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USING STORIES TO CHANGE ORGANISATIONS

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Title: USING STORIES TO CHANGE ORGANISATIONS


1
USING STORIES TO CHANGE ORGANISATIONS
Paul Bate
Professor of Health Services Management UCL
Medical School
2
Stories hold many of the keys to change (1)
  • First get peoples attention and then their
    intention Put down that monkey wrench! the
    inciting incident
  • Grounded in everyday lived experience the
    being there/been there quality (cf. Ben Watt)
  • Able to communicate abstract, intangible and
    complex ideas simply, concretely and meaningfully
    (love, honour, letting go, pain, loss
    leadership)
  • Unfreeze, energise and mobilise springboard
    stories (Denning) melting the frozen fires
    within us (Whyte)
  • Makes sense in the head the importance of
    framing and frame alignment
  • Resonates in the heart tapping in to sentiment
    pools
  • Communicates a sense of a better place the pull
    of desire aspirationals desire is the blood
    of a story

3
Stories hold many of the keys to change (2)
  • Truth value v Fact value the dramatisation
    of reality porkies with a purpose!
  • Intensify awareness of the present seeing it as
    it is the nowness of the now (Potter)
  • Suggest an attractive imaginary future escapism
    and reverie
  • Establish personal credibility, integrity and
    humanity, and disable antagonism
  • Stories are how we communicate and remember key
    to spread and sustainabiltiy

4
NHS Treatment Centres
Here today gone tomorrow?
Derek Smith CEO - Hammersmith Hospitals NHS Trust
5
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6
FRAMES PERFORM 3 CORE FUNCTIONS
  • They focus attention by specifying what
  • is in frame and what is out of frame
  • They articulate and elaborate the
  • elements of the scene so that one meaning
    rather than another is conveyed
  • They transform the way in which some objects of
    attention are seen or understood as relating to
    each other
  • (Dave Snow, 2004)

7
3 CORE FRAMING TASKS
(1) Diagnostic Framing Diagnosis of some
event or aspect of life as
troublesome and in need of repair or change
(problematization), and attributes
blame or responsibility
(attribution) (2) Prognostic Framing
Articulation of a proposed solution to the
problem, a strategy or plan of attack,
and the tactics for carrying it
out (3) Motivational Framing Articulation
of a call to arms or rationale for engaging
in collection action addresses the
free-rider problem
8
Different kinds of CorporateTales
  • The realist tale
  • The impressionist tale
  • The uplifting tale
  • The confessional tale
  • (John Van Maanen Tales of the Field, 1988)

9
Uplifting Tales the NHS authentic voices
project
  • Hazel Stuteley Rebirth of a
    community on a West

  • Cornwall housing estate
  • Sean OKelly The
    Modernisation Associates story
  • David Shiers A personal
    narrative on early
  • Maryanne Freer psychosis
    in young people
  • Angela Lennox Rejuvenation of
    St Matthews

  • Estate, Leicester
  • Sarah Schofield Transformation
    of orthopaedic

  • services in primary and secondary

  • care in Hampshire

10
Stories are the key to cultural change
  • If you want to change the way people think,
    start by changing the way they talk. Encourage
    them to devise new scripts and participate in new
    language games. Shape intellectual and symbolic
    structures by giving people new topics of
    conversation to debate, gossip and fight about
    give them new stories to tell and retell each
    other. The theory of change is therefore actually
    quite a simple one if you can unfreeze and
    restructure language you can unfreeze and
    restructure thought Stories and storytelling
    are a crucial aspect of organisational life the
    narrative to tie experiences, views and
    interpretations together, something that has
    sequence, logic, flow and direction, that
    represents a coherent version of the emerging
    reality. (Bate, 1994)

11
Stories and cultural change
  • Stories are not a symptom of culture, culture
    is a symptom of storytelling.
  • (Weick and Browning,
    1986 249)

12
Storytelling to build community and effect
cultural change
  • Change as a journey
  • Pettigrews Pioneers
  • Bates Pilgrims

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16
Stories play a crucial role at every stage of the
change journey from conception to implementation
  • Building personal awareness and understanding,
    and finding a place for oneself on the change
    journey (personal narrative)
  • Becoming aware of alternative perspectives and
    overlapping values, aims and purposes merging
    personal and collective identities and building a
    community of practice (communal narrative)
  • Critiquing and stigmatising the present, and
    building a shared felt need and vision for
    change (counter-narrative)
  • Translating joint commitments into joint actions
    moving forward together, and, most importantly,
    keeping going (mobilising narrative)

17
The dramatisation of change
  • Scripting
  • Staging
  • Performing
  • Interpreting

18
  • All great change leaders are great storytellers
  • Luther King
  • Kennedy
  • Berwick
  • Halligan
  • Sadler

19
References Bate, S. P. (2004), The role of
stories and storytelling in organisational change
efforts, Intervention. Journal of Culture,
Organisation and Management, 1(1), pp. 27-43.
Conger, J. A. (1998), The necessary art of
persuasion, Harvard Business Review, May,
reprint number 98304. Denning, S. (2004),
Telling tales, Harvard Business Review, May,
pp. 1-7. Hunt, S. A., Benford, R. D. (1997),
Dramaturgy and methodology, In G Miller R.
Dingwall (eds.) Context and methodology in
qualitative research. McKee, R. (2003),
Storytelling that moves people. A conversation
with a screenwriting coach, Harvard Business
Review, June, pp. 51-55. Watt, B. (1996),
Patient, the true story of a rare illness,
London Viking.
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