We all know how it is: most internal emails are read half-heartedly, PowerPoint presentations are clicked through. But when someone tells a little story – about a customer, a colleague, a mistake they learned from – suddenly everyone pricks up their ears.
Psychologists call this “narrative transportation”: we immerse ourselves in stories and remember content better because we feel it, not just understand it. In other words, a good story saves explanations, discussions, and misunderstandings – and thus time and nerves.
What’s more, stories build trust. When a manager doesn’t just say, “We need to become more efficient,” but describes a scene – “I spoke to Anna from customer service the other day, and she spends two hours every day entering data twice” – it makes it tangible. Employees see that someone understands their everyday work.
The effects are measurable. Research by Gallup shows that highly engaged teams are up to 18 percent more productive and 23 percent more profitable. (Source) The difference often lies in whether people feel that their work is meaningful – and that is exactly what a good internal narrative conveys.
Here are 5 practical tips that every manager or team can try out right away:
2. Rule rather than exception Turn stories into routines, not campaigns. Once a month at the all-hands meeting, share a short story (“What we learned last week”). Every week at the team meeting, share a “mini case”: one customer, one mistake, one success.
3. Use tangible images Instead of “We optimize processes”: “We want Anna from customer service to get home on time in the evening – without two hours of Excel hell.”
4. Incorporate dialogue Stories are not monologues. Always allow time for questions and gather counterexamples. Often, the real productivity in a conversation is unleashed after the story.
5. Repeat, repeat, repeat A story only has an impact when it is told so often that employees can pass it on. It is better to have three clear stories that are repeated over and over again than 30 new buzzwords per quarter.
Of course, it is impossible to count how often a team member’s “eyes light up.” But you can observe:
“Storytelling in internal communication creates orientation, trust, and meaning – and thus makes teams noticeably more productive.”
Miriam Schwellnus, expert in PR, employer branding, and storytelling at the Mashup Communications agency
Storytelling makes information easier to understand, more emotional, and more memorable. Employees understand goals more quickly, can better contextualize decisions, and are more motivated to participate.
When employees understand the purpose of their work, they are more focused. Studies (e.g., Gallup) show that engaged teams are up to 18% more productive and 23% more profitable.
Many companies use storytelling for cultural change or purpose communication – for example, Siemens with its “Ownership Culture” or DB Systel with its transformation into a network organization.
With simple routines: a short story in the all-hands meeting, weekly mini-successes in the team meeting, or a report on experiences from customer contact. The important thing is to use real, tangible examples instead of abstract slogans.
Common mistakes include slogans without substance, too many messages at once, or thoughtlessly copying other people’s models. Successful storytelling requires authenticity and clarity.
By checking whether employees can express priorities in their own words, whether the story is taken up in everyday life, and whether key figures such as wrong decisions, handover times, or sick leave are improving.
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