zcbot/skills/ppt/references/modes/narrative.md

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# Mode: narrative
Story-arc persuasion. Carry the audience through situation → tension → resolution, using suspense, turns, and human framing so the point lands emotionally before it lands logically. For pitches, case studies, brand journeys, fundraising.
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## 1. Narrative skeleton
**Arc, per deck and per page**: scenario → conflict → resolution. Set a stake, raise a tension, resolve it — then bridge to the next beat.
**Suspense and payoff**: pose a question at the right moment, answer it on the next page. Let curiosity pull the audience forward.
**Human framing**: anchor abstract points in a protagonist, a moment, a concrete stake ("a team that shipped in two weeks instead of three months").
**At least one turn**: a reframe, a reveal, a "but here's what changed". Flat exposition is not narrative.
Titles read as beats that advance the arc ("Then the numbers stopped adding up"), not as labels.
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## 2. Page-structure tendencies
- Pages alternate rhythm: a dense beat followed by a breathing page (single image / quote / turn) to prevent fatigue.
- Visual weight guides the eye through each beat (hero image, one focal number, a pull quote).
- Continuity within a chapter, variation between chapters.
> Structure serves the arc, not a grid. Layout / chart geometry lives in [`templates/charts/`](../../templates/charts/) and [`executor-base.md`](../executor-base.md); this mode decides *the emotional beat of each page*.
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## 3. Speaker-notes register
Conversational narration — like talking with the audience, not reading a report. Scenario-conflict-resolution per page. Metaphors make the abstract tangible ("like adding a turbocharger"). Plain rhetorical questions create suspense; bridge each page from the prior one. Conversational data ("nearly a third", "more than doubled"). (Common framework: [`executor-base.md §8`](../executor-base.md).)
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## 4. Page skeleton example
```
Page 3 (turn): full-bleed image + one line — "Then deployment broke."
Page 4 (payoff): the reframe — what changed, one focal number
Notes: "You might be wondering where the opportunity is…" (bridges, builds)
```