Story-Building
A short exercise to bring ‘story-building’ to life: a key emerging concept in networked digital communications.
A short exercise to bring ‘story-building’ to life: a key emerging concept in networked digital communications.
Here's an interesting game that produces humorous results. Hidden behind the humor, however, is subtle provocation that forces participants to think deeply to justify some of the basic principles and assumptions related to the training topic.
Participants write “Why?” questions related to the training topic. Then each participant writes a response to someone else's “Why?” questions. The questions and answers get mixed up, producing incongruous results.
This is a very quick and impactful check-in for groups.
Personal Kanban is a tool for organizing your work to be more efficient and productive. It is based on agile methods and principles.
This is a practical, dynamic and versatile method for groups to explore ideas and questions together. Something like a physical questionnaire; participants respond to questions by walking around the space and placing themselves on an imaginary line. This provides a starting point for reflection and discussion and brings teams together.
This is a simple method to prioritize actions as part of an action planning workshop, after a list of actions has been generated.
Things can get tough sometimes, it will happen, we are human. Life is full of contrast, good/bad, light/dark, happy/sad, with/without - so we need some processes/tools/methods for facilitating ourselves to a better place. Also, when things are on the up & up, it’s still useful to curate your own toolbox to build up yourself and to support others.
A persuasive activity where participants "give" each other terrible presents.
Encourage creative thinking and getting to know each other better with a short round of 'time travel' questions to each of your participants.
Fun energiser to create energy and fun. Great to use after breaks such as lunch or coffee breaks.
Try on a relentlessly positive, can-do attitude before tackling the big stuff. The proverb goes "If life gives you lemons, make lemonade." Practice the art of positive thinking to unlock creative ideas. Use this as a warm-up before brainstorming or to energize your team meetings.
The purpose of this simple exercise is to demonstrate three key principles useful for creativity and idea generation: quantity is a condition for quality; building on the ideas of others; the ideas we come up with are usually all the same. The format is simple, with small groups standing and drawing apples. At the end of the exercise, the whole group reflects and draws out learnings and reflections.