

|
Is it really possible to say anything new on leadership that has been
already said many times before? A number of distinguished leadership
experts believe so:
Praise for The Secret Language of Leadership "Steve Denning is the Warren Buffett of business communication. He sees things others don't and is able to explain them so the rest of us can understand.”
"I highly recommend you get it today and read it tonight. Tomorrow will be an entirely different kind of day if you do.
How do transformational leaders connect and engage with their audiences and inspire enduring enthusiasm for strange new ideas? In his exciting new book, The Secret Language of Leadership: How Leaders Inspire Action Through Narrative, (Jossey-Bass, October 2007, business narrative expert Steve Denning explains why traditional approaches to leadership communication don’t work and reveals the hidden patterns that effective leaders use to spark change. He shows how anyone can inspire enduring enthusiasm for a cause, even in skeptical, cynical or even hostile audiences and provides a comprehensive guide to the nitty-gritty of transformational leadership. Sparking enduring enthusiasm for change is the principal and most difficult challenge faced by business communicators today. This presentation (and the book) is the first systematic account of how to go about it. The book's lucid explanations, vivid examples and practical tips are essential reading for CEOs, managers, change agents, marketers, salespersons, brand managers, politicians, teachers, parents—anyone who is setting out to the change the world. More advance praise for The Secret Language of Leadership “The Secret Language of Leadership has been instrumental in helping me overcome the challenges of rapid growth and intense competition. It’s all about the story.”
"I don’t think I have ever read a more compelling preface. And best of all, the advice Denning gives to the reader about speaking and writing is exemplified in the way he has written this impressive book."
“Engaging and erudite, this book draws on very wide reading and research to help any leader or manager master the arts of narrative in a way that is both pragmatic and original.”
“Out of the morass of strategies leaders are given to transform organizations, Denning plucks a powerful one—storytelling—and shows how and why it works.”
“The Secret Language of Leadership is not only the best analysis I have seen of how and why leaders succeed or fail, it's highly readable, as well as downright practical. It should be mandatory reading for anyone interested in engaging a company with big ideas who understands that leaders live and die by the quality of what they say.”
"A primary role of leaders is to create and maintain meaning for their organizations. Denning clearly demonstrates that meaning-making comes from stories well told."
"Steve Denning is one of the leading thinkers on the power of narrative in business settings. His latest book is a smart, useful guide than can help leaders of every kind add value to their organizations and add meaning to their own journeys."
“The Secret Language of Leadership shows why narrative intelligence is central to transformational leadership and how to harness its power.”
“There is something very special about The Secret Language of Leadership. A lot of authors write about storytelling and other methods of leadership communication. What sets Steve Denning apart is his authenticity. He is one of the rare few who write about it from intensely personal experience. This book offers a genuinely refreshing perspective and an uncommon insight into the narrative life of leadership."
Book review:Let me tell you a story about Al GoreOn August 29, 2007, the Financial Times published a 700-word review by Stefan Stern of The Secret Language of Leadership. Here are some of the highlights:
“If business leaders do not immediately grasp the vital insights offered by this book, both they and their organisations are doomed. But the good news is that there are examples of executives out there who have taken this book’s messages to heart, and have acted successfully on them…
“This new book represents a considerable advance on the earlier work. The squirrels have been superseded by an intelligent and sustained analysis of the art of contemporary leadership. Those bosses who quietly despair of ever getting their people to change should spend a bit of time learning how to speak Denning’s ‘secret language.’
“One leader who does seem to have got the message is former US vice-president Al Gore. In a superb opening section, Denning takes Gore’s lousy presidential bid of 2000 apart, showing how at each stage the man of destiny from Tennessee blew his chances…
“Denning is a subtle and astute reader of audiences’ minds. Don’t try to out-reason deeply sceptical employees, he says. You have to make a personal – and emotional – connection with them first. Indeed, facts may be the last thing people want to hear right now. They will simply be discounted and rejected.
“Of course, there is still a need for reasoned arguments, he says, but it is crucial to get the “sequencing” of messages right. Get people’s attention, “stimulate the desire for change”, and then wheel out the rationale.
“’Leadership communications begin as monologue,’ Denning says. ‘If they are successful they turn into dialogue and then conversation. The conversation emerges because of the enduring enthusiasm for change that has been inspired.’
“Some business leaders may be sceptical about the need for language skills these days, but this “secret language of leadership” will reward further study.”
Read the full review here (subscription required) What's different about The Secret Language of Leadership? For a very long time, we’ve been living with the idea that leadership and change are driven by the efforts of a few exceptional people. This book puts forward a different idea. It says that change and leadership don’t require exceptional people at all. Leadership and change are driven by ordinary people who act and speak in a different way. Once people grasp what's involved in acting and speaking in that way and take the trouble to master it, then they find that anyone can drive change, if they want to. For too long, we’ve been thinking that leadership was some kind of innate gift, a mysterious kind of genetically inherited charisma. But once we’ve deciphered the language of leadership and understood its essential enabling conditions, transformational leadership is no longer a mystery. Once the hidden patterns of the language of leadership are made explicit, leadership becomes accessible to anyone. As Malcolm Gladwell has noted, the difference between generating resistance and enthusiasm is narrower than we imagine. What's nice is this: when ordinary people have learned the language of leadership, they find they can have extraordinary impact. Anyone who is trying to change the world, whether you're a CEO, a manager, a change agent trying to change your boss, a marketer, a salesperson, a brand manager, a politician, a teacher, a parent—anyone who looks out on the world and wants to do something to make it a better place. In fact, the only person for whom the book isn’t relevant is someone is totally complacent and happy with everything in the world, exactly as it is now. The conventional wisdom: Pick up almost any leadership book these days and what do you find? Leadership is presented almost solely as an issue of inner conviction. Find the leader deep within yourself. Become the person others will want to follow. Discover your strengths. Become emotionally intelligent. Merely through increased self-awareness, self-regulation, and positive modeling, authentic leaders develop authenticity in followers. When you visualize, then you materialize. Be true to yourself and change happens. Would it were so. The reality: The reality is that sustained, enthusiastic change doesn’t occur by osmosis or extrasensory perception. If leaders’ inner commitment to change is to have any effect, they have to communicate it to the people they aspire to lead. True, the leaders’ actions will eventually speak louder than words, but in the short run, it’s what leaders say—or don’t say—that has the impact. The right words can have a galvanizing effect, generating enthusiasm, energy, momentum, and more, while the wrong words can undermine the best intentions and kill initiative on the spot, stone dead. What are the main elements of the language of leadership? The central triad of every effective leadership communication involves a shift from the traditional approach of,
to the new triad:
The book shows:
It also explains which of these work best and why. The book tells you what other books on leadership never got round to revealing: what you have to say, and how to say it, so as to inspire enduring enthusiasm for your cause. Narrative intelligence: The book introduces the concept of narrative intelligence. Narrative intelligence is an ability to understand and act and react agilely in the quicksilver world of interacting narratives. The enabling conditions of the language of leadership: The language of leadership will have the maximum impact if certain enabling conditions are in place. Without these enablers, the words that leaders use—the spoken language of leadership—risk sounding glib and superficial. The book identifies six enabling conditions:
The book also covers:
Want to read a chapter? Here's Chapter 1 (MDI format, 860kb) or (PDF format 1.6 megs) When
and where can I buy it? It will be published on October 15, 2007 in
the US. It's can be preordered at Amazon
(US) Want to organize a tailor-made workshop for your organization, based on the themes and insights of The Secret Language of Leadership? Click here |
Celebrate the launch of The Secret Language of Leadership: A special offer of free bonus gifts from Larry Prusak, Jim Kouzes, Chip Heath, Kevin Ekenberry, Katalina Groh, Shawn Callahan, Svend-Erik Engh and many others to all purchasers of The Secret Language of Leadership. To collect your gifts, click here |
![]() |
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
Copyright © 2000-2004 Stephen Denning Webmaster CR WEB CONSULTING