Donald Miller (author)
Donald "Don" Miller (born August 12, 1971) is an American author, public speaker, and business owner. He is the CEO of StoryBrand, a marketing company. He is also an author of personal essays and reflections about faith, God, and self-discovery. His first New York Times bestselling book was Blue Like Jazz and his latest book is called Building a StoryBrand.
Donald Miller | |
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Born | August 12, 1971 (age 48) |
Occupation | Author, CEO, Public speaker |
Nationality | American |
Genre | Memoir, Business, Business Strategy |
Notable works | Building a StoryBrand |
Website | |
storybrand |
Biography
At 21, Miller left his home in Pearland, Texas and went to Portland, Oregon, where he owned a small Portland-based textbook publishing company called Coffee House Books. Miller became a New York Times Bestselling Author when he published Blue Like Jazz in 2003. In 2004, Miller released Searching For God Knows What, which discusses how the traditional understanding of the gospel of Jesus aligns with a theory of personality. In 2005, he released Through Painted Deserts, a republished version of his first book, Prayer and the Art of Volkswagen Maintenance, originally published in 2000. In 2006, he wrote another book, To Own A Dragon, on his reflections on growing up without a father. Miller is also the founder of The Mentoring Project, a non-profit that partners with local churches to mentor fatherless young men. Miller's next book, A Million Miles in a Thousand Years, was released in late 2009.
In 2009, Miller served on a Presidential Advisory Council on Fatherhood and Healthy Families.
On November 30, 2013 Donald Miller married Elizabeth "Betsy" Miltenberger. They now live in Nashville, Tennessee.
In 2015, he published a book called Scary Close, discussing his views and personal history of self-discovery and intimacy in relationships.
In 2015 Miller helped The Federation for Children create the Failing Our Kids campaign that lobbied state governments for school voucher programs. In early 2016 Miller consulted with Fox River Partnerships, an economic think tank in Illinois, to develop a messaging campaign for a new economic and tax plan called a Circulation Economy. The Circulation Economy plan was created by Joe Ritchie and aims to shift America's economic machine from a trading-based economy to a manufacturing-based economy.
In 2017, he released his latest book, Building a StoryBrand, on marketing and messaging. He presents a marketing framework inspired by principles of storytelling called the StoryBrand 7 Part Framework. The framework is made up of 7 parts:
- A character who wants and needs something
- The character's problem
- A guide who helps the character
- A plan that is delivered by the guide.
- A call to action. The guide calls the character to action.
- Success - the call to action results in success or the 7th part (failure).
- Failure - the call to action results in failure.
In this framework, the "main character" of one's branding and marketing is the customer, not the brand. The brand plays the role of the guide — leading the "main character" to success.
Published works
- Prayer and the Art of Volkswagen Maintenance: Finding God on the Open Road, 2000 (Harvest House Publishers) Note: republished as Through Painted Deserts
- Blue Like Jazz: Nonreligious Thoughts on Christian Spirituality, 2003 (Nelson Books)
- Searching For God Knows What, 2004 (Nelson Books)
- Through Painted Deserts: Light, God, and Beauty on the Open Road, 2005 (Nelson Books)
- To Own a Dragon: Reflections On Growing Up Without a Father, 2006 (NavPress) Note: expanded and republished as "Father Fiction"
- A Million Miles in a Thousand Years, Fall 2009 (Nelson Books)
- Father Fiction: Chapters for a Fatherless Generation
- Storyline: Finding Your Subplot in God's Story, 2012 (Donald Miller Words, LLC)
- Scary Close, 2015 (Nelson)
- Building a StoryBrand, 2017 (Harper Collins Leadership)
- Marketing Made Simple, 2020 (Harper Collins Leadership)
References
- "Author Donald Miller on failed relationships, intimacy issues, and healing through counseling". Religion News Service. February 3, 2015. Retrieved October 28, 2019.