It’s Storytime - What’s your story?
Posted by austin under Fundraising, Leadership, Talent Search
Stories aren’t just for kids, or storytime at daycare.
I love a good story. In fact we all do. Stories are the means that we entertain, learn, teach, explore and play out the adventures of our lives.
In business we have the stories we tell ourselves in our heads, stories we tell investors, customers, employees and co-workers.
A great story can change the world, or the way you percieve it.
Stories are about change and the best ones affect the audience of the story, and create some meaningful impression.
A leaders job is to create stories that are worth believing in. A vision, a series of small successes that give confidence and a story that carries passion and is worth figthing for. Passion is something you can’t pay for, it has to be something that is shared - and stories are the ways we have shared our passions since we grunted our way out of our painted caves.
What are the words of your organizations story?
Do the words you use include fullfilling your brand promise to reward employees and shareholders. Please, kill me quickly before your story bores me. I’m tired of boring stories. I’ve heard entrepreneurs pitching me who can’t tell their stories, candidates applying for jobs who can’t tell their story and surprisingly many CEO’s I know can’t tell their story.
Stories need adventure, good guys and bad guys, drama and danger. Most of all they need hereos, they need some epic injustice being addressed or help being offered to the needy.
You have as much luck finding passion in many companies as you would find a hollywood blockbuster based on the story of a CEO who increased shareholder value by implementing six sigma management techniques lowering operating costs while increasing market share by double digits over a five year period. If that’s your organizations story then you need a new storyteller.
As an entrepreneur if your story is about how you can use mashups and the wisdom of crowds with a new AJAX api for a relationship management tool that used web 2.0 techniques and user generated ……….. sorry - the story was borying me too. You can guess the result this story gets with investors, media or even employees.
Most organizations have great stories, but lousy storytellers. Every struggle, sacrifice, win with customers or change in direction is rife with drama and opportunities to create stories and legends that shape culture and build your organization.
Every story in business needs to follow the hearts, minds, wallet rule. (My version is win the heart, challenge the mind, and the wallet will figure itself out easily).
Here is a great story from Kodak that made me laugh. It’s great marketing and has people sharing Kodak’s story.
The power of blogs and social media is being able to tell your story with employees, partners, customers, competitors and the whole world. In fact the more people you share your story with and the better you tell your story, the more you succeed.
With the dropping cost personal publishing I’m continually surprised had how few companies, employers or leaders take the time to tell stories to their market.
Ask youserlf, is your organizations website still a corporate brochure or a tool for telling your companies story? How often do you update it? Who writes the content? What story does it tell week by week, month by month.
Here are two of my favorite articles that I found on Google on the role of storytelling in leadership.
- Harvard Business Review - Telling Tales - from Steve Denning, Organizational Storytelling author
- Harvard Business Review - Storytelling That Moves People: A Conversation with Screenwriting Coach Robert McKee
11 Responses to “ It’s Storytime - What’s your story? ”
Comments:
Leave a Reply
Trackbacks & Pingbacks:
-
Pingback from Links: 2007-12-23 « ideas Revolutionary
December 23rd, 2007 at 5:41 am[...] Story time - Love this quote, “The highest-paid person in the first half of the next century will be the storyteller” - My friend Austin Hill and I talked about story telling and he wrote about the importance of storytelling here. [...]



April 17th, 2007 at 6:35 am
great article, although i have to say most people and companies don’t have any story to tell. They just happen to be there. existing.
takes time to get your own story and find your passion.
and this doesn’t tell what’s your story with akoha?
April 17th, 2007 at 9:44 am
Heri: yeah, the Akoha people are just teases
April 17th, 2007 at 11:10 am
It’s killing me not to tell the story - but I’m enjoying taking the time to get it right.
Thanks for the words guys, can’t wait to share the story with you.
-Austin
April 17th, 2007 at 5:36 pm
Hi Austin,
Great Blog, makes you want to do better with the website, stories, etc.
Cheers,
tom
April 18th, 2007 at 12:35 pm
Hello Austin,
Great entry. The Kodak clip was quite cool, too bad they don’t have much goods to show yet.
Will you be able to join us at our first DemoCamp in Calgary?
CU,
Kempton
April 18th, 2007 at 6:40 pm
Love the article. I am co-founder and director of a Melbourne Australia based company called One Thousand & One (www.onethousandandone.com.au) and we specialise in storytelling for organsiations.
Stories are such a powerful way to engage employees, customers, investor’s etc. but the corporate world tend to have this over reliance on data and data alone.
Well done. Gabrielle
April 22nd, 2007 at 7:26 am
Hi Austin,
Your words made me think about a book I read recently. It explains why it so difficult to convey one’s story once a person is deep into their endeavour. It’s a must read for every tech entrepreneur.
http://www.madetostick.com/theauthors/
April 25th, 2007 at 7:51 pm
Stories are great ways to gain people’s attention, especially if there is a moral. I love a good yarn as much as anyone else but I prefer to use real life stories and experiences in my blog. My belief is that people will identify more with a true story delivered by a witness or one who has actuaaly experienced the event.
It just makes the story believable - no matter how unbelievable the story is.
Unfortunately, most companies and corproate executives won’t like my stories.
May 11th, 2007 at 5:49 pm
Stories are powerful because they make the listener’s mind shift gears into story mode, and the receiver starts imagining that which is described in the story.
A great thing to do is to turn life experiences into stories. Think back to things you’ve done in the past few days - what happened? Some things may be incredible, other experiences mundane. But no moment in life is boring until you make it so!
I like to walk around with “Spare Change” stories in my pocket, which I accumulate from funny moments or meaningful experiences that I had over the last few days. Just like carrying spare change for charity, it is important to carry around Spare Change when it comes a time to tell a story or just for some smalltalk!
Spare Change Stories are better than monetary charity - they nourish the soul. Stacking yor Spare Change stories makes your life more meaninful too - because it enhances your relationships with others and unlike a diary - your memories are cast in other people’s memories, no on some dusting bookshelf.
And if you think your life is really mundane, you can turn mundane moments into exciting stories by adding some imaginary adventures.
Like the bike trip to school the other day. It takes an hour to get to school by bike from where I live but I only had 40 minutes to get to a quiz. In my rush I put on my ski helmet (couldn’t find where my bike helmet was), put on full gear, and started running red lights and dodging all the traffic, bursting into class 2 minutes into the quiz!
In reality the story above is not completely accurate. I do bike to school, but the day I had my quiz I actually biked to a friend’s appartment a few hours earlier and we studied. I wear a bike helmet, not a ski helmet, but biking in traffic dodging cars in my ski helmet would be a really funny visual. And I do run red lights and dodge traffic sometimes - but I do it very carefully and without being in a rush, and also I prefer to take the bike path (which I only found out about on Tuesday - which is a story for itself).
You see? A story out of my own life experience from last week, even though nothing special really happened to me last week. I simply bike to class to do my study thing.
Cheers,
Shai
August 13th, 2007 at 2:18 pm
I couldn’t understand some parts of this article , but I guess I just need to check some more resources regarding this, because it sounds interesting.