Great storytelling and great storytellers have the
opportunity to rule the world. We use
storytelling to connect to each other on a different level. When we were young we wanted a story before we
went to bed, when we were in school we wanted the teacher to hear ours, and as adults we convene at restaurants, bars, and
reunions to revisit the times that made us most happy. We remember what we want to, and the
connection to the positive things that happened to us drive those conversations. The last minute wide-open jump shot to win
the
game in high school has turned into a fade away, from the corner, over
three people, from our knees. Even
revisiting difficult times with your friends often results in how it made you
better as a person, or grew as a family or group. We thrive on storytelling and look for any
opportunity to share our perspective.
via www.socialmediatoday.com |
We want to hear great stories. We want to invest in great stories. There is a reason pregame shows before big
events conduct mini movies on members of the teams taking part in the
contest. Last weekend was the NCAA Final
Four. The network access to players,
coaches, and families was unbelievable.
Superbowl coverage starts 6 hours before kickoff and is watched by ridiculous
amounts of people. We want to hear their
story. We want to connect with them, and
those in charge of programming know that this is the way to higher ratings and
more exposure. When an Internet video
goes viral, you will often see talk show hosts and news stations lining up to
interview the individuals and have them tell their story. To desire that connection is human and
derived by emotion. We look for the story
because we want to connect, and the emotion of the stories gives us that
connection.
via www.allposters.co.uk |
We live in a true attention deficit society. NBC does not promote Must See TV anymore
because must see is on our time. We are
able to watch full seasons of television shows, download radio podcasts, and aggregate the
stories from publications that fit our needs…on our time. Take a look at someone as they check their
phone for information. If something doesn't catch their eye right away, what happens? Their phone turns into a Roulette wheel and
the emphatic scroll begins. Our stories
have to grab the attention of the public and engage them in the wonderful
things kids do in our school. In effect,
we are storytelling through 140 characters, an Instagram picture, or a Facebook
post. We are utilizing those spaces to
make tell micro stories in an effort to highlight the amazing work of kids. This also helps us build social capital with
our stakeholders and take them along for the ride that is education today.
via http://blous.me/post/73524047104/all-this-technology-is-making-us-antisocial |
Families in our school want to connect, but they want to do
it on a schedule that fits them. There
is nothing wrong with that because at the end of the day it is not about the
time of the connection, but whether or not it happens. We need to look at time as a commodity…one
that we can harness, but not control.
Parents and community members will engage in what we do if we give them
the opportunity, but do not force the issue of time on them.
A picture, video, post, call, or text all can have a
profound impact on emotions. Great
stories find where emotion lives, and deliver something impactful in that
area. The world has, and will, belong to
the storytellers. We have 800 in this school,
and all with the desire to have their voice heard. When they don’t have the medium, we should
provide the opportunity. When we do,
everyone has a chance to come along for the ride. Go Crickets.