Visuals you can track and optimize in real time.
Unique content that your audience can relate to.
More creative
storytelling possibilities.
Rich, immersive
multimedia stories.
With the right visual storytelling tools, you can create content that will keep your viewers engaged and drive results for
your business. With it, you'll be able to create:
With Ceros' visual storytelling software, you can create impactful, unique digital content that will captivate your audience. Tell us a little bit about yourself, and we'll call within 30 minutes to set up a demo call.
Top brands are sharing visual stories in a variety of compelling new ways online. Here are a few of our favorite examples from a variety of different brands.
Top brands are sharing visual stories in a variety of compelling new ways online. Here are a few of our favorite examples
from a variety of different brands.
Kate Spade’s Miss Adventure web series focuses on the everyday mishaps of main character Anna Kendrick while subtly showcasing their products.
GE Aviation brings its cutting-edge technology
to life with interactive, visual elements on their engine website pages.
The Dallas Cowboys’ Deep Blue documentary series highlighted personal stories from players and staff.
Red Bull’s Red Bulletin magazine features highly visual editorial content on sports, music, photography, and more.
Top brands are sharing visual stories in a variety of compelling new ways online. Here are a few of our favorite examples
from a variety of different brands.
Infographics and data visualizations.
Web series on YouTube and other video channels.
Interactive content such as articles, eBooks, and whitepapers.
Live-streaming channels like Periscope, Blab, and Facebook Instant Video.
Visual social posts on Instagram, Pinterest, Vine, and Snapchat.
There are a variety of visual storytelling types that your prospects, customers, and followers are already engaging with
on a daily basis. Here are just a a few of the most common types:
Mountain
of people respond better to
visual information than text.
40%
Users clicking on photos of real-life people are 2X as likely to convert
to a sale.
94%
more views than those without.
Articles with visuals receive
Visual cues help us to better retrieve and remember information.
of human learning relies on
visual data.
83%
The part of the brain used to process words is quite small in comparison to the part that processes visuals.
While formats have changed over time, visual storytelling has persisted as a communication method for thousands of years.
It’s also been proven to be an excellent educational tool.
To understand why visuals are such a powerful narrative
tool, let’s look at a few stats from recent studies.
Oldest portrait carving made (Venus of Brassempouy)
Anthropomorphic carving Guennol Lioness made in Mesopotamia
Earliest known cave paintings in Sulawesi
Will Eisner publishes
the first graphic novel,
A Contract with God
John Kricfalusi launches
the first web cartoon
Disney releases the first cartoon, Steamboat Willie
The Lost World, the first stop-motion feature film, is release
The first serialized comic strip, Ally Sloper’s Half Holiday, is published in England
First film, Arrival of
a Train, is recorded
The Illustrated London News, the earliest magazine with graphics, begins distribution in England
Paintings on canvas become widespread across Europe
Joseph Nicéphore Niépce takes the first photograph
Cardinal Turrecremata
creates the first woodcut illustrated books in Italy
The Tale of Genji, the earliest illustrated handscroll, is created in Japan
Cloth of St. Gereon is
woven in France
The Rossano Gospels,
one of the oldest
illuminated manuscripts,
is penned in Italy
Narrative ceramic painting becomes widespread
in Greece
Panel painting takes
off in Greece
The Epic of Gilgamesh, the oldest written story, is recorded
Visual storytelling is by no means a new art form. Our ancestors were painting stories on cave walls 35,000 years ago, and we’re still telling visual stories today—just using different tools and delivery channels.
We all know the old adage, “a picture is worth a thousand words.” In today’s oversaturated digital content economy, visuals aren’t just a way to cut copy—they can actually help you deliver more impactful, unique stories to your audience.