Tuesday, May 13, 2008

washington - storytelling weekend

So the Friday of the Washington DC Storytelling event took place in the S Dillon Ripley Center at the Smithsonian. It was a Steve Denning production with four speakers and Madelyn Blair MCing. The auditorium was huge but the seats were bolted down lecture-style which didn't make for a particularly collaborative experience. I believe Steve recorded the sessions so I'll put a link up to those when they are ready but in the meantime, some observations:
  • I liked Madelyn's intro - esp. her story about the antique shop-owner's comment.
  • Dorthothy Leonard was pretty darned good as a presenter - as you'd hope a university professor to be. I'm a fan of Deep Smarts so was interested to hear her take on the role of story in the innovation process. The key thing it reinforced for me: If you want to find out an organisation's attitude to innovation - and therefore what forms of innovation will succeed - then listen to its stories.
  • Linda Coffman has been working on the uses of digital storytelling in learning at P&G. It seems that P&G have started some work in this area - the question is: will they actually deploy it? Of the two stories made, one is pretty dire (as Linda herself acknowledged) but the second one is very powerful (although the subject matter initially baffled some men in the audience). A suggestion to P&G: Easy on the emotive soundtrack - it felt a but manipulative. The more powerful your story, the simpler your visual and audio cues. BTW check out the Center for Digital Storytelling.
  • Claudia L'Amoreaux is (if she'll pardon the expression) a hippy. And Education Community Developer for Second Life's Linden Labs. Her discussion on Second Life really brought home to me how those immersed in the SL environment are using it creatively and flexibly. I remain to be convinced that it's quite right for me but I am willing to give it another go.
  • Finally Steve Denning was up - talking about creating dynamic team/organisational "hot spots" through story. By this stage, I had been awake for about 48 hours and crashed part-way through Steve's presentation. I am looking forward to the recording though.

1 comment:

Jasmin Tragas said...

good on you for making the trip. sounds great!