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Remember My Service
http://www.tunedinblog.com/ blog/ 2008/ 03/ remember-my-ser.html
Brad Baldwin of Rocky Mountain Voices interviewed Sharlene Hawkes of Story Rock Electronic Publishing this week about a new service they provide for military units. The offering is called Remember My Service and you can watch the interview feed by following this link to Rocky Mountain Voices. Hawkes is a CMO for Story Rock, a small start-up in Utah that focuses on capturing more dynamic CD and DVD versions for milestone life experiences. Rooted in the education industry, some of their core offerings include turning traditional yearbooks into online stories that include video, music, and the interactivity of the Internet.
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Tell a great story
http://leadonpurpose.wordpress.com/2008/04/02/tell-a-great-s...I recently had lunch with a friend who made an interesting comment that CEOs are looking for people who can coach them and help them to tell a good story. He had recently read an article that criticized the overuse (or abuse) of PowerPoint, which has lead to more mundane presentations and unexciting seminars. What people really want to hear is a great story. I was thinking about this concept of telling a story as I was catching up on my blog reading. I came across two excellent posts that support this idea: The first is by Phil Meyers on Tuned In. Phil profiles Remember My Service by Story Rock. They focus on telling the stories of service men and women by creating a movie-quality DVD for their unit, its journey and impact. The second post is by Seth Godin. Seth asks which comes first – the story or the work. Most of the time it’s the work that comes first, then we tell a story based on the work. But Seth suggests you turn it around and create the story first. “If you decide what the story is, you can do work that matches the story. Your decisions will match the story. The story will become true because you’re living it.” One of the great story tellers was (the late) Dan Fogelberg; he told his stories through music. Songs like Same Old Lang Syne and Leader of the Band told powerful stories you could live in as you heard him sing. Regardless of the work we do, to the better the story we tell the more success we will have. What are your favorite stories?
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