Best story wins Storytelling for business success

Mark Edwards

Book - 2024

"Whether you're standing up in front of a crowd at a conference or chatting with a colleague in an elevator, storytelling is the most effective way to get your point across. It works in ninety-second Superbowl television spots, it works in ten-second social media formats, and it works in that email you have to fire off in five seconds flat. Why? The short answer is that people don't make decisions based on logic. They make decisions based on emotions. To persuade, influence, and inspire, you need to make an emotional connection. And storytelling is the best way of doing that. Journalist-turned-business coach Mark Edwards has developed his own methodology for telling compelling stories at work. Best Story Wins shows how storyt...elling will make better communicators of us all"--Book jacket.

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658.45/Edwards
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf 658.45/Edwards (NEW SHELF) Due Sep 29, 2024
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : The Economist, an imprint of Pegasus Books, Ltd 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Mark Edwards (author)
Edition
First Pegasus Books cloth edition
Physical Description
248 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781639366446
  • Introduction: The power of storytelling
  • 1. Why storytelling works
  • 2. What is a story?
  • 3. Storytelling at work
  • 4. What gets in the way of good storytelling?
  • 5. How to create great stones at work
  • 6. Storytelling with data
  • 7. The storyteller's mindset
  • 8. The emotional journey
  • 9. The writing process
  • 10. The stories you need to know
  • Epilogue
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Whether presenting at a conference or "firing off a quick email," spinning narratives is key to business success, according to this intermittently useful guide. Life coach Edwards (The Tao of Bowie) argues that attempts to persuade colleagues and associates using reason often fail because they prompt counterarguments and, if perceived as coercive, can motivate listeners to reassert their autonomy by rejecting the idea. By comparison, storytelling constitutes a more subtle way to get one's point across. A six-step process for crafting effective narratives encourages readers to establish a connection with one's audience, identify a desirable goal, detail obstacles to achieving that goal, explain why one's proposal is the best solution, and describe how the solution will transform lives. Though Edwards aims to make the advice broadly applicable, the examples focus on presenting to business associates and will be most helpful for those pitching potential investors, rather than, for example, marketing to consumers. Edwards sometimes resorts to dubious reasoning, as when he suggests without evidence that the power of stories derives from invoking nostalgia for childhood story time. Still, there are some solid tips recommending that readers structure stories as a "hero's journey," with the audience positioned as the hero, and useful warnings that ginning up narrative mystery may work in movies but is merely "annoying" in corporate settings. This will help readers nail their next work presentation. (June)

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