The Rule of Three (2024)

Hey – Nathan here.

Let’s start with a game. Fill in the blanks:

  • Veni. Vidi. __.

  • Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of __.

  • Tall, dark, and __.

Did you get at least one? Maybe even two? Each of these phrases uses The Rule of Three, a wonderfully practical technique to make your stories more memorable. It’s also the focus of this newsletter.

Today’s hook (hit me back with your best guess): “In the week before their departure to [], when all final scurrying about had reached a nearly undeniable frenzy, an old crone came to visit the mother of the boy, [].”

Last week’s hook: The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

The Rule of Three (1)

Humans love patterns. We’re drawn to them. We learn from them. We remember them.

A 2012 study by Cambridge neuroscientist Daniel Bor found:

The process of combining more primitive pieces of information to create something more meaningful is a crucial aspect of learning and is one of the defining features of human experience. Once we reach adulthood, we have decades of intensive learning behind us, where the discovery of thousands of useful combinations of features, as well as combinations of combinations and so on, has collectively generated an amazingly rich, hierarchical model of the world.

Daniel Bor

Tldr: Your brain is a pattern-completion machine.

The number three is the smallest number of elements needed to create a pattern.

  • Two? One too few.

  • Three? Spot on.

  • Four? That’s a lot to remember.

See, three bullet points look natural. But this idea doesn’t just apply to bullet-point structure.

The Rule of Three is a storytelling principle that says people better understand concepts, situations, and ideas in groups of three.

Researchers like Bor have proven it works on, you guessed it, three levels:

  • Sentences

  • Situations

  • Stories

They’re right. The most common storytelling structures are split into threes:

But why’s it so effective?

Threes let you shape your story. Any less, there’s no pattern. But, add more than three, and both the skill required to tell the story and the attention required to understand it, go way up. More than three is harder on both the storyteller and the audience. So, as it’s the lowest number of elements required to create a pattern, three becomes the go-to for many writers.

Connect two points, you have a line. Connect three points, you might have a line. Or a squiggle. Or a triangle. Now, it depends on how you, the storyteller, connect them.

The Rule of Three (2)

Tricolon – The repetition of similar words or phrases three times in one sentence, or in three back-to-back-to-back sentences, to create a parallel pattern.

  • “Ever since the Cognitive Revolution, Sapiens have thus been living in a dual reality. On the one hand, the objective reality of rivers, trees and lions; and on the other hand, the imagined reality of gods, nations and corporations.” – Yuval Noah Harari in Sapiens

Three-part structure – James Clear calls his newsletter "3-2-1." He organizes his writing into three sections, and it's become a popular way to format newsletters.

Here’s a great advertisem*nt from Marketing Examples showing the power of The Rule of Three:

The Rule of Three (3)

Hendiatris – A hugely popular technique in speeches and advertising, hendiatris means using three individual words together to convey one idea:

  • “Reduce, Reuse, Recycle.”

  • “Friends, Romans, Countrymen.”

  • “Government of the people, by the people, for the people.”

Notice how the most important word hits you at the end of each of those phrases. That’s not an accident. In their legendary book Elements of Style, William Strunk and EB White say:

The proper place in the sentence for the word or group of words that the writer desires to make most prominent is usually the end… This principle applies equally to the words of a sentence, to the sentences of a paragraph, and to the paragraphs of a composition.

The Elements of Style

The Rule of Three may be the most practical rule in all of writing. Proven by science, effective in practice, and simple to implement.

Pay attention to good writing, and you see threes everywhere.

Cheers,

Nathan

PS: This is not a hard and fast “rule.” There are so few of those. It’s a guideline and helpful frame.

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The Rule of Three (4)

A message from... Me!

The interest in this tweet blew me away...

One way to become a better storyteller:

Take your two favorite authors. I recommend one non-fiction and one fiction.

Copy, word for word, their best work. Do it by hand.

I chose Paul Kalanithi and Neil Gaiman.

It’s the single exercise that improved my writing the most.

— Nathan Baugh (@nathanbaugh27)
Jan 5, 2023

In my experience, there are two ways to get good at storytelling:

  1. Study the greats (what this newsletter is for)

  2. Practice, practice, practice

I do a lot of practice through StoryWork.

And so many of you liked, commented, and sent me DMs about the practice I decided to turn it into a guided course for you.

Check it out:

The Rule of Three (6)

Nathan’s Picks

☁️ Quote: “I've been making a list of the things they don't teach you at school. They don't teach you how to love somebody. They don't teach you how to be famous. They don't teach you how to be rich or how to be poor. They don't teach you how to walk away from someone you don't love any longer. They don't teach you how to know what's going on in someone else's mind. They don't teach you what to say to someone who's dying. They don't teach you anything worth knowing.” — Neil Gaiman, The Sandman

  • Neil uses the underlying principle of The Rule of Three, patterns, but cranks the dial up to hard mode. Instead of tying together three ideas, he does seven. He’s also a master storyteller. Start with three, work your way up.

📚 Video: You Must Be The Master of Your Own Kingdom. Guy Ritchie tells Joe Rogan about the essence of narrative.

⚒️ Tool: The Leuchtturm1917 journal is my favorite journal I’ve ever had. I now have three of these things. One for personal journaling, one for StoryWork, and one for outlining my 4th book. Enjoying a journal may seem like not a big deal, but I’ve found that simple enjoyment of the product makes me more likely to sit down on a Saturday morning, whip out the journal, and start writing.

The Rule of Three (7)

When you’re ready to go deeper, here are three ways I can help:

I wrote this from chilly Austin, Texas. Where you reading from? Curious where all the World Builders are.

The Rule of Three (2024)

FAQs

How do you explain the rule of three? ›

The rule of three is a storytelling principle that suggests people better understand concepts, situations, and ideas in groups of three. Over time, the rule has been confirmed by anthropological experts as an archetypal principle that works on three levels: sentences, situations, and stories.

What is the 3 rule example? ›

Examples of the rule of three

In storytelling: “The Three Little Pigs,” “Goldilocks and the Three Bears,” and “Three Billy Goats Gruff” are all classic examples of stories that use the rule of three. In speeches: “I came, I saw, I conquered” is a famous example of the rule of three used by Julius Caesar.

What is the rule of three in an argument? ›

These three parts satisfy the strictures of an old triadic chestnut about persuasive writing: “Tell them what you're going to say. Say it. Then tell them what you said.” This structure follows the pattern of a familiar triad: beginning, middle, and end.

What is the Rule of 3 questioning technique? ›

Put simply, the three question rule is this: when you start a conversation with someone, ask a question, listen to the person's response, and then follow up with two more questions in the same way.

What is the rule of three answer? ›

What is the Rule of Three? The Rule of three simply explained is a writing principal that states when information is presented and received in groupings of three, the information is intrinsically more amusing, more gratifying, and effective thus making it more memorable.

Why is the rule of three so powerful? ›

Using the rule of 3 can be really helpful when crafting your speech or presentation. Not only does it provide a solid structure and framework, but it will also help focus your mind on the most critical points that you want to make, whilst enabling you to use powerful and impactful language.

What is the rule of three in psychology? ›

Understanding the Rule of Three

In the context of productivity, the rule of three emphasizes that breaking tasks or concepts into three distinct components can make them more manageable, memorable, and actionable.

Is rule of three a persuasive technique? ›

The rule of three in writing is a successful literary technique because it makes stories memorable, emotionally impactful, and persuasive for readers.

What are the elements of the rule of three? ›

The rule of three can refer to a collection of three words, phrases, sentences, lines, paragraphs/stanzas, chapters/sections of writing and even whole books. The three elements together are known as a triad. The technique is used not just in prose, but also in poetry, oral storytelling, films, and advertising.

What is the rule of three in conversation? ›

Three is the most powerful number in communication. An audience is far more likely to remember information if it's presented in groups of threes. If you give your audience one piece of information, they will feel it's not enough.

What is the rule of three thinking? ›

It suggests that information presented in groups of three is more memorable, engaging, and persuasive. The rule of three is a principle that has been used in communication for centuries, and it suggests that things that come in threes are inherently more satisfying, effective, and memorable than other numbers.

What is the rule of 3 in interviewing? ›

If you want to appear knowledgeable or otherwise prepared in a job interview and not embarrass yourself, try to know at least three different facts about anything that you claim to have knowledge of—whether you are the one being interviewed or doing the interviewing.

What is the summary of the Rule of Three? ›

Eric Walters's post-apocalyptic Rule of Three series chronicles the aftermath of a global catastrophe on one suburban neighborhood. Teenager Adam Daley, his police captain mother, and a retired government spy take charge when a computer virus causes modern technology to fail.

What is the rule of thirds for dummies? ›

What is the rule of thirds in photography? The rule of thirds in photography is a guideline that places the subject in the left or right third of an image, leaving the other two thirds more open. It divides a photo into nine equal parts, split by two equally spaced horizontal and vertical lines.

What is meant by 3 rule? ›

noun. a mathematical rule asserting that the value of one unknown quantity in a proportion is found by multiplying the denominator of each ratio by the numerator of the other.

How to teach the Rule of Three? ›

The rule of three is simple: things are manageable and elegantly presented in threes. A writer can write about three characters. A child can learn to use commas between three nouns in a series. And a reader can notice words and phrases that are repeated three times.

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