Monday, January 2, 2012

How To Tell A Story The World Will Listen To

Have a good cause, issue or product, convert it to a simple, well told story and the world will listen.

Over Christmas I have been reading books on storytelling by former World Bank executive and Australian author, Stephen Denning.  Recently I blogged about Denning's thoughts on  corporate storytelling and change.  

So how do you construct an effective story that can stimulate people's willingness to change?

A springboard story is one designed to take listeners to a new level of understanding about a change. This type of story can be used to inform, educate or to shake the skeptics out of their complacency or hostility to your new idea. 

According to Denning an effective springboard narrative has seven  parts:

A strong idea
The change idea you communicate is clear and worthwhile aiming for.

The story is about on a real example of success
It can be from a program that tested a new idea, a successful case study from another part of your  organisation, or one from the same industry or a different but nevertheless relevant environment.

Single protagonist
Tell the story from the viewpoint of an individual the audience can relate to.

Date, time and place
Set the boundaries of your success example so people readily see your story’s authenticity.

Detail
You only need minimal detail because listeners need mental space to make the leap between what they are hearing  and their own situation.

Ending
Have a genuinely happy ending: one that illustrates success in terms of improved outcomes, team work, health, sales, production efficiency or other measures your audience relates to.

Purpose
End with a visible link back to your central change idea.


Perhaps we should take a leaf from the history books and use stories, as well as the facts and figures of business logic, as we set out to encourage people to accept change.

Sunday, January 1, 2012

A PR New Year Wish

Best wishes to my communications friends for 2012.

If you are a PR or marketing professional, may all your campaigns succeed beyond your wildest dreams and your hard work be rewarded.

If you are a not for profit, may your cause be blessed with the community awareness it so richly deserves. Keep going in the coming months.  Your neighbourhoods, towns, cities and suburbs depend on you.

And if you're like me you'll probably become obsessed with your PR and marketing efforts. Let's hope we can all strike the right balance between self, career, business and family.  

Wishing you and yours every happiness and best health for the coming 12 months. 





Thursday, December 22, 2011

What A Wonderful World!

Enjoy this video and be thankful for all the good things 2011 brought us.



Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Make Stories Part of Your Communications Toolkit

PR people have long known the power of stories to engage the media.  However storytelling is becoming an important tool in corporate communications.  Management fads may come and go but stories still resonate with people - even in the workplace.
Denning's book is a guide to corporate storytelling

I'm currently reading The Leader's Guide to Storytelling by former World Bank executive and Australian author Stephen Denning.  

Denning describes the intrinsic power of stories, the range of stories that can further organisational goals, and how to construct  effective narratives in particular situations.

He identifies a corporate communications catalogue of stories that can be used to:
  • Springboard staff into adopting new practices.
  • Introduce a manager and his or her vision.
  • Communicate an organisation's brand to external audiences. 
  • Transmit culture and values throughout an organisation.
  • Pass along knowledge and highlight the benefits of collaboration.
  • Deliberately set out to counter workplace gossip and rumours.

Stories are the language of the human camp.  They have been around 40 000 years and  continue to be as effective today as they were back then.  They work in our personal lives so we as communicators should borrow their power and make it work for us in our work lives.

Denning's book is good guide to story telling so I'll be blogging highlights and practical tips in future posts.