Your Content Marketing

typewriter stories
Image Credit: Pixabay.com

There are many different types of stories that you can use in your content marketing

  • Stories from others (like this one)
  • Personal stories from your own life or from individuals within the company you are creating content for (like my Superman story)
  • Your business’s origin story
  • Customer stories
  • Case studies

Just make sure that when you tell these stories that you make sure to do it like a storyteller would and not like an analyst would (no offense to analysts!).

CONTENT MARKETING LESSON #2:

Form Impacts and Increases Function

There is one last thing I learned AFTER watching this film. And this lesson has nothing to do with Charles Dickens himself or even his story “A Christmas Carol.”

It has everything to do with the movie – the story about him.

You see, it wasn’t until I started researching all of this that I discovered that the movie was based on a book of a similar name. The book is called The Man Who Invented Christmas: How Charles Dickens’s A Christmas Carol Rescued His Career and Revived Our Holiday Spirits.

The book came out in 2011, but I have never heard of it!

The Man Who Invented Christmas How Charles Dickenss A Christmas Carol Rescued His Career and Revived Our Holiday Spirits

What is the lesson that content marketers can learn from this? 

It’s simple.

Never imprison your content in only one format! When you do, you limit its audience and impact.

That means that you need to remember to repurpose your content so that you can extend its reach and the reactions it causes in people.

A book reaches a smaller amount of people than a movie does. Not only that, but the impact of reading a story is different from seeing it acted out before you.

When they took the story from the book and transformed it into a movie, it changed its influence.

The wisest and most successful content marketers have always understood something. They know that each form of content has a different level of impact reaches a different audience, and even has a different perceived value to each audience.

If you want an example, think of how people value movies over books. You can see this difference in value when you look at the typical box office earnings of a blockbuster movie and compare that to the earnings of a typical best selling book. The movie makes much more money because more people value movies than books.

In case you’re worried, your new format won’t take away the value or impact of the old format. The truth is that new formats can actually impact the original format in very positive ways. Let me show you what I mean…

When I looked up the book on Amazon a few weeks ago, I saw that it had a pretty good ranking…

Man Who Invented Christmas Book on Amazon

Do you understand what that means? It means that the story of Dickens’ impact on Christmas, in the form of a movie, has positively impacted the sales of the book!

(I know this personally because I went ahead and put the book on my Amazon Wishlist.)

That’s why you must free your content from the limits of only residing in one content form! When you do this you will see amazing new results through your new form of the content and your original form.

I don’t think that Charles Dickens ever meant to change how people thought of and celebrated Christmas during his day.

And he could never imagine influencing people 174 years later who lived on another continent!

But that is the power of content marketing that’s infused with stories or veiled in a larger story. It can have a huge impact, even when used unintentionally.

If that true when it’s used unintentionally, then just think of the impact it can have when you use the combination of content marketing and stories intentionally!

Read the Rest of This Series

After posting this, I finally began to read the book I mentioned in this article. That lead me to build a whole traffic building series off of what I read in chapter one.

You can read the other articles here:

SOURCES: CharlesDickensPage.comIndependent.co.uk, and Time.com 

P.S. If you haven’t downloaded my free guide, The Content Marketer’s Ultimate Guide to Creating Content That Captures the Short Attention Spans of Today’s Readers, you should do that right now. It reveals how you can use a literary technique that Dickens used to become famous, then you go do that by clicking here.

Red Content Marketers Ultimate Guide to Grab Attention 768x1226 1

This is Your Brain on Stories: What Happens to Your Prospect’s Brain When You Tell Stories

THIS IS YOUR BRAIN ON STORIES
THIS IS YOUR BRAIN ON STORIES

I hope you enjoyed my post last Friday called Direct Marketers Go Where Branders Fear to Tread- My Interview With “the World’s Greatest Copywriting Coach” (Video).

If you haven’t seen it yet, then make sure to check it out after you read this one.

The following post is from my website RecessionSolution.com. It originally appeared on October 25, 2016, but I feel it’s important to share it again here on my new site.

WHY? Because whether you’re a content marketer or a direct response marketer, you need to understand the power of stories to amplify any/all of our marketing efforts.

This post reveals the behind-the-scenes, neurological secret that reveals just why stories are so powerful.

This Is Your Brain on Stories

“The brain is a wonderful organ. It starts working the moment you get up in the morning, and does not stop until you get into the office.”

– Robert Frost
Brain Image Listening to Stories

(The image above shows activity in the brain when hearing stories http://gallantlab.org/huth2016/)

I’ve talked before about the reason why stories are so needed and so powerful when they are used in content marketing.

So I KNEW, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that stories were powerful. I’ve seen the effect that they have on people!

But it wasn’t until I was listening to an episode of the “Freakonomics” the other day, that I knew the reason why this is true based on Neuroscience. 

In other words, I suddenly understood what stories do inside our brains which, in turn, gave me the neurological reason why stories are so powerful.

Let me explain…

I was listening to a “Freakonomics” episode called This Is Your Brain on Podcasts yesterday and Stephen J. Dubner was interviewing a guy named Jack Gallant

I found out that Jack Gallant is a professor at UC Berkeley who does research focused on Cognitive Neuroscience and Behavioral and Systems Neuroscience.

And it was during one of his research projects that he discovered what stories actually cause to happen within our brains.

The Study They Didn’t Have to Pay People to Be a Part Of

Gallantand his team decided to test people while they listened to The Moth Radio Hour. They chose this because normally laying in an MRI scanner is very boring because they just flash words at the person inside the machine.

This is not the way to get brain activity going! 🙂

But the stories they share on The Moth are much different than flashcards. The stories are very engaging and compelling. In other words, people can’t NOT pay attention to these stories!

In fact, people loved the stories so much that Gallant said that they didn’t even have to pay the test subjects like they usually do. It was the perfect way to test how the brain responds to stories.

The people in the MRI scanners listened to a couple hours of stories. As they did, Gallant and his team measured their brain activity by measuring the changes in blood flow and blood oxygen in different locations across the brain.

As they measured these things, Gallant and his team tried to figure out what information in the stories was creating the activity at the different locations in the brain.

And that’s when Gallant and his team found something they weren’t expecting.

Stories Light Up the Brain

Gallant said that stories didn’t really activate the normal auditory part of the cortex like they expected them to. Instead, stories activated a larger constellation of areas in the brain – areas that represent different aspects of meaning.

Listen to what Gallant says about it in his own words…

“…the one very surprising thing from this study is that semantic information, the meaning of the stories, is represented broadly across much of the brain. All of those various areas of the brain represent different aspects of semantic information, in these really complicated maps that are very, very rich but fairly consistent across different individuals.”

Jack Gallant, Interviewed on Freakonomics episode This Is Your Brain on Podcasts 

Why do stories do this? Read on and I’ll explain…

My Take on Why the Brain “Light Ups” on Stories

My “take” on what Gallant said about why our brains light up is this….

When we are hearing or listening to a story, our brain isn’t just listening to dry information:

  • It’s engaging with the stories.
  • It’s trying to comprehend what’s happening in the story.
  • It’s analyzing and calculating any numerical details in the story.
  • It’s connecting the details of the story with its past experience and knowledge.
  • It’s trying to anticipate what will happen next.
  • It’s seeing what you’re describing.
  • It’s feeling the emotions involved in the story

I’d say it simply like this: Your brain enters and experiences stories!

I’d say it simply like this: Your brain enters and experiences stories! Click To Tweet

Your brain can ignore dry facts. It passively takes in data and stats. But when you tell a story (if you tell it well), then the brain wakes up and plays along!

This is why stories are so powerful.
This is why you MUST use them in your content marketing.

How to Tell More Engaging Stories

If you want to learn more about how to tell stories that light up the mind, then check out my previous posts below: 

3 Ways to Tap Into the Most Powerful Content Tool Ever Created – ContentMarketingInstitute.com

Have You Been Using the Most Powerful Content Marketing Tool Incorrectly? – MarketingInsiderGroup.com)

2 Days Left to Get a Free Copy of My Book

For a limited time, those who join in the month of April will get a FREE COPY of my book 51 Content Marketing Hacks.

(It’s a book FILLED with stories. You will not only discovered powerful examples of content marketing from throughout history, you’ll also see how I use stories to draw people in.)

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