Freytag's dramatic structure reveals how narrative shapes human experience
For over 150 years, Gustav Freytag's pyramid has been the hidden blueprint behind compelling stories. From novels to films to landing pages, the same arc repeats because it works. It works because it mirrors how we experience life: setup, tension, climax, resolution. Let's explore how this ancient pattern applies to modern design.
Why structure matters
Pages without narrative structure feel disconnected and unmemorable. Users scroll, but don't engage.
When you introduce a problem, curiosity rises. People want to know the solution.
Every story needs a world. In exposition, you establish context, introduce characters (or products), and answer the basic questions: Who? What? Where? When?
In design, exposition is your hero section. It says: "This is what we're about. This is the world you're entering."
But context alone is boring. You need a problem. An inciting incident disrupts equilibrium and forces action.
On a landing page, this is where you say: "You have a problem. Things could be different."
Each feature deepens the argument
Introduce the world and establish what's possible
Deepen the problem, add complications, build stakes
Reach the climax where resolution feels inevitable
The rising action is where you build your case. You're not rushing to the solution—you're making the reader care about solving the problem.
Each section should feel like you're getting closer to understanding. Each piece of evidence adds weight.
This is where features shine. Not as a list, but as proof points in an unfolding argument.
You understand the problem. You've seen the possibilities. Now comes the choice that changes everything.
You're not alone in choosing transformation
Have already taken the leap and transformed their approach
From startups to enterprises, people just like you are succeeding
This isn't new. Freytag's pattern has worked for 150 years
The climax is exciting, but the falling action is essential. This is where you:
Don't skip the falling action. Your readers need reassurance that they've made the right choice.
Your turn to write a better narrative
© 2026 Built on timeless patterns. Every page tells a story.