Organizational storytelling is a detailed narrative
of management actions, employee interactions, and other intraorganizational
events that are communicated informally within the organization (Dalkir 107). It differs from regular storytelling in that
it is storytelling with a business purpose, supported by hard data, and is
authentic and true (Naidu). It is significant
because it is part of the first phase of the knowledge management cycle which
is knowledge capture and stories are excellent for capturing and coding tacit
knowledge (Dalkir 107).
In the context of a library, organizational
storytelling is an “emerging management technique” that can help librarians
“improve their organizations through the power of narrative (Bartlett 1). Stories can be used to teach the corporate
culture, to “navigate the organizational environment” and help people deal with
“workplace anxiety and uncertainty” as well as “entertain and build morale”
(Bartlett 1).
Baker believes that storytelling is
as an effective way to communicate and to enhance organizational communication
and performance. The strengths of
storytelling lie in the fact that all humans are storytellers that send and
receive messages establishing a common ground among the participants and
quickly establish a social relationship (Baker 302). “With
this existing support for the cross-cultural power of storytelling and its
business application, and the critical need for a communication tool addressing
the organizational diversity continuum, it follows that storytelling is a
viable solution to promote cogent communication and assist in the development
of organizational understanding, building stronger employee relationships and
therefore increasing business productivity” (Baker 303). “Storytelling is effective in bringing about
a sense of community—that in which
listeners can easily understand and find common ground with their fellow
listeners” (Baker 306). Baker uses the
following diagram to illustrate the Storytelling Model of Organizational
Communication (Baker 302):
Works
Cited
Baker, Randolph and Kim Gower.“Strategic
Application of Storytelling in Organizations: Toward Effective Communication in
a Diverse World.” Journal of Business Communication, Jul2010, Vol. 47 Issue 3,
p295-312, 18p, 2 Diagrams; found on p302.
Bartlett, Jennifer A.1, jen.bartlett@uky.edu.
"New And Noteworthy: A Natural Fit: Organizational Storytelling In The
Library." Library Leadership & Management 25.4 (2011): 1-3. OmniFile
Full Text Mega (H.W. Wilson). Web. 13 Nov. 2012.
Dalkir, Kimiz.
Knowledge Management in Theory and
Practice. Cambridge: MIT Press,
2011. Print.
Denning, Stephen. "Stories In The
Workplace." Hrmagazine 53.9 (2008): 129-132. OmniFile Full Text
Mega (H.W. Wilson). Web. 13 Nov. 2012.
Fiol, C. Marlene and Elaine
Ramanelli. “Before Identity: The Emergence of New Organizational Forms.” Organization Science 23.3 (2012):
597-611. Print.
Naidu, Yamini.
“Organisational Storytelling with Yamini Naidu.” YouTube. CPAustralia, 3 May 2009. Web. 13 November 2012.