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Posts Tagged ‘ISPI’

Tribal Knowledge and the Use of Stories in Training Managers

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

By William Seidman

Tribal knowledge is important, and important to the work of training managers.  Seth Godin explains it here (the video is 12 minutes long).  The transmittal of tribal knowledge was on our minds at the International  Society for Performance Improvement (ISPI)’s annual meeting earlier this month in Orlando, Florida. I attended a presentation by Jon Revelos . The focus of the training was the use of stories in training. There was a great discussion about the value of story-based learning  when holding and delivering critical tribal knowledge. In the presentation, we talked about ways to show the value of a narrative to management by emphasizing positive deviant stories. Positive deviance  stories proved increasingly valuable because they are richer in content and have a more direct connection to performance. We also talked about the use of stories when motivating and sustaining responses, which effectively connects stories to impact.

Jon is now driving a compliance training program — these can be pretty dry. He is looking for ways to bring stories into compliance training. Again, positive deviants are an opportunity because they treat compliance as a fundamental tool to achieving a greater social good. All of this is consistent with our work with positive deviance, and it was an altogether interesting and exciting presentation.

Terrific Multinational, Multicultural Session at the ISPI Annual Meeting

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

By William Seidman

More on the International  Society for Performance Improvement (ISPI)’s annual meeting earlier this month in Orlando, Florida: discussion in the multinational, multicultural session was particularly interesting because of the presenters’ culturally varied experiences. Paul Nieminen is responsible for United Parcel Service’s change programs in Europe and Asia, Al Pacheco is a consultant for IBM doing a cultural diversity program for the major accounts teams, and Karen Waterlander works in Finland for Kone,  the fourth-largest manufacturer of – and service provider for -  elevators in the world. There were many others — too many to mention. What a great group!

What was amazing was how many things we had in common. Everyone had encountered resistance from each country because of their perceived uniqueness and everyone struggled with having to engage people and sustain change over great distances. Our program seemed to interest many of them, particularly Cerebyte’s international work with Intel, because it solved these problems.

 
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