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Tell the Story of Where You Are Going

March 19, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Where do you see yourself in five years?  That’s a classic interview questionStories at Work. But it’s a question that nonprofit organizations should ask themselves too–and the answer should be a story.

Not just a number. Saying “We’re going to serve 25% more people” is fine, but it says nothing about how you’re going to reach that objective.

Not just a statement. Saying “We’re going to offer art education to every student in our neighborhood” is inspiring,” but without a vision of how to get there, it may remain empty words.

Telling the Where Are We Going Story (as Andy Goodman of the Goodman Center calls it) is a way to share your vision, inspire your people, and make them all the heroes of the story. It’s the only way of describing the future that helps create it, too.

Where Are We Going?

I can think of two different ways of telling the story of what will happen if your organization succeeds. One is what the world will look like at the end. The other is the travelogue of how you intend to get there.

Take the statement we made above: “We’re going to offer art education to every student in our neighborhood.”

Story #1: Five years from now, a mom walks into our center. By her side a small boy stands, fidgeting, not meeting our eyes. “My son draws all the time, and he’s good,” Mom says. “But no one ever taught him how to get better.”

“We will,” you say. “Sign up right here. Son, do you draw with pencils, crayons, or computers?”

Story #2: Tomorrow, we’re cleaning up that classroom. Next week, we’re hiring an art teacher. He gets a budget to go buy supplies. In the mean time, we’re going to put the word out with flyers, email, and social media, in English, Spanish, and Chinese, that we have an art program for children who live in this neighborhood.

This year, we’ll arrange with the museum for free field trips. We’ll take children’s artwork and tell their stories to local businesses and raise money for the program. We’ll expand. In five years, everybody will know about it, and we’ll have enough teachers, supplies, and space to serve everyone who wants it. (That’s where Story #1 begins!)

 

Storytelling around the fire

Businesses Use Storytelling Too

“We’ve never had a policy manual. The way we pass along our values is to sit around the campfire and share stories.”

That’s the CEO of a $1.3 billion company talking.

Elizabeth Weil, in Fast Company magazine, interviewed many business leaders about the power of storytelling. The Where We Are Going story is a basic tool of corporate leadership.

“Leadership is about change,” says Noel M. Tichy, a professor at the University of Michigan Business School and the coauthor of The Leadership Engine (HarperBusiness, 1997). “It’s about taking people from where they are now to where they need to be. The best way to get people to venture into unknown terrain is to make it desirable by taking them there in their imaginations.”

In other words, by telling them stories.

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Lead Your Organization by Telling a Story

March 13, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

tug of war

Get your people pulling in the same direction

Here’s a problem leaders face every day. You want to get something done. It will take everyone in your organization to do it.

How will you get them pulling in the same direction?

You could go around and have a heart-to-heart with each person in the organization. You could explain in detail the role each person should play and how they are supposed to do it.

That might work…if you have three people in your organization. In a larger group, you’d be spending a huge amount of time and you still wouldn’t know whether or not your people “get it” until you saw them in action.

You’d also be accused of “micro-management”—and your accusers would be right. Why tell other people how to do their jobs, which is something they might already know better than you do?

You don’t need to tell them how to do it. You need to make sure they know what needs to be done. And the best way to do that just might be through telling a story.

Find out how:

http://www.trippbraden.com/2015/03/13/who-is-the-hero-of-the-story/

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Would Martin Luther King Use Social Media?

January 19, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Happy Martin Luther King Day to all my readers in the United States, and everywhere the legacy of nonviolent social movements is alive today.

MLK at mike

Dr. King knew how to communicate, connect

Tripp Braden writes:

 

I got into a conversation with an older friend who knew Dr. King.  He asked me how different the Civil Rights movement would have been if it happened today in such a divided country.

 

I shared that I can only imagine how Dr. King would have leveraged today’s technologies and social media to make change happen even more quickly. After all, Dr. King knew the power of connection long before the rest of us even imagined it.

 

– See more at: http://www.trippbraden.com/2015/01/19/connect-like-dr-king-jr/#sthash.zjOHFTN5.ERBdZMb7.dpuf

 

Please join Tripp and me for a webinar on No Nonsense Social Media this Wednesday at 2:00 p.m. EST. We may not all be powerful orators like Dr. King, but we can all follow his example and build relationships that contribute to a better society. Sign up today!

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