Note:
Story-telling is the diametric opposite of  tech writing
 
 
“He who writes in blood  and aphorisms does not want to be read, he wants 
to be learned by  heart.”

“Of all that is written, I love only what a person  has written with his 
own blood"
Nietzsche
 
 
What may be added to the advice below is that good writing depends upon  
feelings,
upon passion for a subject. The problem is that in academia and business,  
passion
and feeling, with VERY few exceptions, are no more  welcome than  the 
bubonic plague.
Regardless, the rule is inviolate, unless you write with passion,  
conviction, feelings
that come across clearly, in a word, with fire and spirit, the chances of  
communicating
much of anything are small.  In the tech world, of course, and in hard  
science, economics, or demographics, even a drop of emotion spoils the whole 
pot  of porridge. And this is essential in that kind of world. You have to 
keep such  things clearly in mind. But otherwise, if you are writing for any 
kind of  market, if you don't write with emotion 
you cannot get your point across. People respond to fire, not ice.
 
BR
 
------------------------------------
 
 
 
 
 
 
Why Leaders Are Great Storytellers

 
 (http://www.entrepreneur.com/author/denise-brosseau) 
BY _Denise  Brosseau_ (http://www.entrepreneur.com/author/denise-brosseau) 



Read more: http://www.entrepreneur.com
 
 
 

 
People  of all ages, backgrounds and traditions respond to great stories. 
That's the  secret behind the enduring power of myths, legends and 
scriptures. We see  ourselves in stories. We empathize with the heroes and 
enjoy 
rooting against the  villains. We learn to believe when we observe others' 
successes, and we overcome  doubt when we watch others conquer their obstacles.

Stories are the way  we learn.

As you think about your own experiences, those of your team,  and those of 
the people who lives you have influenced, think about what stories  you 
could share that will engage and empower and enrich the lives of others.  Great 
storytellers simplify complex information, engage with metaphors, channel  
universal wisdom, help us understand the potential impact of our efforts, are 
 willing to be vulnerable and adhere to journalistic  principles.

Uncomplexify. Avinash Kaushik, author,  speaker and digital marketing 
evangelist at Google credits his success (which  includes more than 200,000 
followers on Google+) to his ability to simplify (or  as he calls it 
"uncomplexify") highly complex information on topics like web  analytics and 
digital 
marketing into very simple, clear language. He writes in  his blog, "Occam's 
Razor," which has more than 100,000 followers, at the fifth  grade level (and 
even uses a web tool to double check), yet it attracts Fortune  10 chief 
marketing officers and beginners alike. He recommends others to follow  his 
lead. Uncomplexifying is not the same as dumbing down - it is simply making  
the information you are sharing easier for your followers to  understand.
Ask yourself: How can you simplify your own message? 






 
Engage with metaphors. Robin Chase, the cofounder and former  chief 
executive officer of Zipcar, has built a global following based on her  ideas 
on 
sustainability and reducing carbon dioxide emissions through  peer-to-peer 
networks. She told me, "I constantly pay attention to whether what  I'm saying 
makes sense or not. I'm listening as well as I'm telling. I am a  collector 
of metaphors, always looking for what makes sense for people. I am  
constantly seeking what resonates with people in terms of the story I'm  
telling." 
For example, in a Huffington Post blog post entitled "Fossil Fuel is  the New 
Slavery: Morally and Economically Corrupt," Chase uses a metaphor  
(slavery)that not only captures people's attention but gets them to reexamine  
their 
preconceived notions.
Ask yourself: What metaphors best explain and  engage others with your 
ideas?

Channel universal  wisdom. Chip Conley, the founder and former chief 
executive of Joie de  Vivre Hospitality, grew his company into the 
second-largest 
boutique hotel group  in America. Along the way he wrote four books about 
his experiences. He told me,  "When I woke up early to write, I often felt 
that something was coming through  me. I believe that being a thought leader 
is, in some ways, learning how to be a  vessel for the great, channeled wisdom 
that's out there. That somehow it needs  to channel through you." He 
experiences this even more often when he's speaking  than when he's writing.
Ask yourself: How can you channel the work's  wisdom to your audiences? 
Help others see the impact. Every year I attend a fundraiser  for my 
favorite local organization, Fresh Lifelines for Youth, which helps kids  stay 
out 
of jail by offering them legal education, leadership training and  
one-on-one mentoring. At every event, chief executive officer Christa Gannon 
and  
her team do an excellent job telling stories of the kids who escaped gangs, 
went  back to school, and turned their lives around as a result of 
participating in  FLY's programs. By the end of the breakfast, every attendee 
pulls out 
a  checkbook - and a big pile of Kleenex. FLY knows that to engage 
attendees to  donate, they need to see a real kid, not a faceless stranger; 
they 
need to know  that they are having an impact on real lives. If the personal 
connection is not  possible, stories are the next best thing.
Ask yourself: Who are the  people whose lives you're impacting? How can you 
engage by telling their  stories? 

Be willing to be vulnerable. In 2011, I  was invited to speak about women's 
entrepreneurship at a major women's  conference. I was on the stage with 
two business-owners turned coauthors and a  famous swimsuit-model turned 
successful entrepreneur. I had lots of great  resources to share but as I 
listened to the other speakers I realized that if I  wanted to stand out, I 
needed 
to rethink my content-rich presentation style.  With no planning and 
practice, I shared a very personal story about a time when  my father became 
very 
ill, my mother diagnosed with breast cancer and my best  friend's husband got 
a brain tumor. At the end of that talk, a surprising thing  happened. The 
audience members didn't go talk to the swimsuit model or the  famous authors. 
They stood in line to talk to me. In that moment, I realized  that our 
personal stories allow people to connect with us as they recognize  themselves 
in our struggle and journeys. The more we are willing to be  vulnerable, the 
more we connect.
Ask yourself: Are you willing to be  vulnerable and share your lessons 
learned? 

Practice  journalistic principles. In his book Mediactive, former 
journalist Dan  Gillmor offers a list of principles for thought leaders who 
contribute to the  "emerging ecosystem of knowledge and ideas." These include 
thoroughness,  accuracy, fairness, independence and transparency. While most of 
these are  self-explanatory, I would add that transparency is especially 
important,  requiring us to cite or at least credit those whose creativity and 
innovation  have informed our own and delineate what part of our work is 
original versus  what is based on the work of others. Don't hesitate to give 
credit where credit  is due and take credit when you deserve it.
Ask yourself: Are you  practicing journalistic principles? 


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