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"This is THE book on using story telling to effect any change or influence you want to have on anyone in a company or organization." |
The Leader's Guide to Storytelling: Mastering the Art and Discipline of Business Narrative A book by Steve Denning Published in April 2005 by Jossey Bass |
| What's it about? Like to hear the buzz? Did you know? Read a chapter |
Where
can I buy it? What's new and different? How did it come to be written? |
"This book, Steve Denning’s Magnum Opus on Storytelling, is a great achievement: the one book every manager should read before giving up their lifeless PowerPoint presentations. The book is creative, eclectic, passionate and useful-a rare and winning combination for a business book."
"Storytellers
play a pivotal role in the 21st century enterprise, and Denning has
provided us with a handy field guide to the narrative craft. After making
a compelling argument for the power of storytelling, he gives us the
details on how to deliver the right story at the right time. Read this
useful book-and then tell your friends about it!" The book is a comprehensive look at the role of storytelling in meeting the most important leadership challenges today, including motivate others to action, build trust in you, build trust in your company (branding), transmit your values, get others working together, share knowledge, tame the grapevine, create and share your vision, solve the paradox of innovation, and use narrative to transform your organization. In his Harvard Business Review article, Telling Tales (May 2004), Steve Denning outlined the main high-value forms of organizational storytelling and how they could cope with the principal challenges facing leaders today. Now, The Leader's Guide to Storytelling offers a detailed account of why each type of story works and how it works, with numerous examples from business settings of each type of story and practical templates so that to assist leaders to construct their own story. The book covers some new areas, not covered in the HBR article, including:
In some ways, you could say that it’s the business book equivalent of Squirrel Inc, with examples from the world of IBM, GE, Xerox and so on, rather than the imaginary land of squirrels. It gives detailed how-to advice and practical templates for constructing and performing your story. But The Leader’s Guide is considerably deeper and broader than Squirrel Inc. because, as I was writing it, I discovered that there was a need to clarify the underlying subjects. Why is change so difficult? What is human identity? What are brands? What are values? What is knowledge? Why can’t we solve the problem of innovation? What kind of leadership actually works and why? Narrative bears on all these issues, but the book has ended up being more than a simple toolkit of how to use story, and goes into the underlying reasons why story works when nothing else does. What to read a few
chapters? You can also read an excerpt from the Foreword and Chapter 1 A one-page brochure on the book is available. Where can I buy it?
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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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