World's Worst
Come up with the world's worst way to approach something. Play as a game and/or use to generate productive ideas
Come up with the world's worst way to approach something. Play as a game and/or use to generate productive ideas
A fun, informal networking activity for a small team who know each other. Ideal for remote teams who get together irregularly. If you are looking for something DIFFERENT and not the same old this is a great choice.
It can be modified to your interests. Requires some prep time.
A proper understanding of Agile Manifesto is VERY important for the introduction of Scrum. The twelve agile principles are less abstract than the four values of the Agile manifesto and can be easily understood.
The game is based on an exercise Pocket-sized Principles.
Any creative endeavour can generate a certain amount of anxiety. The first step is always the hardest… has anyone not heard that before?
In his book ‘Being Creative’, Michael Avatar suggests that we draw inspiration from the Zen Buddhist idea of the 'beginner's mind' - where everything is beginning. In a beginner's mind there is possibility, openness, curiosity: all qualities that are useful for an exploration of creativity. This activity is a short, grounding ideation and exploration that taps into the beginner's mind.
From a list of songs important in the lives of the group members, we will try to guess who chose them.
Die GPA-Karten erlauben es, in der beraterischen Arbeit schnell an den persönlichen Werten und Glaubenssätzen anzuknüpfen. So können Überzeugungen und Haltungen und damit die eigenen Filter der Wahrnehmung reflektiert werden.
A method to capture notes and reflections in hybrid events
Punctuate any hybrid event with moments in which participants joining remotely and in-person briefly get together to discuss their experiences at the gathering.
Tech tasks
Send all the people participating in person a link to join the online call.
Tech host create as many breakout rooms as the number of attendees in the smallest cohort, pairing each with one or, if necessary, two, participants from the other group.