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The website for business and organizational storytelling |
Investor's Business Daily features organizational storytelling |
| Organizational and Business
Storytelling In The News: Story #133
April 28, 2004 Investor's Business Daily on organizational storytelling Investor’s Business Daily’s Ten Secrets to Success: Investor’s Business Daily has spent years analyzing leaders and successful people in all walks of life. Most have ten traits that, when combined can turn dreams into reality. Each day they highlight one. On April 27, 2004, they highlighted organizational storytelling under the heading, “Decide upon your true dreams and goals”. The article, by Amy Alexander, is entitled Once Upon A Tomorrow When they needed to brand a common goal onto the minds of many, Martin Luther King, Winston Churchill and John Kennedy turned to storytelling. They didn’t tell fairy tales or fables. They painted a picture of tomorrow that their followers could make their own. King shouted, “I have a dream,” and then spoke of all Americans working and playing together. Churchill described fighting on the beaches, landing fields, in streets and on hills, laying out what the troops would have to do to win World War II. Kennedy said, “This nation shall commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon.” You don’t have to be a King or a Churchill or a Kennedy to tap into the power of storytelling. It’s an effective way to get goals to gel at any company, says Stephen Denning, an organizational storyteller. Reach Within “You might be bale to excite the mind with analysis, but when you are trying to move people and inspire people, you have to reach for the heart,’ he said. Denning was one of several organizational storytelling experts who gather
in Washington D.C. in April for a Smithsonian-sponsored seminar on how
to use storytelling as a catalyst for change.
Using Imagination Why does storytelling so well when it comes to creating a vision? Denning explains it in his forthcoming book, “Squirrel Inc.” “The best way to get human beings to venture into future terrain is
to make that terrain familiar and desirable by taking them there first
in their imaginations through a story,” Denning wrote.
“Future narratives sketch a vision that points in a general direction but little else,” he said. “if these narratives are effective, it is because the listeners themselves put flesh on the skeleton. The listeners contribute the narrative detail.” A brief evocative, general story makes it easier for listeners to adapt when the unexpected happens. “People can remold the narrative in their imaginations on the fly,” Denning said. Shake things up,. What would a better future look like for your organization? Don’t’ get too caught up in “what ifs” and “yeah, buts.” When you’re crafting your vision – your company’s story of tomorrow – it’s important to keep an open mind. “A vision doesn’t offer exclusionary moves,” Denning said. “It opens up the landscape of possibilities still to come.” Read the Investor's Business Daily For more examples of Storytelling in The News, go to the Archive |
| Learn
more about Squirrel Inc: A Fable of Leadership Through Storytelling, a new book by Steve Denning (Jossey-Bass, June 2004)
Storytelling
in Organizations
The Springboard: How Storytelling
Ignites Action in Knowledge-Era Organizations
Go to other relevant links Steve Denning consults and gives workshops and keynote presentations on topics that include: leadership, innovation, organizational storytelling, business storytelling, springboard storytelling, knowledge management, branding, marketing, values, communication, communities of practice, business performance, collective intelligence, tacit knowledge, business collaboration, knowledge, learning, community, performance improvement, visionary leadership, social potential, institutional community building, and internal communications. You can contact Steve at steve@stevedenning.com
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