<aside> <img src="/icons/info-alternate_yellow.svg" alt="/icons/info-alternate_yellow.svg" width="40px" /> This page is part of The Toolbox by Danny Smith.
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Workshop facilitation is a huge topic and there are thousands of frameworks, models and activities to help run good Workshops & Brainstorming Sessions. It’s possible to run a pretty good brainstorming sessions with just two basic tools though…
The 5 minutes of individual thinking gives space for people to reflect and explore their own thoughts independently of each other. This tends to generate a wider spectrum of ideas than if everyone was talking while they did this – it helps to prevent groupthink. It also caters for folks who think best when they’re sat quietly on their own.
By purring one thought per note, we make it easy to shuffle thoughts around on the board as we discuss and refine our thinking together.
Divergent thinking is all about generating ideas. Nothing is off the table. Convergent thinking is all about creating clarity from a collection of thoughts: narrowing down options until you find a single answer.
An awful lot of brainstorming sessions end up following the Double Diamond framework – we use divergent thinking to brainstorm the problem space and then convergent thinking to hone in on a specific problem definition. We then repeat the process to brainstorm solutions and converge on a single solution.