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Archive for March, 2007

Tell Stories

Posted by Bert Decker   |   March 4th, 2007   |   3 Comments   |  Tweet This

Storytelling Spoke last week in Miami, and the presenter before me started out with a story, followed by another, and another. All linked to points. Brilliant, and so rare in business presentations today. He warmed up the audience, and I was grateful.

"Story" is the S of our SHARP principles, the sure fire way to connect with an audience (including an audience of one.) Story is critical to making your ideas sticky, in the vernacular of Malcolm Gladwell ("Blink") and the great new book just out that takes up where Malcolm left off, "Made To Stick." (Rush out and get it now, don’t wait for our rave review coming next week.)

The Top Ten Reasons stories are useful and powerful:

  • They are real
  • They are short
  • They are interesting
  • They are human
  • They give third party credibility
  • They are easy to tell
  • They are memorable
  • They are emotionally connecting
  • They move people
  • They are the principle communication tool since Man began talking

What Others Say

To be a person is to have a story to tell.
  -Isak Dinesen

The story is more important to me than the part.
   -Catherine Deneuve

Of course it’s the same old story. Truth usually is the same old story.
   -Margaret Thatcher

A compelling story, even if factually inaccurate, can be more emotionally compelling than a dry recitation of the truth.
  – Frank Luntz (Communication Specialist in language – also a political consultant)

Eighty percent of our life is emotion, and only 20 percent is intellect. I am much more interested in how you feel than how you think. I can change how you think, but how you feel is something deeper and stronger, and it’s something that’s inside you.
   - Frank Luntz

THE USE OF STORIES IS A POWERFUL TOOL that aids in material retention, but methodologies of inclusion are rarely discussed. The desire to share emotions and effect the emotional states of others drives us to tell and retell stories. A story is a vector that spreads the information and emotion that is contained within it. No classroom or teacher is needed past the initial storytelling. We have been doing this for years in the form of childrens stories.  It has been widely speculated that the story of Hantzel and Gretel is a cautionary tale used by elders to prevent children from wandering off into the dangers of the European forests alone.

http://coe.sdsu.edu/eet/articles/storyemotions/index.htm

Jesus told stories and parables. He didn’t talk in concepts – he only needed stories, and he riveted peoples attention. Sowing seeds along the path, the rich young ruler, a house built on sand, faith growing like a mustard seed, and dozens more.

Remember, people buy on emotion and justify with fact.

A great resource for getting great at telling stories is Doug Stevenson’s Story Theatre – and it pays as a communicator to get serious about storytelling. Create your communication experience.


Categories: SHARPs and Stories

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Internet Radio Today

Posted by Bert Decker   |   March 2nd, 2007   |   Leave a Comment   |  Tweet This

Today March 2 I’ll be LIVE on Grapevine at 12:15 to 1:15 PST talking about communications. If you’re interested and available check it out:

  • The Behavioral Big Five
  • Avoid sabotaging your Message
  • Avoid PowerPoint Abuse
  • Three biggest mistakes in Communicating
  • Having a Focused Message
  • And how DO you Create Your Communications Experience

And more on "Back Porch" on Internet Radio Grapevine with Bob and Dave…


Categories: Short Bits

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