Saturday, December 11, 2010

STORYTELLING By Ravi Patel

STORYTELLING 
Stories have been used to pass along 
knowledge for thousands of years 
Every culture has a history of 
storytelling 
Stories can take many forms - 
Written, Oral, Paintings, 
Architectural. 

STORIES - WHAT ARE 
THEY GOOD FOR? 
Sole and Wilson (2002)*: 
Sharing Knowledge 
Sharing Values 
Developing Trust & Commitment 
Generating Emotional Connection 
* D. Sole and D. G. Wilson, "Storytelling in Organizations: The power and traps of using stories to share knowledge in organizations," Harvard Graduate School of 
Education, 2002.
SHARING KNOWLEDGE 
Stories allow tacit knowledge to be 
shared more easily 
Stories provide context and focus 
A good story will provide laser- 
like focus on issues relevant to the 
listener 
Example: Xerox field engineers 
gathering to swap stories of their 
experiences* 
* J. S. Brown and E. S. Gray, "The People Are the Company " in Fast Company, 1995.
SHARING VALUES 
Stories help convey values, ethics 
and morals 
Example:  Many people equate the 
Boy Scouts to being helpful 
Most have heard the story of a 
Scout helping the old lady 
across the street 
Storytelling can change the 
perception of values by describing 
what future values should be
DEVELOPING TRUST & 
COMMITMENT 
Stories help describe organizational 
competencies and/or commitments. 
Stories can highlight the good (and 
bad) things that people/organizations 
do 
By building trust, you can address 
issues 
Example: The Public Conversations 
Project help people/organizations 
address issues of conflict through 
stories.
GENERATE EMOTIONAL 
CONNECTION 
Stories have the ability to connect 
with our emotions 
Unexpected twists and turns can 
grab a person’s attention and 
generate connection 
Emotional connection can generate 
‘stickiness’ 
Example: Daniel “Rudy” Ruettiger 
is well known by football players 
in the US.   Rudy is small but has 
more ‘heart’ than most.
TACIT TO EXPLICIT: AN 
INTERPLAY SHAPING 
ORGANIZATION 
KNOWLEDGE 
M. BHARDWAJ AND J. MONIN
EXPLICIT KNOWLEDGE 
Explicit knowledge is the ‘know- 
what’ of an organization 
Explicit knowledge is the ‘visible’ 
knowledge 
Explicit knowledge has been 
defined by Polanyi (1967) as: 
knowledge that can be 
communicated using 
formalized language 
M. Polanyi, The Tacit Dimension. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 
1967.
TACIT KNOWLEDGE 
Tacit Knowledge is the ‘know- 
how’ of an organization. 
Tacit Knowledge is the ‘invisible’ 
knowledge 
According to Takeuchi (1998)* tacit 
knowledge is: 
deeply rooted in an 
individuals actions and 
experiences as well as in the 
ideals, values or emotions 
that the person embraces 
* H. Takeuchi, "Beyond knowledge management: lessons from Japan," 1998.
CAPTURING / SHARING 
KNOWLEDGE 
Current technology is perfect for capturing explicit knowledge 
Tacit knowledge must be transformed to explicit knowledge 
Tacit knowledge can be shared using informal social processes 
Through storytelling, tacit knowledge can be embedded in narratives and 
shared
TACIT KNOWLEDGE 
THEMES 
Literature review performed by Bhardwaj & Monin 
suggest four themes in the field: 
Overall tacit knowledge management 
Mobilization of organization tacit knowledge 
Role of tacit knowledge in problem solving 
Tacit knowledge and decision making 
These four themes were used as the basis for research 
by Bhardwaj & Monin
RESEARCH METHOD 
Bhardwaj & Monin interviewed 8 HR Professionals in 
8 different knowledge intensive organizations. 
Interviews were performed using open ended 
questions to encourage the use of narratives by the 
interviewee’s 
The resulting narratives were deconstructed to gather 
information on how the four themes are addressed
RESULTS 
Bhardwaj & Monin found that tacit knowledge 
interacts with six important subsystems of an 
organization. 
These subsystems are: 
Psychological 
Intellectual 
Knowledge 
Functional 
Social 
Cultural
RESULTS 
The management of tacit 
knowledge can be severely 
hampered by individuals 
and attitudes. 
Narcissism and self- 
aggrandizement were 
noticed in the research 
results 
The attitude of top- 
management plays a key 
role in how well tacit 
knowledge is mobilized
FUTURE RESEARCH 
How can an organization reduce the risk of 
dependency on tacit knowledge ‘maintained’ by a 
few employees? 
How can an organization activate tacit knowledge 
that resides within employees for the betterment of 
the organization?
USING MENTORING AND 
STORYTELLING TO 
TRANSFER KNOWLEDGE 
IN THE WORKPLACE 
W. SWAP, D. LEONARD, M. SHIELDS, AND L. ABRAMS
STORYTELLING & 
MENTORING 
We live in a knowledge based 
economy 
Knowledge accrues through 
experience 
Experience is earned by doing and 
takes time 
How can an organization use the 
knowledge of their experienced 
employees to help inexperienced 
employees?
EXPERTISE AND 
KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER 
Expertise is developed through 
learning by doing 
Experts use their long years of 
experience to apply their 
knowledge to problems.   
Many researchers report that 
someone must practice 10 years 
before reaching the ‘expert’ stage 
Experts recognize patterns and can 
easily call on their knowledge for 
that pattern
EXPERTISE AND 
KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER 
The two characteristics of expertise: 
Pattern recognition - patterns are used to know 
when/how to use knowledge. 
10 year rule - to be an ‘expert’, you must practice 
for 10 years (10,000 hours). 
Both characteristics are intrinsic and difficult to share 
explicitly
EXPERTISE AND 
KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER 
Two methods of sharing tacit knowledge (Nonaka & 
Takeuchi - 1995)*: 
1. Internalization - Learning by Doing. Defined as: 
“a process of embodying explicit knowledge into 
tacit knowledge” 
2. Socialization - Learning by Sharing. Defined as “a 
process of sharing experiences and thereby 
creating tacit knowledge” 
* I. Nonaka and H. Takeuchi, The Knowledge-Creating Company: How Japanese Companies Create the Dynamics of Innovation: Oxford University Press, 1995.
METHODS 
Formal teaching methods cannot be used for tacit 
knowledge without first transforming tacit 
knowledge to explicit knowledge 
Informal methods are a better fit for tacit knowledge 
(Nonaka & Takeuchi - 1995) 
Internalization and Socialization can be addressed 
with mentoring and storytelling
MENTORING 
Swap et al. define a 
mentor as “a person 
who draws upon a deep 
knowledge-base to teach 
and guide” 
Mentors serve as 
informal teachers 
The use of mentoring 
has grown significantly 
over the last few 
decades
MENTORING 
Swap et al.’s literature review shows evidence that 
mentoring provides: 
Skills transfer 
Managerial Systems transfer 
Values transfer 
Mentoring has been shown to play a role in building 
up an organization’s capabilities 
Mentoring process provides both the socialization 
and internalization aspect of tacit knowledge transfer
STORYTELLING 
Swap et al. use the term ‘Organizational Story”. 
An organizational story is defined as: 
a narrative of past management actions, 
employee interactions or other events that are 
communicated informally within the 
organization.
STORYTELLING 
Organizational stories are generated internally and 
reflect the organizations values and culture. 
Stories must have context and focus. 
Stories must be memorable to be effective. 
STORYTELLING 
Stories are better used to share values, managerial 
systems and tacit knowledge. 
Stories are not good methods of sharing critical skills 
You wouldn’t want your doctor or pilot learning 
their job by listening to or reading stories 
LEARNING VIA STORIES 
Stories make knowledge more 
memorable via the ‘availability 
heuristic’ 
Swap et al. provide the following 
example: 
Which animal, Grizzly Bear or 
Moose, is more likely to kill a 
hiker?
LEARNING VIA STORIES 
Stories make knowledge more 
memorable via the ‘availability 
heuristic’ 
Swap et al. provide the following 
example: 
Which animal, Grizzly Bear or 
Moose, is more likely to kill a 
hiker? 
Statistically, a hiker is more 
likely to die from a moose than 
a grizzly bear
LEARNING VIA STORIES 
Stories help people remember knowledge via 
elaboration
People remember things easier if they can build a 
vivid image from their own experience. 
Stories can be memorable by being clear or dramatic 
and by providing context that the listener 
understands and relates to.
LEARNING VIA STORIES 
If developed and shared correctly, stories can tap into 
the episodic memory of individuals. 
Episodic memory is memory gained from direct 
experience and is more easily accessed for retrieval. 
If the story and storyteller can create a vivid account 
so that the listener can experience the story, research 
suggests that this will be stored in episodic memory.
SUMMARY 
Organizations can use mentoring and storytelling to 
share values, transfer skills and share tacit 
knowledge 
Calling someone a ‘mentor’ isn’t enough...formal 
mentoring programs must be implemented 
Stories must be memorable, be focused and have 
relevant context to be useful
SUMMARY 
Organizations & Managers must be careful to not 
devalue the concept of ‘water-cooler talk’. 
What may look like gossip to one person may be co- 
workers sharing extremely important organizational 
knowledge through the use of stories

4 comments:

Shantashree Kar said...

Well, Ravi the presentation was really good. i do believe storytelling does help in sharing knowledge and gaining knowledge because it z the experience which comes in form of stories.

ravi said...

think u shantashree...

churchil said...

as usual the presentation which is made by you is always the visual one. The presentation on "STORYTELLING " has forced me to think in the other side of the coin.
the first time i have started think about the stories in the all dimension.
the emotional and the sharing value as well as the knowledge part of the story is really good. After the presentation i have remind all the stories in my mind and really i have found many reality in those.

kapil said...

Awesome visual presentation itself in the form of story presented very well......
loaded with concepts & shared live examples and personal experiences are really valuable for us...
Thank you Ravi.........!!!