Leadership without Silver Bullets

I am currently reading a great book by Phillip Ralph called Leadership without Silver Bullets.  First of all, I love the title because there are no silver bullets with leadership, but rather some very practical models which Phil outlines in his book.

Leadership without silver bullets exposes some of the flaws with traditional leadership and provides details on the 7 spheres of leadership.  Reading the book with a constant eye on how storytelling plays a part in leadership, there were a couple of leadership spheres that stood out, for me.  I want to share with you the one on  ’Manage and Lead Change’.

Phil explains that “Two-thirds of organisational change initiatives fail.  This is a sobering fact for all managers and leaders in organisations.”   He proposes that one significant reason for failure in change initiatives is “what often motivates you does not motivate most of your employees”.  This  resonated with us, as we see it so often with the work we do with leaders, when they are attempting to communicate their new strategy or new change initiative there is often the mistaken assumption that what motivates them will motivate their people.

Often this results in negative stories being used to motivate people to change. The traditional ‘burning platform’.  ‘We need to change because if we don’t we will keep losing market share, we will be a takeover target, we will become irrelevant’, etc, etc’. 

Negative stories serve a purpose and that purpose is to raise awareness of a problem.  What they will not do is change behaviour and get people excited and engaged.  The best you can possibly hope for with a burning platform story or a negative message is begrudging compliance.

What will help leaders get people engaged and excited in the change is positive stories about the future.  But stories that your employees find positive, not that you find positive.  Stories about what you are trying to create and how the organisation and the employees can make a difference…..and here is the other catch, it needs to be how you can make a difference to the customers or the community not to the shareholders.

As Phil states “Well intentioned leaders invest significant time in communicating their change story….many leaders focus their story on the deficit-approach or the burning platform.  While this may appeal to some employees, many are looking for a positive reason to change.”

So to increase your chances of success with your next change, focus on the positives of the change (without denying or covering up the negative aspects).  Focus on what you are trying to create for the customer and actively find and share lots of stories about that throughout the change process………because the organisation changes when the stories change.

Business Storytelling for Leaders – What do you stand for?

Recently we facilitated a storytelling workshop for Accenture in Melbourne when Ann Burns shared this story. The story gave us an insight into some of  her values.  Sharing a story like this (Annette Simmons story expert calls these ‘Who am I Stories’ ) lets people know what you stand for. 

Very powerful in leadership, where people crave to know who you are and what you stand for.   Here is Anne’s story…..

“I grew up in England with two brothers.  One of my brothers was learning to ride a bicycle and every Saturday my father would take him up to a nearby hill and he would pedal down,  while all us kids watched and cheered.  He used to do this with a bike that had training wheels and after many Saturdays of this my father took the training wheels off. 

I was determined to repeat his feat and persuaded my father to let me ride down the hill too, on my bike with no training wheels.  My father very very reluctantly agreed.  I was very excited when we walked to the top of the hill.  I could see my brothers and friends at the bottom of the hill looking on.  I got on to my bike and shot off down the hill and to my shock the bike started hurtling down  the hill faster and faster, almost out of control – I could see the stunned faces of the children waiting below and before the bike hit the ground I hurled myself off onto the grass and rolled down laughing, much to everyone’s shock! 

On that day I learnt two important life lessons.  If someone can do something so can I , and no matter what you are trying in life always have an exit plan.”

Business storytelling for leaders – Interview with Noel Turnbull


Yamini Naidu interviews Noel Turnbull former journalist, public relations consultant and adjunct professor in communications at Melbourne’s RMIT university.

 Yamini Naidu: What is your definition of business storytelling?

Noel Turnbull: I think it’s narrative and making sense of things. I suppose what a story does in a corporate sense is to construct stories about the culture. I think stories construct a narrative that people can relate to but stories construct people themselves as well – their personalities and their lives are really an on going story and whenever you talk to someone you are constructing part of your personality

YN: Where have you seen business leaders use business storytelling well?

NT: James Strong when he was younger and first at TAA used storytelling very well – he used a story about customer service.  The thing that depresses me is that, and this is partly the fault of the public relations industry, there is not a lot of good examples these days of people telling stories, partly because of the way language is debased in its use.  Don Argus is good at storytelling and John McFarlane at ANZ told stories and his successor, who seems to be totally different in personality, is telling different sorts of stories about Asia and opportunities.  John McFarlane was telling stories about discovering yourself and by discovering yourself you will be better at customer service, while Mike Smith is presenting stories about Australia’s engagement with Asia and creating a different narrative for the bank which conveys the strategy as a story.

YN: What did you mean when you said PR people are responsible?

Don Watson is quite right in what he says about the debasement of language, but there have been a lot of people before him, like George Orwell.  I think what happens is business people, scientists, academics get so hung up the jargon that they set out to ‘obscure reality’.  Whenever a PR person, whether inside or outside a company, sits down to write something on change management or financial results they start digging into that obtuse ugly language, instead of telling the story.  I actually think people, when they see or hear that language, can see through it and that it is bs.  I don’t think you have to write in a terribly stylish way but you have to have spare simplicity and colour things with anecdotes.  As the world gets more complicated we lose our sense of anchoring.  Stories help us not only make sense of the world but also teach things – parables are good examples.  Harold Evans of the Sunday Times taught people to do simple headlines with this story.  He told of a man who was going to set up a fish shop and tells a friend ‘I am going to set up a fish shop and want some advice on the sign I need.  I’ve got this terrific idea of a big sign that says ‘Fresh Fish Sold here’.  The friend said are you sure that is the sign you want because you don’t need the word ‘here’ as it is this shop, you don’t need the word ‘fresh’ as you won’t be selling old fish, you don’t have to say ‘sold’ as it is obviously a shop, so all you need on the sign is ‘Fish’.  When you try to teach someone about writing a compact headline and go through all the stuff they need to know it’s very complicated but when you tell them that simple anecdote, you begin to see how you can communicate something simply.

YN: People get storytelling intellectually, it’s works so why the fear? What is holding business leaders back?

NT: I think a couple of things.  Firstly they are frightened of showing a bit of themselves, as when you start telling stories you are inevitably revealing something of yourself and business leaders are taught to be very controlled.  Also while a lot of business leaders are very smart they lead quite isolated lives, they travel at the front of the plane, work out of big offices rarely get on trains and trams so don’t experience the sorts of things that ordinary people do.  There is a wonderful cartoon from Bruce Petty in the 1960’s that illustrates this.  He drew a group of businessmen sitting around in a luxurious club and one of them is smoking a cigar, this is obviously a 60’s type thing.  One of them turns to the other and said ‘I don’t know how we can waste billons of dollars sending a man to the moon when the entire world is crying out for company tax relief’.   If I say CEO’s are out of touch and they say how do you know.  I tell the anecdote of the cartoon and they get it.

YN: When business leaders use storytelling they want to know what success looks like?  How do I know it worked?

NT: Success looks likes two things – when other people start to repeat the stories and when people smile sincerely.   That’s why you tell a story.  It’s much better to tell a story then tell a joke.  How many business leaders you see begin with a joke that some one writes for them.  It’s become axiomatic that you never begin a speech without a joke.  The success is do people enjoy listening to the stories, do they keep it going by repeating it?    Where I worked many years ago a story was told over and over again where one of the managers at one of the plants was giving a talk to the staff about the bleak outlook and tough times, with advice like work harder and smarter and finished with asking for any questions.  One of the staff members said ‘I am surprised you said that as the CEO was reported in last week’s Financial Review as saying we are headed for a record profit’.  That story stayed in the company as an example of, if you are going to share information, be honest as people have other sources of information.

YN: Some final words of advice for business leaders and what are some pitfalls to avoid?

NT: I think the first thing is to make sure the stories are relevant because if they are not relevant they fall down with a terrible great clang.  You need some trusted advisors and trusted counsellors to try them out on.  The second thing is to try them at home – your kids and partner are not a bad judge of whether it’s authentic and makes sense.  Another thing I think is that people should write their stories down.  I know there is a difference between the oral and the written, but writing it down in the simplest way as possible imprints it on the brain better.  Most people can’t tell if something makes sense unless it’s on a piece of paper.  You need to practise it – it’s a bit like acting.  Clive James, in the latest volume of his memoirs talks about the difficulty many people had being spontaneous on his TV show. He remarked on the exception of Joanne Lumly who has always fantastic. As he says: It takes a great actor to be spontaneous.

Interview with Terry Dwyer

Yamini Naidu interviews  Terry Dwyer (Executive General Manager – Organisational effectiveness CPA Australia) on storytelling and leadership.

Yamini Naidu: Terry why did you consider storytelling as part of the leadership development at CPA?
Terry Dwyer: We embarked on a program to build the capability of our leaders particularly our senior leaders because we feel that senior leaders shape the organisation. So storytelling was part of a broader leadership development program. I think that one of the keys to good leadership is communication and that is where storytelling is of real benefit in being able to communicate effectively. There is nothing like some really good examples and when we put our leaders through the training they could see the value in storytelling, in communicating with their teams, in coaching and mentoring.

YN: When you presented storytelling as a development opportunity what was the reaction?
TD: When you first mention storytelling, it isn’t something that figures in the corporate vocabulary so you really need to explain what it is, but once we talked about what organisational storytelling was, the power and the benefits,  people really got it.  As you know we put our senior executives through the storytelling workshop as were looking for a way of adding value for a seasoned group of executives but also adding value to the business. Our executive team got it straight away and thought this is a real opportunity. We also put our general managers through the program.

YN: What are some of the barriers in organisations that stop leaders from using storytelling? Leaders get storytelling intellectually they connect with stories but something stops them from using stories more often?
TD: For many people it is challenging, probably more than those who are natural storytellers. Sometimes it is a confidence thing – thinking is this story really worth telling?  You have to overcome that feeling and I think there is nothing like success. So if you experiment with storytelling and the lights go on with people then you are obviously encouraged to continue doing it.  I think also from my own experience and people I have talked to, it is good to have a number of stories that are top of mind, otherwise it is too easy to revert back to your old style.

YN: What helps leaders with their storytelling?
TD: I think leaders have to buy into the fact that good communication is the key to good leadership.  Quite often when you see ineffective leadership it comes down to poor communication whether lack of or inappropriate communication.  In leadership communication is so important – once leaders buy into this they look for communication methods that resonate.  I also think there is nothing like good role models, so if you experience good storytellers you  think  “I can do that” and start to develop your own stories. The training we did with One Thousand & One was to draw those stories out.  

YN: Where have you seen stories used well?
TD: I have seen senior executives tell stories to large groups of staff when they are wanting to engage people in change or in a new strategic direction.  When you are addressing a diverse group of people storytelling can be really powerful because it can convey strategic thinking in a very practical way.  I have also seen it work in smaller forums;  in small teams or one on one coaching when you are trying to communicate a principle or to encourage someone to think differently.  For me, I find storytelling has quite a broad application.  We often find it  easier to tell stories in our home life or personal life and it is more of a challenge at work.

YN: We often heard about the ‘Chipped mug story’ at CPA, please tell us more
TD: Our former CEO used to tell this story when he was talking to staff about the organisation’s brand strategy. Our three year strategic plan includes positioning CPA as a “premier global brand”. The CEO tells the story about attending an internal event and discarding a cup that he saw had a chip.  The CEO then used this story to explain how being a premier global brand doesn’t just mean getting the strategy or the big things right but also depends on getting the little things right every time. Sometimes you get a story that has a disproportionate  impact on culture and this was definitely one.

An interview with John Stewart

Gabrielle Dolan interviews John Stewart, Chairman of Legal and General, member of the Court of the Bank of England (London) and non executive Director of the Telstra Corporation.  John is also ex CEO of National Australia Bank Group, Barclays Bank and Woolwich.

Gabrielle Dolan: John you are a passionate sailor and sailing was a source for many of your stories, can you talk about that?

John Stewart: I believe not enough leaders understand the power of creating myths or common stories about you.  I am passionate about sailing and at first I resisted these stories but found them a powerful ally.  Too many leaders resist these types of stories when they should be actually feeding them.  There are many reasons why I would use them but one is very practical.  I would often be in a lift at work and would see how uncomfortable some people were.  They were thinking ‘Oh my God I am in the lift with the CEO.’  Once I started using those sailing stories, people would often ask me if I went sailing on the weekend.  I could then have a casual chat with that person…the stories provide a connection to me

GD: How much time do you think a leader should spend communicating with their employees?

JS: I recall that when I first became a CEO I thought that about 20 to 25 percent of my time should be taken up by communication.  I soon started to realise that it was at least 75% of my time and often much more than that.

GD: John you always tend to talk in a language that people understand and seem to avoid corporate jargon.  Do you think that is a lost art?

JS: You know it is very easy to make things complicated in business and I see too many leaders who tend do over-complicate things.  When it comes to communicating complex messages, using corporate jargon is simply lazy.  Communicating complex messages in a way people understand is really hard, using jargon is easy.  It is not until you truly understand something that you then can communicate it in a way everyone understands……and only the very good leaders do that…..When I have to communicate complex messages, I find using a story helps me do that, so I just keep doing it.

GD: When you first arrived in Australia to head up the NAB Group, did you notice any differences with the way Australians do business?

JS: Yes I did.  Australians have a different attitude to risk, their attitude to sport and their attitude around not taking yourself too seriously.  I remember the very first day I arrived in Australia I had to do a press conference. That night there was snippets of my press conference on the news and it was in every major news paper the following day.  The next morning I put on the radio as I expected there may be a bit of talkback about my appointment, considering it was CEO of one of Australia’s biggest companies……but nothing prepared me for what people talked about.  The first caller’s only comment was that ‘surely John Stewart wears a wig’.  The next caller was a woman who disagreed and suggested that he ‘had a fine head of hair’.  Another caller commented that it was ‘definitely a rug’.  I could only laugh at what I was hearing*.

So I think Australians don’t take themselves too seriously and they don’t like their leaders taking themselves too seriously either.  Starting with a self deprecating joke is always a good thing with an Australian audience.

GD: Finally John, throughout our work at the NAB people often refer to you and say ‘John Stewart is a natural storyteller’…are you?

JS: Hmmmm….my best ‘adlibbed’ stories have been practised for hours in front of the mirror.

*Just for the record John has a fine head of hair, which is all his own.

An interview with Andrew Thorburn…

Andrew Thorburn is CEO and Managing Director of Bank of New Zealand and shares his thoughts on leadership, storytelling and listening.

Gabrielle Dolan: Andrew you tend to use a lot of ‘normal language’ when talking, which is both rare and refreshing, do you think it is important?

Andrew Thorburn: I think leaders need to use normal language to connect with their people instead of coming out with all this jargon.  I think you gain respect that way.  We use normal language and story when we are talking with our family and friends and we need to bring that into the workforce.  We need to communicate in a way that is authentic and real.

GD: Why do you think most leaders don’t use normal language?

AT: I see leaders who have no problems challenging decisions and asking the hard questions and making the tough calls but they very rarely are prepared to break the boundaries with the emotional stuff.  Very few leaders are prepared to show vulnerability or humility or admit mistakes.  Stories are a very good way to show a level of vulnerability, they show that you are human.

GD: Do you often use stories to help reinforce your key messages?

AT: Yes because I know through stories that people will connect with my messages and if they connect with them they will remember them.

GD: Andrew you are giving me a look …a ‘that is pretty obvious though and surely everyone does it?’ look.  Can I tell you from what I see most leaders when preparing for closing remarks may take the time to think of their key messages and then simple restate them.    Something along the lines of ‘So the three things I want you to take away are…a, b and c.’.   Very few leaders take this to the next step and think about how they will make people connect with their messages.

AT: I suppose you are right.

GD: Do you see any dangers in leaders using storytelling?

AT: I think the only risk of organisational storytelling not working, is if leaders are not authentic.  I certainly believe people can be trained in the technique but they have to be authentic.  They have to be grounded.  They have to have humility and they have to be prepared to show emotion.  Otherwise it will just come across as scripted and an attempt to manipulate.

GD: What is one of your insights to getting all leaders across the business using storytelling?

AT: I believe that for storytelling to work across any organisation that senior people need to role model it.  Once they role model storytelling, it gives other leaders permission to use it.

An interview with Cindy Batchelor…

Cindy Batchelor is a Managing Director at the National Australia Bank, she shares her personal insights about presenting and the role of storytelling within presentations with Gabrielle Dolan

Gabrielle Dolan: Cindy you have a reputation for being a good presenter, do you have any tips?

Cindy Batchelor: I think the key is to think about what your key messages are and then think about how you are going to make them stick.  As leaders, when we communicate and present we have to be fully aware that people only have the capacity to take in so much…you can’t have ten key messages and expect people to remember them all

GD: And how do you see the role of storytelling when presenting?

CB:  I always think about how I am going to make my messages interesting, and then I think about how storytelling will help me achieve that.  Story is such a powerful tool because it helps people remember your message and often retell it.

When I think back to some of the training I have done and presentations I have sat through, it is the stories that I always remember.

GD: How many stories would you advise people to use?

CB: I don’t use a story for everything.  You don’t need a story for everything, but when presenting I now think a lot about what I want people to remember or take away from my presentation…..I use a story for those messages.

GD: You signed off on the investment to train the top 100 global leaders at nabCapital, what was your thought process?

CB: We give accountability and responsibility to our leaders and when we do that we need to build their skills, confidence and capability.  Our leaders were highly technical, highly effective and highly skilled but there was a gap in the way they engaged with employees.  We knew there was a gap so we had the responsibility to fix it, especially after we had asked them to be responsible and accountable for employee engagement.

In regards to the cost of leadership development, it is pretty simple; people just need to understand that this is an investment not a cost.

GD: Who do you think could benefit from storytelling training?

CB: I truly believe any person in any position can benefit from using storytelling.

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