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How to Name Your Characters : Candlepower : Thinkmap Visual Thesaurus
10 Exercises to Build Your Creative Confidence | ideo.com
Four Horsemen of the Brainstorm cartoon | Marketoonist | Tom Fishburne
The Content Strategy of Civil Discourse, Part 5 | Think Company
In part four, we looked at the difference between hierarchical and collaborative conversations. Now we bring it all together and ask, “What can we do?” The answer is, a lot. There are, as it turns out, many solutions to how we can do a better job of talking to each other, and any one of these are approaches you can try in your own lives or organizations.
8 Easy Icebreakers to Warm-Up Any Meeting That Aren’t Awkward
How Twitter Users Can Generate Better Ideas
New research suggests that employees with a diverse Twitter network — one that exposes them to people and ideas they don’t already know — tend to generate better ideas.
Creating Names with Emotional Appeal - The Startup - Medium
The Humanitarian Innovation Guide
The Humanitarian Innovation Guide is a growing online resource to help individuals and organisations find their starting point and navigate the humanitarian innovation journey.
The Magical Short-Form Creative Brief - Jared M. Spool - Medium
Powerful Billboard In South Korea Lets You Step In And Prevent Child Abuse | DeMilked
Affinity Diagramming: Collaborate, Sort and Prioritize UX Ideas (Video)
Facilitation Resources – Chris Corrigan
Here is a collection of resources I use in my facilitation practice. By and large these resources support facilitation of participatory and self-organizing process at scales ranging from very small groups to large conferences. I use some of these tools directly and others as inspirations to design and create my own processes. The first section provides links to participatory group process that are inclusive and self-organizing to varying degrees. The section on process architecture and maps contains links to sites whose worldviews can inform process design from single meetings to large scale change. The next three sections cover more specific tools useful for particular purposes, and finally the last section contains links to sources of ongoing inspiration.
Cognitive Maps, Mind Maps, and Concept Maps: Definitions
3 Simple Habits to Improve Your Critical Thinking
Post-it notes spread protest message on Hong Kong’s Lennon Walls — Quartz
Trainer's Notebook: Facilitating Brainstorming Sessions for Nonprofit Work | Beth's Blog
The Toolbox Toolbox
Liberating Structures - 33 methods to generate ideas in a group
group facilitation methods for icebreakers, brainstorming, prioritizing, etc.
Creative Feedback (Head, Heart, Body) - Google Slides
How and when to give different types of feedback on creative designs
Organizing Brainstorming Workshops: A Designer’s Guide — Smashing Magazine
Breakups, Space Travel, And Design Research – Dropbox Design – Medium
At Dropbox, we’ve found that metaphors are a powerful tool to help people explore and share their experiences in more creative and meaningful ways. We use metaphors in research so people can talk about their experiences through a different lens. We can do this simply by inviting people to make a comparison through a single question. Or we can facilitate entire interviews by using tools to symbolize and explore meaning together.
6-3-5 Brainwriting - Wikipedia
In brief, it consists of 6 participants supervised by a moderator who are required to write down 3 ideas on a specific worksheet within 5 minutes, this is also the etymology of the methodology's name. The outcome after 6 rounds, during which participants swap their worksheets passing them on to the team member sitting at their right, is 108 ideas generated in 30 minutes.
Two better ways to have group conversations – The Conversation Factory – Medium
Group facilitation approaches: Think Alone, Think Together Think, pair, share One, Two, Four, All
Are You Solving the Right Problems? HBR
How Brainstorming Questions, Not Ideas, Sparks Creativity | Co.Design | business + design
How watching a short clip from a Tom Hanks movie saved one company £1.5 million — Fluxx Studio Notes — Medium
Here’s one way to deal with things : show them a clip from the film Apollo 13. Specifically, the bit where the crew on board the lunar module are facing imminent suffocation due to a faulty air filter, so the scientists on the ground are forced to make a ‘square peg fit a round hole’ with whatever is available to the astronauts. I showed the clip to one client team I was working with, who were all blockers and no action. Before watching the clip the team was fatalistically resigned to business as usual. They didn’t like it, but they accepted it. Business as usual was a six month requirement gathering phase leading to a £1.5m bet on an unproven concept. After watching the clip, they built a working proof of concept within two hours, a fully fledged beta test within 6 weeks and ended up with an award-winning product that delights customers and is incredibly valuable to the business.