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Note: This article is an excerpt from the book, also titled
Tell Me About Yourself:
Storytelling that Propels Careers.
Once upon a time, a job-seeker underwent a frustrating series of interviews over a five-month
period with no job offer. Then the discouraged individual read a book that suggested composing
personal stories. Doing so, the job-seeker found, provided him with better interview preparation
than any coaching he had ever experienced. Using stories he hadn't remembered before he
read the book, he said, made him more confident, convincing, and persuasive in his interviews.
Stories enabled him to present himself in a personable and powerful way to his interviewers.
He again used stories during the next round of interviews. The story ends happily with his hiring
in an executive position that represented a major advance in his career. The job-seeker is a
real person who posted a review on Amazon.com of Annette Simmons' 2006 book,
The Story Factor.
The forthcoming book, Tell Me About Yourself: Storytelling that Propels Careers, from
which this chapter is excerpted, extends the ideas of Simmons and other current authors who
tout the value of storytelling. It focuses on a narrow yet powerful use of storytelling -- telling stories
to advance your career, whether by moving up in your current organization or landing a job in
a new organization. The title comes from the most commonly asked question (which isn't even
a question but a request) in job interviews, "Tell me about yourself." Composing stories to
reveal your personal and professional self in response to that "question" is just one way to
use storytelling to propel your career.
Simmons writes that the natural reaction of an unfamiliar person whom you hope to influence
is to distrust you -- until you answer two major questions. The first question is "Who are you?"
In resumes, cover letters, portfolios, and interviews, job-seekers attempt to tell who they
are, but how often do you think these communications really convey a sense of who the job-seeker is?
Simmons' second question, "Why are you here?" can be translated as "Why are you contacting
this employer?" and "Why do you want to work for this organization?"
But answering those questions is just the beginning of how storytelling can springboard
your job search and career advancement. Here are more reasons that storytelling is
especially appropriate in the job hunt:
In Training & Development magazine, Bonnie Durrance tells a tale that exemplifies
the notion of revealing one's personality through story. She describes an aspiring dancer
exuding happiness and a positive attitude while working in a tollbooth. While many toll-takers
might consider such a job soul deadening, the protagonist in Durrance's story radiates joy
because he turns on music and practices his true aspiration -- dancing -- in his tollbooth
throughout his shift. "We can feel the story move us," Durrance writes, "opening windows of
possibilities, expanding our idea of work, and challenging our thoughts about jobs, dreams,
and tollbooths." It's not difficult to picture the toll-taker/dancer interviewing for his next job and
dazzling the interviewer with his upbeat take on making the best of a dull job.
Indeed, we remember people who tell stories because, as psychologists and neuroscientists tell us,
stories form the basis of how we think, organize, and remember information.
The Information Age and the era of knowledge workers may seem cutting edge, but in his popular
book, A Whole New Mind, Daniel Pink asserts that society has moved beyond that
mindset and into the Conceptual Age in which we are "creators and empathizers," "pattern
recognizers," and "meaning makers." Story is an important tool in this age because it enables
us to "encapsulate, contextualize, and emotionalize." Pink refers to story as "context enriched
by emotion" and tells us that "story is high touch because stories almost always pack an emotional punch."
Look around you. Story is everywhere. Increasingly, advertisers are telling stories in TV
commercials and print ads. In an age of minuscule attention spans, marketers know that stories
are the key to drawing in their audiences and connecting with them emotionally. A growing body
of literature describes the connection between storytelling and marketing/sales, including an
article in which Warren Hersch discusses the value of storytelling in insurance sales ("storyselling"
in the words of Mitch Anthony, a financial planner that Hersch quotes). Merely being educated
about a product is not enough to motivate a buyer to take significant action, Hersch notes;
clients need to be emotionally energized through story. Given that that the intuitive thinking
associated with stories leads prospects to conclusions more easily than does analytical thinking,
Hersch advises salespeople to "use storytelling to build rapport and credibility with the
prospect. Substitute "employer" for "prospect" and "job-seekers" for "salespeople," and Hersch's
advice about using story in sales becomes instantly applicable to the job-seeker selling himself
or herself to an employer.
Final Thoughts
Questions about some of the terminology used in this article? Get more information (definitions and links) on key college, career, and job-search
terms by going to our Job-Seeker's Glossary of Job-Hunting Terms.
Have you seen all our Career
Storytelling Tools for Job-Seekers?
Before you attempt to influence anyone you need to establish enough trust to successfully
deliver your message. . . People want to decide these things for themselves… the best you
can do is tell them a story that simulates an experience of your trustworthiness. Hearing
your story is as close as they can get to first-hand experience of watching you ‘walk the
walk' as opposed to the 'talk the talk' . . . You need to tell a story that demonstrates you
are the kind of person people can trust.
The book from which this chapter is excerpted is rooted in my dissertation research for
my Ph.D. in organizational behavior from Union Institute & University. I've made an exhaustive
study of what scholars and experts have to say about the uses of storytelling and how those
uses can be applied to the job search and career advancement. I've also conducted interviews
with job-changers and people in changing organizations, as well as focus groups with
hiring managers, recruiters, and human-resources professionals to obtain their reactions to
storytelling in resumes, cover letters, and interviewing. Watch
this section of Quintessential Careers for more about using storytelling in the job search,
as well as career-story examples.
Katharine Hansen, Ph.D., creative director and associate
publisher of Quintessential Careers, is an educator, author,
and blogger who provides content for Quintessential Careers,
edits QuintZine,
an electronic newsletter for jobseekers, and blogs about storytelling
in the job search at A Storied
Career. Katharine, who earned her PhD in organizational behavior
from Union Institute & University, Cincinnati, OH, is author of Dynamic
Cover Letters for New Graduates and A Foot in the Door: Networking
Your Way into the Hidden Job Market (both published by Ten Speed Press),
as well as Top Notch Executive Resumes (Career Press); and with
Randall S. Hansen, Ph.D., Dynamic Cover Letters, Write Your
Way to a Higher GPA (Ten Speed), and The Complete Idiot's Guide
to Study Skills (Alpha). Visit her
personal Website
or reach her by e-mail at
kathy(at)quintcareers.com.
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