Tips and Trends Industry Advice and Developments

The Storytelling Innovation

Each month brings news of great leaps forward in the fields of artificial intelligence, machine learning, self-driving vehicles, advanced robotics, virtual reality, blockchain databases and conversational interfaces — so it’s easy to believe that innovation belongs exclusively to the world’s technologists.
Jason Allen

But leaders across disciplines are increasingly investing in a different strand of innovation, one that’s simpler, cheaper and, compared to our bleeding-edge technological breakthroughs, downright ancient: storytelling.

In an age defined by rapid change, increasing complexity and information overload, you’d be hard-pressed to find a technology more suited to solve your most immediate challenges than narrative. Stories make order from chaos, deliver memorable messages in noisy environments, motivate effectively in volatile times, and connect efficiently across distributed networks. The collection of sense-making skills we know as storytelling has never been a more powerful or necessary capability.

And that’s why executives in firms across sectors and functions — professional services, human resources, consumer goods, energy management, information systems — are investing in building narrative intelligence, teaching storytelling skills and establishing story networks across their teams.

Here are five use cases that suggest you should join them.

1. MYTHS AND MOTIVATION

The last few years of research into employee engagement and motivation has surfaced an unmistakable trend: Talent is far more likely to join, stick and lead if the mission of your company is clear. Not surprisingly, the research also reveals that your mission better be more than a statement; employees want evidence of the mission brought to life, lived out by leadership and colleagues. In short, they want stories of how your company is benefitting the community, the industry and the world. Companies able to tell their “impact stories” are winning the race for world-class talent, building flywheels of enthusiasm and productivity.

2. CONNECTIVE TISSUE

Anthropologists, ethnographers and other practitioners of applied science have known for a very long time what organizations are just now discovering: Cultural norms are created by the stories a community celebrates or condemns. Want to know why a team or an office behaves a certain way? They’ll almost always have a story — or a handful — to explain their habits and actions. Want to inspire them to behave differently? Start sharing and celebrating the stories that reward and reinforce those new habits.

3. NARRATIVE ECONOMIES 

Storytelling has long been thought to be an art, but it’s a science, too. One of storytelling’s primary contributions to organizations is its effective fight against the second law of thermodynamics. Seriously. All systems tend toward entropy, losing their energy and heat over time — and that includes your organization and team. Leadership wages a constant battle against this deterioration, and story is your secret weapon. An organizational storytelling economy recirculates success, multiplies the impact of good ideas, and preserves best practices. Think of stories as the kinetic energy recovery system of your organization, retaining the energy and extending the momentum of your victories.

Storytelling has long been thought to be an art, but it’s a science, too. One of storytelling’s primary contributions to organizations is its effective fight against the second law of thermodynamics. Seriously. All systems tend toward entropy, losing their energy and heat over time — and that includes your organization and team. Leadership wages a constant battle against this deterioration, and story is your secret weapon. An organizational storytelling economy recirculates success, multiplies the impact of good ideas, and preserves best practices. Think of stories as the kinetic energy recovery system of your organization, retaining the energy and extending the momentum of your victories.

4. STORYTELLING = STORYSELLING

The sales teams of the future won’t hawk products; they’ll deliver provocative insights. Consultative partnership, proactive solutions, product knowledge augmented by creative problem-solving techniques — these are the new sales essentials. Your sales team will have to be capable of understanding the customer story, identifying their location in a larger narrative, and naming the right role and entrance for your firm in that story. Customer journey mapping will only become more essential to this process, and story is its natural and intuitive framework.

5. LEGACY 

Wherever you are on your leadership journey, you’ve already witnessed the power of story in the lives of your mentors and models. Those most able to motivate stakeholders, garner support and resources, stimulate buy-in upstream and down, and build a track record of success are the leaders who have shaped and sold the best stories — of themselves and their agendas. Your personal brand inside your company and within your industry is the product of the stories you’ve intentionally collected and advanced. Whether you’ve got a future to shape or a legacy to ensure, your challenge is fundamentally a storytelling one.

Unlike the world-shaking new technologies produced in Silicon Valley labs, innovation in storytelling requires little in the way of capital investment or deep specialization. We’re born storytellers; we just spend most of our educational energy unlearning that native language.

The unique challenges of our global, diverse and ambiguous moment call for a rapid narrative upskilling that will return our teams to fluency.

Join Jason Allen Ashlock, Partner at The Frontier Project, at our Annual Conference & Expo in Denver as he unlocks the story teller’s secret. You’ll learn how to tell stories that work, how they’re built and discover why they stick. Learn more.