The Think blog.
News and ideas on user experience.

Contact us

Tel: +44 (0)207 336 4700
Contact details
About Flow

Visualising the future with graphical facilitation

Drawing ideas in real time helps workshop teams imagine the future more effectively.

In concept design projects, we help our clients to envision how people will use technology in the future. But people who are experts in particular subjects (like their current customer experience or business process), are often less comfortable imagining or describing how things might become. Sometimes, Flow uses client workshops with graphical facilitation to help everyone get a solid grip on abstract ideas.

Augmented conversations

The idea of a graphical facilitation is simple to say, but harder to do: Draw everything that's being said in real time on gigantic sheets of paper. For maximum effect, paper the whole room, so that all ideas remain immediately available throughout the workshop.

\"The revolution is in the chains of data\" - this extract visualises the concept
An extract from a large mural created during a workshop

Here's some rationale...

  • People have new ideas through conversation. Well managed conversations provide inspiration, as well as tests and checks that can help new ideas take shape.
  • Conversations about complex things stop working well unless they are recorded as you go. A visible, running record of the ideas helps the team reach agreement and accept new ideas as building blocks for the next iteration of the discussion.
  • Images are a very powerful record. Most of us can scan images quickly and find things again efficiently. They're also very information rich.
  • Some concepts are more easily expressed in terms other than words. Mathematicians and physicists use mathematical notation. Architects use sketches, models and blueprints. Describing a building or a law of physics in words alone would be exhausting. Expressing complex, interrelated ideas behind a vision of the future will always be easier in pictures.

Visualising the presentation of a new system
Visualising the presentation of a new system

The effects of thinking in pictures

I asked a couple of Flow's user experience consultants about using graphical facilitation.

"The future is unfamiliar territory, and that can be unnerving. Real time graphic output helps make everyone comfortable," Simon Hatch told me. "In a recent workshop, there was visible, engaging output even before we broke for lunch on day 1, and that really helped people feel they were making progress."

But as well as helping people see progress, the imagery on the walls helps people to think more effectively.

"It enables us to uncover and unpack things in a different way," explained Stuart Penny. "Seeing everyone's words represented on the wall helps each team member to absorb everyone else's ideas. And thinking in pictures reduces the effort of working an idea through and visualising its impact and consequences."

Smaller scale

Images are a great way of summarising and communicating the contents of a meeting too. We've been experimenting with writing up some of our meetings using images. You could see it as putting doodling to constructive use!

For fabulous drawing talent, we like to work with Cognitive Media.

No comments yet. Be the first.

Leave a reply