anecdote.com.au

« Communities of Practice - a strategic technology? | Main | Identifying a story »

17/03/07 |

Why use business narrative techniques?

By Shawn. Follow me on Twitter. Filed in Anecdotes, Narrative.

Whenever someone asks me this question I tell them this story.

One of our first narrative projects was to help a government department assess their occupational health and safety practices to see whether their policy and procedures were being following and to determine their training needs. We formed two teams to collect our data, one used structured interview techniques and the other collected stories. At the end of the first day of data collection both teams got together to compare notes. “Well, looks like they pretty much have things together,” said the interview team. “They seem to follow the procedures and policies quite well.” The narrative team members looked at each other in amazement. “So you didn’t hear about the guys showering in their own urine because their recycling system is faulty or how in one workshop everyone wears protective shoes because a guy chopped the top of his foot off a while back but no one wears protective eye wear?”

Send this entry to:      del.icio.us icon StumbleUpon Toolbar Slashdot Digg icon Reddit icon Newsvine icon Searchles icon

email iconEmail this entry to a friend      technorati icon View the Technorati Link Cosmos for this entry

Trackback Pings

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.anecdote.com.au/cgi-bin/mt-tback.cgi/652

Comments

I'm curious whether the narrative team learned something from the survey team too? (I'm quite on the qualitative data and adverse to questionnaire, but think I could balance more towards those too).

Posted by: joitske at March 27, 2007 5:39 AM

Post a comment




Remember Me?

(you may use HTML tags for style)