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Stakes Mechanics: Making the Reader Care

A five-week course on installing stakes the reader can feel.
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Course Overview

Overview

Most stakes advice is some version of ‘make the reader care more.’ That’s not a craft instruction; that’s a wish. Stakes are mechanics. Specific, layerable, installable mechanics. Five weeks on the actual machinery — external stakes, internal stakes, moral stakes, relational stakes — and how they layer on top of each other to produce stakes the reader can name in one sentence. Each week you install one stakes layer on your draft. By the end your draft has stakes that work. The course is mechanics-heavy and emotion-light by design; we’re installing equipment, not chasing feelings.

What’s inside

  • 5 modules, 25 lessons + stakes templates — mechanics-first, layer-by-layer install
  • Mindset Maven Test that names YOUR specific stakes-flattening pattern
  • 5 guided meditations averaging 9 minutes — paired to the weekly stakes-install sessions
  • Toolkit: the Four-Layer Stakes Install Worksheet + the Stakes-Naming Test Card
  • Lifetime access, unlimited retakes — new drafts need fresh stakes work
  • Companion blog post per module — public, perfect for the writer whose readers said ‘I didn’t feel anything’

Who this is for

  • The novelist whose beta readers said ‘it’s well-written but I wasn’t gripped’
  • The screenwriter whose stakes are technically present but readers can’t name them
  • The game designer whose narrative branches lose weight after the first act
  • The brand storyteller whose brand stories test flat in focus groups

FAQs

Won’t focusing on mechanics make the stakes feel forced?
Counterintuitively, no. Stakes built mechanically test as MORE emotionally affecting than stakes wished-for. The mechanics are what produce the feeling. Wish-based stakes feel forced because the mechanics underneath are missing.

What’s the difference between stakes and tension?
Tension is a moment-to-moment effect; stakes are the underlying machinery that makes tension matter. You can write tense scenes with no stakes (the reader doesn’t care who wins) — and those scenes don’t land.

Do all four layers need to be present?
Module 5 covers the layer-presence decision. Most working drafts have 2-3 layers actively; some genres need all four. The course teaches you which layers your specific project needs.

Will this work for brand storytelling?
Yes — Module 4 explicitly addresses brand and commercial work. Brand stakes are often relational + moral; commercial work often skips both.

What’s the stakes-naming test?
A specific reader test: can a reader name your draft’s stakes in one sentence? If they can’t, the stakes aren’t installed. The test is the load-bearing diagnostic of the course.

Can I retake?
Yes. Unlimited. Each new draft needs its own stakes installation.

What one student said

★★★★★

“I do brand storytelling for financial services — a category where every brand sounds the same on purpose. My principal asked why our brand stories weren’t ‘landing.’ This course gave me the four-layer stakes framework, and I went back through last year’s brand work and identified what was missing in each piece. We installed external + relational stakes on the rebrand we’re shipping in Q4. The new copy tested 3x better than the version without explicit stakes. I will be expensing this course.”

— Jensen R., brand storyteller (financial services)

Curriculum

  • 5 Sections
  • 20 Lessons
  • Lifetime
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Instructor

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L. A. Walton

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36 Courses