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Whoever Tells the Best Story Wins: How to Use Your Own Stories to Communicate with Power and Impact: How to Find, Develop, and Deliver Stories to Communicate with Power and Impact
 
 

Whoever Tells the Best Story Wins: How to Use Your Own Stories to Communicate with Power and Impact: How to Find, Develop, and Deliver Stories to Communicate with Power and Impact [Kindle Edition]

Annette Simmons
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Review

."..strongly recommend this book to adult educators of all types. Although it targets trainers, the concepts and techniques...can be applied in many settings." - Adult Learning Magazine

Product Description

Story telling is a powerful communications tool that is becoming more and more recognized in the business community. These stories are not the usual speech openers or ice breakers, but stories that will influence others to trust the storyteller and shape decisions and actions that are important to both individuals and organizations. As the author explains, we've been conditioned to believe that business communication should be clear, rational, objective, with no place for emotion or subjective thinking. Not true. The most powerful, persuasive communication has a human element: "Communication can't feel genuine without the distinctive personality of a human being to provide context. You need to show up when you communicate - the real you, not the idealized you.The missing ingredient in most failed communication is humanity. This is an easy fix. In order to blend humanity into every communication you send, all you have to do is tell more stories and bingo - you just showed up." This book teaches readers how to tell six kinds of stories. Part 1 explains how to shift from normal "business thinking" to story thinking.
Part 2 describes the six types of story, and walks readers through the process of finding their own inspiring stories. Part 3 outlines five practical principles that maximize story as a tool to understand as well as persuade. Readers can also make journal entries to capture and develop story ideas. The book is - naturally - full of inspiring stories (some very funny). The style is lively and personal, yet eloquent and sophisticated.

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 1393 KB
  • Print Length: 241 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0814409148
  • Publisher: AMACOM; 1 edition (16 May 2007)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B0015KL2EM
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #138,757 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Annette Simmons
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
30 of 31 people found the following review helpful
By Robert Morris TOP 100 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
I am among those who have praised Annette Simons' previously published The Story Factor and are thus delighted that she has written this book in which she develops in much greater depth many of the same core concepts of the earlier work, one in which she rigorously examines the basic components of effective storytelling when explaining what a story is and what it can do that facts alone cannot. She suggests how to tell "a good story," in process explaining the psychology of an effective story's influence. She offers excellent advice on how to influence the unwilling, the unconcerned, and the unmotivated. Simmons also devotes an entire chapter to "Storylistening as a Tool of Influence," then in the next chapter identifies a number of storyteller Dos and Don'ts. Simmons concludes her book with insights that have their greatest value only if considered within the context created for each in previous chapters.

In this volume, she explains "how to use your own stories to communicate with power impact" and I commend her on the informal, almost conversational tone she establishes and then sustains throughout her narrative. Her focus is on what each of her readers can contribute to all manner of communications with others. Hence the effectiveness of her direct, one-on-one rapport with those for whom she wrote this lively and entertaining as well as informative book.

Appropriately, she shares a number of "stories" from her own life and career when illustrating various key points. For example, in Chapter10, she recalls a situation in which she was meeting with a group of international women in Europe only 10% of whom were from the U.S. When explaining how to be a more effective leader, she used a "I know what you are thinking story" to illustrate her key points. She recalled her need to "feel special" (i.e. to be admired, respected, and especially to be accepted) in school, college, and then as she began her career. Only later when she studied group process did she realize that "groups have patterns, and if you can predict the patterns of the group you can be in the right place at the right time. That sort of knowledge is power. I also learned about how ruthless groups can be to members who are innovative (deviant) or perceived as weak." This is but one of several examples - drawn from Simmons' own life and career - that illustrate how a personal story well-told can establish and then sustain a rapport, especially with those in an audience who may otherwise consider your point of view as dangerous, foolish, or simply not worth it. "Demonstrate how deeply you understand their objections by telling a story that validates them."

In Part Two, Simmons explains how to find and then formulate stories. She includes a series of exercises for her reader to complete...and do so within the spaces provided in the book. She introduces each exercise with brief comments and suggestions before the reader records her or his own thoughts, feelings, and experience when formulating various kinds of stories such as those that explain "Who-I-Am"(Chapter 5) and "Why-I-Am-Here" (Chapter 6). In Chapters 7-10, she then helps her readers to organize material for "Teaching Stories," "Vision Stories," "Value-in-Action Stories," and the aforementioned "I-Know-What-You-Are-Thinking Stories." Although Simmons' approach is systematic and comprehensive, I want to emphasize again the effectiveness of the personal tone of her narrative. Many readers will feel as if they are engaged in an extended conversation with her and, as they complete various exercises, interact with her as well as with the specific suggestions she offers.

In the "Call to Action" that concludes her book, she asserts that "every problem in the world can be addressed - solved, made bearable, even eliminated - with better storytelling. At first, initially this statement seemed somewhat hyperbolic to me and then I realized that some of the most influential leaders throughout human history (e.g. Jesus, Abraham Lincoln, Winston Churchill, Mohandas Gandhi, and Martin Luther King, Jr.) were master storytellers who anchored their most important ideas within a human context "to communicate with power and impact."

Few (if any) of us are worthy of being included among them but we can at least improve the skills we need to be much more effective when clarifying and then sharing with others our own thoughts, feelings, and experiences. That is why Annette Simmons wrote this book...and that is why I think so highly of it.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
By C. R. Downing TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
I cannot really write a better review than Robert Morris has. But I wanted to say how good the book is. I've also used the previous book as this reviewer has. And I've used it to create (what I thought were) some pretty well recieved presentations. All Annette's points work extremely well so if you think you've finished your presentation skills development, this book could kick you up to the next level. If you've ever wondered why great public speakers seem to do things just right, this book could offer up some huge insights for you. You may think people buy from you, agree with you because of the great factual message you give - but it's so much more than that. You really need to connect and storytelling helps you do that like nothing else. Most conference keynote speaches are stories, most motivational talks are stories, the best presentations by leading politicians are nearly always stories. There are plenty of examples out there every day if you are observant. This book will help you understand all the issues and push you up to a new level of communication impact.

I'd also point you to the best book I ever found for creating presentions for Director Level audiences. You won't go far wrong with this classic written about 20 years ago. Read both books, apply what you read, and you'll be one of the best. Powerspeak: Engage, Inspire and Stimulate Your Audience
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
By LarsDK
Format:Hardcover
I was very disappointed in this book. Having bought it for the specific reason
of learning something about using storytelling in a sales/persuasion context I was
I quickly found that there was very little to learn or gain from it.

The book launches itself as a guide for professionals wanting to use stories in a
business or organization context, but as another reviewer points out, the author quickly
makes the disclaimer that storytelling cannot really be told, being too subjective and
ambigious an art form.

This is the root problem of the book. One hand the author sets out to give us some
tools on storytelling on the other hand, she doesn't really believe this is possible,
the result is a bunch of concepts and a methodology that is unclear and confusing
and a lot of story examples that doesn't seem to be examples of what she claims they are.

Perhaps this book is for the more emotionally or "subjective" (a pet word of the author's)
inclinded, in need of a bit of inspiration. People looking for useful and practical advice
should look elsewhere.
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Popular Highlights

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&quote;
Story is a reimagined experience narrated with enough detail and feeling to cause your listeners' imaginations to experience it as real. &quote;
Highlighted by 120 Kindle users
&quote;
i. A time you shined 2. A time you blew it 3. A mentor 4. A book, movie, or current event &quote;
Highlighted by 77 Kindle users
&quote;
Subjective point of view changes meaning. Meaning is more powerful than facts. If people fear the meaning of your facts they can easily distort, discredit, or ignore them. Likewise, if they like the meaning (subjectively) of your facts, they embrace, use, and even embellish your facts. Actions result from the stories people tell themselves about what objective facts mean to them. &quote;
Highlighted by 72 Kindle users

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