[image: Photo Credit: Rockaway Youth on Banner by Flickr.com user Light
Brigading]
A MESSAGE FOR SCIENTISTS (AND EVERYONE) ON EARTH DAY: "NARRATIVE IS
LEADERSHIP"

Randy Olson / March 7, 2017


This Earth Day scientists will receive attention like never before (and
they deserve it), but if they’re smart they’ll turn to great leaders like
Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King, Jr. as models for how to engage the
public. Both of them had what scientists tend to lack — narrative intuition.

In one major Washington DC Earth Day event, the Earth Optimism Summit
<http://earthoptimism.si.edu/> (where I’ll be speaking) scientists will be
the main attraction. Across town at the March for Science
<https://www.marchforscience.com/>, scientists will literally be on parade.
It will be a big day, but if they want to make an impact they will need to
“deliver a message.” To do that they need to understand the power of
narrative which underpins messaging.

Let me show you how narrative works using two of the greatest speeches in
American history. I’ll analyze them with the ABT narrative template I
developed and presented in my 2015 book *Houston, We Have A Narrative
<http://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/H/bo21174162.html>*. It’s
the centerpiece of my Story Circles Narrative Training
<http://storycirclestraining.com/> program I now run with a range of
government agencies (including National Park Service, NASA, USDA, USFWS and
USGS) and corporations. You won’t find it in any humanities textbooks. The
closest thing is my friend Jerry Graff’s million-selling handbook for
argumentation, *They Say, I Say
<https://www.amazon.com/They-Say-Matter-Academic-Writing/dp/1469028611>.*

First, the template. The ABT consists of three words (and, but, therefore).
These words embody the three fundamental forces of narrative (agreement,
contradiction, consequence). It’s a tool that provides the structure for
boiling down content to its narrative core by filling in the blanks of,
“_____ AND _____ BUT _____ THEREFORE _____.”

The ABT gives you a narrative statement that is both concise and compelling
— not boring or confusing. If you look at the Gettysburg Address, famous
for its brevity, you see it’s a perfect ABT of three paragraphs.
[image: Photo Courtesy of Randy Olson]THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS.  It’s only
three paragraphs with perfect ABT structure.

For Martin Luther King, Jr’s “I Have A Dream” speech his first paragraph is
ABT, plain and simple. He even has the words “but” and “so” (which is the
more common word of consequence than “therefore”).


[image: Photo Courtesy of Randy Olson]MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR’S “I HAVE A
DREAM” SPEECH.  The opening paragraph is an ABT.

So why is this relevant to scientists? Because if they want to accomplish
anything meaningful, they need a clear message, which means narrative. In
fact, narrative is what “branding” is in the business world. It all comes
down to the same basic dynamics — “Coke AND Pepsi are great, BUT 7 Up is
better, THEREFORE you need to drink it.”
THE MARCH FOR SCIENCE

On April 22 large numbers of scientists will walk the streets of Washington
DC and demand … what? What will they demand? What is their message? What is
their motto? What is their slogan? What is their slugline (the short
statement of their demands)?

Let’s have a look at their website <https://www.marchforscience.com/>.  In
their banner is the title of the event, “The March for Science,” but
nothing more.

The fact is the march was announced over two months ago, but still there
doesn’t seem to be a simple message. This is a problem, because when you
fail to speak up for yourself simply and loudly, others will speak for you.
This is exactly what has happened for the Science March.

On January 31 a scientist from South Carolina wrote an editorial in the *New
York Time*s titled, “A Scientists March on Washington is a Bad Idea
<https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/31/opinion/a-scientists-march-on-washington-is-a-bad-idea.html>.”
This was followed by *Vox *calling the idea “awkward
<http://www.vox.com/science-and-health/2017/2/7/14458608/science-march-on-washington-pros-cons>
,” *BuzzFeed* saying scientists were “arguing”
<https://www.buzzfeed.com/azeenghorayshi/is-science-political?utm_term=.qvNQxQ7LG#.ka0MXMkZe>over
it, and *Science* Magazine offering unsolicited advice
<http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2017/01/science-march-planners-here-s-some-unsolicited-advice>.


For all of these media pronouncements there has been no clear idea of what
the scientists want (i.e. the message — and maybe all they really want is
to be respected, in which case they might draw their message from the motto
of the nation’s largest science organization, American Association for the
Advancement of Science, which is “Serving society”). Looking at the four
paragraphs of text on the March for Science website
<https://www.marchforscience.com/> you see very little narrative structure.
Instead of starting with words of agreement (such as “We all know science
is a cornerstone of our society”) it begins with consequence (scientists
are marching). Which means from the outset they are narratively confused.

It’s great that scientists are massing for the big events, but it would be
even better if they could agree on what it is they want. They (and actually
everyone) would do well this Earth Day to study the narrative structure of
those who understand it’s power, past and present.  This includes Abraham
Lincoln, Martin Luther King, Jr., and yes, as I regretfully pointed out in a
podcast the morning after the election
<http://businessofstory.com/podcast/brander-chief-dr-randy-olson-explains-power-trumps-narrative-intuition/>,
our new President.

Sorry about that, but it’s still a fact that narrative is essential to
lead. People don’t follow voices that are boring or confusing. It’s a
principle of society that reaches back thousands of years. Scientists can’t
afford to neglect it.
RANDY OLSON

Randy Olson earned his Ph.D. at Harvard University and became a professor
of marine biology before moving to Hollywood for his second career as a
filmmaker. He is the author of *Don't be Such a Scientist*
<https://islandpress.org/book/dont-be-such-a-scientist>

-- 
David Duffy
戴大偉 (Dài Dàwěi)
Pacific Cooperative Studies Unit/Makamakaʻāinana
Botany
University of Hawaii/*Ke Kulanui o Hawaiʻi*
3190 Maile Way
Honolulu Hawaii 96822 USA
1-808-956-8218

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