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The website for business and organizational storytelling |
HBR article, "Telling Tales" reviewed in Many Worlds |
| Organizational and Business
Storytelling In The News: Story #139
May 4, 2004 HBR article, "Telling Stories", reviewed in Many Worlds The Many Worlds Strategy Studio (http://www.manyworlds.com) is an interesting website that systematically reviews the business literature on a daily basis. Today it has a review of my Harvard Business Review article, "Telling Tales", and gives it four stars (out of a possible five star rating). At the time of writing, the community gives the article five stars. The review reads as follows: "Stephen Denning is well known for advocating the use of stories as a powerful management tool. Despite his own initial skepticism about “touchy-feely stuff” and a typical preference for hard analysis, he came to appreciate the ability of stories to galvanize an organization around a defined business goal. In this article, Denning tells the tale of how he came to understand some surprising aspects of storytelling for leadership, and he sets out seven types of stories, each suited to a distinct purpose.It also notes several other books and articles of relevance to storytelling including: 1. Optimize by Peter Guber
Peter Guber, former CEO of Sony Entertainment, now chairman of Mandalay Entertainment and author of a new book, says it’s the poets rather than the engineers who creating bonding with customers. In the movie industry, market winners use storytelling and ‘state change’. Guber suggests that capturing the essence of an entertainment-hit approach and translating it into your own products requires a tolerance for risk. 2. How Storytelling Builds Next-Generation Leaders
Executives with little patience for “soft stuff” may skip over this
article, but will miss out on a relatively hard-headed approach. Douglas
Ready’s storytelling advice grows out of extensive study by five researchers
who looked for innovative and effective practices being used to develop
leaders. Executive-led storytelling initiatives outperformed many other
methodologies. Next-generation leaders are those who can translate strategy
into results and core values into day-to-day behaviors, and storytelling
seems to be a powerful way to develop such leaders. Of course Ready is
not referring to off-the-cuff chats or quick inspirational speeches. Instead,
he identifies and explains the five ingredients of effective stories, then
uses the case study of a global player in the financial-services arena
to show how storytelling can be used to align high-potential employees
with the company’s strategy and values. The conclusion of Ready’s story
comes with his outline of how top teams can implement a storytelling leadership
program.
Do you find too many executive meetings to be a numbing flurry of PowerPoint
slides, bullet points, and graphics? What was once a handy tool for conveying
certain kinds of information efficiently has become the dominant form of
communication. Janis Forman makes a case for spending less time on colorful
slides and more on shaping your message into a compelling story. Stories
excel at giving meaning to information and engaging attention and enthusiasm.
“Strategic stories” imagine and depict an organization’s future, making
the future feel real for the listeners. By “story”, Forman means an argument
for a particular vision of an organization. This argument carries the listeners
by presenting the order of events in sequence, giving them an air of inevitability,
and by linking the advocated reality to the supporting data. Forman offers
a device for developing or testing the coherence of the executive’s story
and the evidence behind it by using an analysis tree. The analysis tree
can also help managers develop flexibility in their storytelling. Forman
makes other useful points about effective storytelling including the importance
of language appropriate to the organization and anticipating objections.
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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