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Dear Reader,
Stories... stories... stories.
Stories in the news, that shape
reality. Stories in books, that
inspire imagination. Stories at
bedtime, that plant new dreams.
Stories in the movies, in gossip
columns, in letters, in songs, in
artifacts, in signposts, in
whispered secrets, in family albums.
Stories shared, insinuated and
hidden. Stories advertised, crafted,
or inadvertently divulged. Can you
imagine your life without stories?
This month we are featuring an
interview with Storytelling expert
Jo Tyler. She shares with us how
storytelling is alive in
organizations and how it can help us
to better understand their strengths
and opportunities.
Enjoy the reading!
(And if stories inspire reflection,
I invite you to visit my new blog
entitled LEGACIES -http://isabelrimanoczy.blogspot.com/
and post comments if you so wish!)
Isabel Rimanoczy
Editor
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Quote of the
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"The most
erroneous stories
are those we think
we know best - and
therefore never
scrutinize or
question."
Stephen Jay Gould
(1941-2002)
American
evolutionary
biologist and
historian of science
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Issue
81 |
The LIM Newsletter |
May 2007 |
Storytelling
An interview with
expert Jo Tyler
LIM News:
What
is storytelling?
JT:
There are quite a few ways to
think about it. In the more
popular use in organizations,
the idea of storytelling is
related to performance, the
stories that are told to the
employees and to the public.
These are stories that plan,
sculpt, and craft. In my first
study, in 2004, I referred to
this sort of storytelling as
strategic storytelling, a
process of connecting stories to
a particular goal that you, as a
practitioner, want to achieve in
the organization. This
interpretation of storytelling
in organizations is perhaps the
most common one. People tell how
they became CEO, how they
founded the company, solved
difficult problems, invented a
new product or process. These
kinds of stories get told in
naturally occurring events like
training classes, or product
launches, on boarding processes
or annual meetings. The stories
are systematically embedded in
these events, often as a sort of
centerpiece.
But there are other
interpretations of storytelling
in organizations. The one I
think the most about has to do
with stories as threads that are
woven into the organizational
fabric. They actually make up
the fabric of the organization.
At the same time, the
organization is constantly
generating more stories; more
threads are entering the loom.
So there is a way in which
stories fabricate or make the
organization, and a way in which
the organization makes stories,
produces them in the course of
producing its goods, information
or services.
I also make a distinction
between the story itself, and
the 'telling the story', by
which I mean the way we narrate
the story. The story is the
story, but it may "get told" in
a variety of ways. Stories have
an energy, a quality of
aliveness, which gets pinned
down, narrowed to one lens, the
lens of our experience, when we
tell it. Storytelling theorist
David Boje talks about
"narrative's prison," the idea
that the story can be trapped in
the way we tell it, blocking off
alternative ways of telling the
story, especially as others hear
the telling of the story and
take action based on their
understanding of it.
When we work and interact with
each other - this creates
stories. We may feel like we
"own" the stories, because we
are a protagonist, but since
these stories have their own
energy, they can work their way
through the organization with or
without us. Stories take on a
life on their own.
LIM News:
Can
you give an example?
JT: Well, we all know how
the grapevine works, right? We
may not want a story to spread
through the organization, but it
does anyway. It can spread like
a wildfire. We might try to
shut it down. We could try
spreading a counter story. We
may want to stop the story, but
sometimes no matter how hard we
try, we cannot. If there is a
story that wants to be told, to
be heard, it operates on and as
an energetic force.
LIM News:
Do we
all have different stories?
JT: Sure. So of course,
we all have different
experiences that we story in
different ways. But we may also
be actors in the same story, we
may share it as it unfolds, yet
tell it in very different ways.
Maybe you tell it as a hopeless
tragedy. Maybe I tell it as a
dark, ironic comedy. We still
share the experience but our
narrations will be very
different. There are as many ways
to narrate as people talking
about it, actually more than
that, since we all have choices
about how we will narrate, what
we will leave in, take out...
LIM News:
This
seems to make communication and
alignment very challenging.
JT: Yes, but also what it
opens is the idea of the
organization discourse as deeper
than what we experience on the
surface, and it opens the idea
of discourse as active. Stories
come from action, are action,
they create action.
Alignment is interesting to me.
I think alignment is a
double-edged sword. Let me talk
about the edge that can hurt,
that can do damage. Stories are
not just told by the people in
the organization. The
organization tells its own
story. It is the story that the
organization wants to tell about
itself to employees, customers,
suppliers, stakeholders of all
sorts. It's the dominant story,
and not all the stories in the
organization - the ones that
come from the people associated
with it - are in alignment with
this dominant story.
LIM News: It
sounds a bit impersonal,
intangible... the "organization
tells, wants..."
JT: There are many
ways for the organization to
speak. Some examples are the
annual report, the vision and
mission statements, the
operating principles, logos.
Even their architecture: the
layout of the physical building,
the website. All these things
are rich with stories. For
example, an alternative energy
organization puts plants in the
lobby, a fountain with fish.
They have set this up to tell a
story connected with their
business, which is all about
sustainable solutions. So they
created a living environment
right there for stakeholders to
see, to educate them, or remind
them. Most corporations have
photos or art in their lobbies,
statues, awards, or other
objects telling their stories,
expressing their values, their
philosophies, their intent.
LIM News:
What
about the difference between the
talk and the walk? It is nice to
hang posters declaring values,
but is this the "true story"?
JT: That is precisely the
point. What are the stories that
are not told, that contradict
the dominant story? What stories
are being silenced, pushed to
the margin? All too frequently,
we hear of organizations whose
espoused values can be very
"green" - like my example of the
firm with the fish in their
lobby - but their practices are
not so clean and green. When the
emergent stories in the
organization gather steam in the
margins, they poke through the
dominant story. Then we read
about those stories in the media
- a whistle blower, a leaked
memo - yet another narration of
these stories. These other
stories that are in the
organization, but pushed to the
margins are what I call the
shadow stories. They can have
tremendous power, in fact more
than the public ones.
LIM News:
Why?
JT: I think there is a
sort of principle of pressure
that the stories obey. Think for
a moment: what happens when we
pressure people to do something
they don't want to do? Over
time, the pressure builds up
resistance, and again, over
time, that resistance can become
energetic itself, and organize.
So you will find that oppressed
people organize - they strike.
When dominant stories are
impenetrable by the emergent
stories that counter it, the
same pressure can build up. The
stories will poke through, and
in that release of pressure the
stories can conspire, inspire,
to shape a new story, the story
of a strike, an overthrow, a
restorying of the dominant
story. They can act against the
best interest of the
organization.... which may be a
very good thing.
LIM News:
That
sounds very provocative. Can you
say more about how going against
the best interest of the
organization can be a very good
thing?
JT: Well, I mean "best
interest" in quotation marks.
When the dominant story of the
organization is contrary to the
greater good, then it's
important to have the dominant
story challenged by the
marginalized stories. We all
have heard stories about good
employers doing community action
that supports the dominant
story. But these same employees
know the organization's
discriminatory practices,
controversial pay practices,
labor practices, environmental
practices. You name it. When
these stories poke through and
become public knowledge, it
forces people to change.
LIM News:
Do you mean that these shadow
stories are like regulation
devices?
JT: Maybe, yes, like the
valve on a pressure cooker. When
it heats up, it's got to
release. But depending how
forceful the dominant story is,
it could corrupt the
thermostatic nature of the
valve, force it to stay closed
for some time. But the more
pressure that builds up, the
more violent will be the release
of energy. Wait a long time, and
it's not a poking through, it's
a blow out. When a shadow story
comes out in to the light, it
invites others to emerge along
with it. They have a way of
organizing and reinforcing each
other.
LIM News:
How is storytelling used in
organizations?
JT: I want to caution
about the term 'use'. It is
associated with making stories
into a tool, a quick fix, and it
opens the door to using stories
to manipulate people in ways
that may not always be in their
best interest, to coerce them.
Of course "using" stories to
persuade is not uncommon. It is
very popular in field sales
organizations for example, where
we train the sales force to tell
a particular story that can
convince the buyers to buy. It
becomes a problem when the
message does not serve the best
interest of the listener.
LIM News:
But if we all tell stories all
the time, when does it become
manipulation?
JT: If I am listening to
a sales person, I know that the
story they tell me has been
shaped to sell me. So I am to a
certain degree prepared,
alerted. But what if I trust the
teller and the story he tells me
is not true, irresponsible?
That, I think, is manipulation.
It has to do with context. When
we are conditioned to believe
the stories we hear on the job,
because believing them lets us
keep our job, which lets us feed
our kids or keeps us off the
streets, the storytelling
becomes manipulation. Whenever
there's a conflict between the
intended affect of the story and
the best interest of the
listeners, well, I think there
are red flags all over.
I try to help organizations see
these red flags. It's different
than telling stories. It has a
lot to do with approaching
storytelling as story-listening.
Organizations can listen to find
their own stories, the organic
stories, often unheard, unseen,
that are emerging in the
organization all the time,
dancing with the dominant story.
Being absorbed into it when
they are aligned and pushed to the
sidelines, unheard, unseen, when
they're not. I want
practitioners, managers,
leaders, to hear those stories,
to hear how they're told, and to
explore why they matter.
LIM News:
What is the value of this?
JT: Language shapes
organizations. If you only hear
and understand the dominant
discourse, the public stories,
you will not be able to
understand why things are
happening in your organization.
You will not notice that there
are stories that are flowing
below the dominant story, in an
undercurrent that is shaping
events in ways you can't see, or
describe, though you will almost
certainly feel them over the
fullness of time.
LIM News:
Organizations are already
chaotic, and people in them try
to organize the natural chaos,
with processes, agreements,
policies, and stories. From what
I understand, you are talking
about bringing more chaos?
JT: Well, I am not at all
convinced that it is really good
to 'organize' the chaos...There
is a way to look at stories as a
means of understanding chaos, of
making meaning from it, learning
how to move with it, instead of
making more chaos, or trying to
deny chaos...
LIM News:
Would it be similar to
implementing an organizational
climate survey?
JT: It works on one
level, as an analogy. When you
begin to listen to shadow
stories, as with a climate
survey, you are initiating an
inquiry and are prepared to find
out things that are not rosy -
and you do it in order to
acknowledge them, to address
them in some way. However,
storytelling is not implemented
through a survey, because
questionnaires tend to be
reductionist and storytelling
seeks to be expansive. You don't
reach the stories through a
survey. You can't.
LIM News:
Can shadow stories be good
sometimes?
JT: Yes. Good stories get
pushed into the shadows by the
dominant story all the time. I
call them shadow stories because
they're in the shadows, not
because they are shadowy in a
negative sense. Sometimes the
public can detest an
organization - everyone can
think of some public or
commercial institution they
think we'd be better off without
- yet inside that organization
there are stories of wonderful
things happening, people
supporting each other, working
creatively (often in opposition
to the dominant story), but
because of their context those
stories don't get told in
public. They persist in the
shadows.
LIM News:
Do negative stories attract more
attention?
JT: Let me ask you, what
is negative, what is positive?
We love the shadows... the media
gives more attention to marginal
stories. Money is made more
easily by telling stories of
suffering. The idea of
Appreciative Inquiry is based on
David Cooperrider's notion that
we are attracted to positive
energy. That we turn our faces
to the sun, but I don't think
it's the whole truth. We love
the sun, but we also love
looking under the beds, into the
closet... that's why we go to
scary movies. And if the untold
stories feel negative, but can
in an ironic twist help to shed
light on new solutions, are they
really bad?
LIM News:
Are you saying that there are no
such things as bad stories?
JT: I think that
"un-manipulated" stories are
always good, because they always
reveal something. They are
always a catalyst for meaning
making, even if we don't like
the meaning. They help us
understand what's going on. Of
course, there there are stories
that make us angry or sad, but
they are as good for us as those
that make us happy. Any story
can catalyze action, or shift
it, or affirm it.
LIM News:
Taking about manipulation, I
recall one mediation session
I attended at
Harvard Law School, where they divided us
into two groups. One was the
Executive Team and one was a
group of young employees. The
Executive Team talked about the
young employees' ideas as
"clueless, inexperienced,
subversive" and the young
employees group referred to the
executive group as "old
fashioned, Jurassic, outmoded".
The words we used to refer to
each other made dialogue
impossible. So the facilitator
asked us to change the wording
to less judgmental terms. If I
understand you, this would
qualify for manipulation?
JT: Well, not in the way
I was talking about it earlier,
because in this case the
facilitation was openly
expressed, disclosing the
intent. You have choice, and you
know the consequences of the
experiment. And there is in what
you say here the important
variable I mentioned earlier of
intention. You're choosing
language to open dialogue, not
to press another into servitude
or oppress them in some other
way. But I like the example. It
demonstrates an aspect of what I
referred to earlier as narrative
prisons, a concept from David
Boje's work: Once we tell a
story in one way, it conditions
how others and we will respond,
we live it out, we react. Change
the language, as your
facilitator invites you to do
experimentally - and the story
will change, the way it gets
lived out will change. One value
of storytelling - of exchanging
stories, listening to them - is
precisely that it allows us to
discover that there is another
way to tell it. We can change
the choices we make, choose new
words, imply new meanings, and
when I reframe the story, I need
to know what I'm doing. Those
are my choices. But I still
can't choose how the listener
hears my story. I can only
increase the odds that my
meaning will be misunderstood.
LIM News:
If storytelling is not a
tool, how do you use it?
JT: We teach people
how to pay attention, how to
notice stories, to compare
different stories, find where
the gaps are. This helps
individuals understand what is
already happening. Then they can
start to think about it, make
choices, perhaps choices that
will restory the organization.
For example, we will give them
instructions to go out into the
organization with the sole
purpose of listening for
stories, seeking them, noticing
them. Not to interpret, not to
fix or judge. Just notice.
LIM News:
Who are the people that would go
out?
JT: It's great to send
out intact teams, folks working
at the strategic level of an
organization, the "C-level"
people, or their direct reports,
who are interested in broadening
their perspective of the
organization, understanding it
more deeply. They go out and
talk to people, asking
questions. They notice the
stories in the architecture, the
layout of the offices and
cubicles, the equipment on the
shop floor. They notice the
artwork. In one organization
someone came back with a story
about the carpets, how the
pattern indicated where
individuals could and could not
go. When everyone comes back
from this sort of expedition,
they begin by sharing some of
the stories they experienced.
LIM News:
How candid are the employees
when the managers are asking
questions?
JT: It depends on the
organization, the context and
the person. It's not always easy
work. Stories can be elusive. If
they have been pushed to the
margins, they don't just waltz
out in front of a person who is
perceived as an oppressor. You
need to learn how to discover,
to hear them. We talk about the
need to create spaces where
stories can be told safely,
without further oppression or
negative consequence. Also, we
go out and seek stories, as
outsiders. We can often hear
stories that insiders wouldn't
be able to elicit, or wouldn't
be able to hear for other
reasons.
LIM News:
What do you do with the
collected stories?
JT: They come back and
share the stories they have
found. We help them explore the
meaning, the gaps, what the
stories tell about what is
working and what is not, where
there are tensions. We want to
find where there is tension and
synergy. As they listen to each
other's experiences, to the
stories they encountered, there
can be a lot of surprise that so
many different stories can
emerge from the same place, and
how different they are from the
stories they expected, the ones
they knew before they went out
to listen. After the
astonishment of the variety,
they may be intrigued,
disturbed, excited. They begin
to move to task, to get ready to
explore where there are
opportunities and possibilities,
to consider what they want to do
about what they've heard and
begun to understand.
LIM News:
How does culture impact
storytelling? Are there some
types of organizational cultures
that are more enthusiastic,
resistant, are there differences
between Hispanics, Europeans,
Asians, Americans?
JT: I haven't seen much
research on the impact of
culture on storytelling in
organizational settings. If
people know of some, I'd be
mighty interested. Of course we
know that national, regional,
and local cultures and
ideologies impact organizations,
so my going in assumption would
be that it would likewise affect
the stories that comprise the
organization and that are
produced by it. It would affect
the dominant stories, the
emergent stories, and the way
that those stories get told.
When I was working in China some
years ago, I noticed that people
don't tell stories about
themselves. They don't feature
themselves as a central
protagonist. In America, people
like to talk about themselves,
and it is sometimes even
difficult to have them talk
about a group, or about social
dependencies. But a production
worker in China will talk
immediately about his
colleagues. The story that he
chooses to tell of his work, is
a cooperative story. It's a
we-story, not an I-story. I just
have anecdotes, things that I've
noticed, nothing that is
conclusive evidence. We could
use more research here to
understand what differences
exist.
LIM News: If our readers
would like to use storytelling,
what would it be best for?
JT: The most important
thing, I think, is to learn to
listen to the stories people
have to share. Line managers,
HRD professionals, CEOs,
everyone needs to learn to
listen more. Differently. Really
listening, not judging, not to
suggest a dissenting opinion or
even to respond at all. That is
where it starts. Figure out what
environments you can structure
so people can be honest. Then
begin to notice gaps,
opportunities that you had not
seen - about how work happens,
things that could be better,
easier, disturbing things that
you've maybe ignored or hoped
would go away, but that are
there anyway. Things will begin
to become clearer. When you see
them, you have the opportunity
to do some repair, make
reparations if you will, make
the organization healthier, more
effective, in the interest of
both the organization and the
people who comprise it.
LIM News: What are some
risks/dangers, things to pay
attention to when using
storytelling?
JT: The big risk is not
about storytelling. The big risk
is about silencing the stories.
Getting them and burying them,
or never getting them at all.
LIM
News: If our readers would
like to try it out, what would
you recommend/ what advice do you have?
JT: Well, I'd say to
start. Bravely listen. Bravely
tell. Be honest. Have courage.
Connect your heart with the
stories. Be ready to be amazed.

Jo A. Tyler Ed.D.
Jo Tyler is Assistant Professor
at Penn State University. Her
primary research focus is
organizational storytelling, and
with Dr. David Boje and others,
she is a co-founder of the
Storytelling Organization
Institute (STORI),
focused on the exploration of
organizational storytelling in
research and practice. She can
be reached at
jat235@psu.edu.
For more information on STORI,
the Storytelling Organization
Institute, see
http://www.storyemergence.org/
For more information on David
Boje's concept of narrative's
prison mentioned above, see
http://business.nmsu.edu/~dboje/690/papers/Story%20is%20Beyond%20Narrative%20Aug%2024%2005%20Boje.pdf
For additional reading on how
stories can provide insight into
your organization, consider:
Boje, D. (2001). Narrative
methods for organizational and
communication research.
Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications
Czarniawska, B. (2004).
Narratives in social science
research. Thousand Oaks:
Sage Publications
Gabriel, Y. (2000). Storytelling
in Organizations: Facts,
fictions and fantasies.
Oxford: Oxford University Press. |
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LEADERSHIP IN
INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT
© 2007 LIM. All Rights Reserved.
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