Friday, May 29, 2020
Why Storytelling Matters in Recruitment
Why Storytelling Matters in Recruitment During my recruitment career, one thing I have noticed is how rarely I refer back to my notes taken from my meetings, whether that be candidates interviews or clients requirements. I may occasionally need to refer back if there is a query over billings or salary for candidates, or commission plans on behalf of clients. But on the whole, I have always been able to âpackageâ up a profile or client spec as a mini âstoryâ and tell it to the relevant party. I hadnât thought about it until I read my cousinâs book âThe Storytelling Bookâ about the art of storytelling that the impact of how we tell a story is what defines us as recruiters and I think it is part of the reason I have always been successful. I donât mean telling porky pie stories, I mean the ability to recall information; to capture it in context, to make it a compelling case to the person listening. More than an âelevator pitch,â enticing the person you are passionately telling this story to, to WANT to meet the person. Think of it in a social context: some of your most memorable nights out- you then go on to tell your friend who couldnât make it about the person who did XY and Z. How it made you feel, the chronological order of events, what happened at the end. The same is the format for telling stories in recruitment- we start at the beginning of the story, why someone has reached this point to explain how you have got from A to B, we want to hear how that journey happened I referred to my cousin earlier- a prominent marketer with global recognition for his achievements and insights- allow him to advise us further, over to you Anthony Tasgal, author, trainer, speaker and strategist POV Marketing. The Power of Storytelling Stories cut through âattention spamâ: Our brain is designed to filter out most of what we throw at it (think of viewers watching ads, parents talking to kids, interviewers having to listen to 50 candidates.) We like to think what we are âsayingâ goes into peopleâs attention inbox. But most of that material isnât memorable, meaningful or emotional (itâs not a story); so, it goes into what I call âattention spam.â A story is the secret weapon to cut through attention spam. We are obsessed with telling people facts (I call this âin-fact-uationâ). Stories wrap facts in emotion and empathy. Stories translate information into emotion Create memories are memorable Captivate hold us in their grip Draw you in whatâs going to happen next?! All join up stories donât have wastage Have a tone of voice-they are all about character/s, so they can express your character and make you stand out Stop you from just talking about facts and information .and then you learn something Storytelling makes us care; tell me a story about you and Im more likely to care about who you are Story works because it is universal It is all about trust and empathy: our lives and identities are written in the story. No tribe or culture on the planet doesnât have storytelling. The same canât be said for Excel or PowerPoint. Numbers Numb Us, Stories Stir Us Top Tips Construct a Golden Thread: a story needs a thread, a skeleton or structure. Plan yours so your audience doesnât get lost in a fog of random facts. The rule of 3: try to remember and communicate no more than three ideas, words or images. It will help you remember and rehearse too, as â3 is the magic number.â Be emotional: story works because it translates information into emotion. Donât rely on facts, information or âdataâ to create a connection in an interview situation. Create personality. Stories are based on characters, who have a personality. To be memorable (and stand out against other candidates) you need to build a convey a memorable personality; it goes without saying that it should be sincere, honest and based on who you are. Grab them early: stories work best when you have something distinctive and memorable to say, try to get into it right at the start: it will be more captivating and draw in your audience. End big. We filter a lot of our experiences through the lens of how they end (think of holidays youâve had: TV series youâve watched, books youâve read). So, people will remember you by how you left them, the last impression you made. So, make it dramatic. And this is the point where you ask for their thoughts and feedback. Recruitment is all about people; it is all about knowledge; it is all about our networks. And for me, it is being to recall information which is locked into a person or companyâs story. What do you think? Is this how you have become successful or am I merely spouting fairytales?
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