Most Popular Exercises
The 10 most popular facilitation exercises on Workshopr.io, ranked by community engagement. These are the activities facilitators keep coming back to.
1-2-4-All
Get everyone involved in generating ideas. This structure moves from solo reflection to pairs, then groups of four, and finally the whole group. All voices are heard, and ideas build in stages.
51 views18F - Archetypes
Archetypes are user representations based on research. They synthesize qualitative data into actionable profiles. Unlike assumption-based personas, archetypes come from observed behaviors, goals, and contexts. In this 2-hour exercise, teams analyze research, identify behavioral clusters, and craft archetype documents. These include goals, needs, attitudes, and pain points. Each archetype gets a descriptive name. The documents help teams focus on users during design, resolve disputes with evidence, and identify solution gaps. Archetypes align cross-functional teams on their target users.
26 views5-Minute User Interview
Practice interviewing under pressure. Five minutes forces you to ask meaningful questions. Constraints reveal skill. You can't waste time on small talk when the clock is running. Watching yourself fail quickly teaches you more than reading interviewing theory.
5 viewsAffinity Clustering & Analysis
Affinity Clustering organizes raw data into themes. After research, you might feel swamped. This exercise transforms chaos into clarity. Teams group similar items. Patterns emerge. Insights crystallize. It's a hands-on way to make sense of complexity. I've found it works best when you resist pre-conceived notions.
5 views18F - Coding Qualitative Data
Coding qualitative data helps teams find patterns in research. This 90-minute exercise moves teams from raw data to structured insights. Participants learn to create descriptive, interpretive, and pattern codes. We'll cover tool selection, codebook creation, and refinement. Teams will practice applying codes, merging codes, and building structures. Expect organized data that supports design decisions and reveals hidden patterns.
5 viewsBulls Eye Diagramming
Bull's-eye Diagramming is a visual prioritization method from the LUMA collection. It uses concentric circles to represent levels of importance. The exercise forces teams to make tough choices by limiting what fits in the center circle. This drives debate about what truly matters for project success. Use it after Affinity Clustering, for feature planning, resource allocation, or strategic planning. It's also useful after voting to refine priorities.
3 viewsIDEO - Align On Your Impact Goals
This exercise, adapted from the LUMA collection, helps teams align on goals. It ensures everyone works toward the same outcome. It's useful for clarifying objectives at the start of a project.
3 viewsA/B Test Design Studio
A/B testing turns opinions into evidence. But poorly designed tests waste time. This exercise teaches you to design A/B tests that provide real answers. You'll learn to create solid hypotheses, meaningful variants, and achieve statistical validity.
2 viewsProvocative Artifact
Imagine tomorrow's headlines announce a breakthrough or disaster, reshaping your organization. This exercise brings those futures into focus. Teams create tangible objects from these possibilities: prototypes, ads, news articles, or interfaces. The goal isn't shock, but to use concrete items to reveal assumptions missed in abstract talks. This 3-hour exercise turns speculation into touchable, debatable objects. It works when you need fresh thinking or stakeholders struggle with abstract futures. A fake magazine cover makes possibilities real. It's powerful for exploring controversial futures or innovations that challenge norms. The artifact allows exploration of ideas killed in strategy sessions. Be warned: this needs a mature culture to handle challenging ideas. If your culture can't handle it, start with safer exercises. Expect creative energy during artifact creation. Teams enjoy making things. Expect rich debate during presentation. The 3 hours are needed. Teams need 90+ minutes to create detailed artifacts. Rushed artifacts yield superficial discussion. You'll know it's working when someone says, "I hate this, but we might need to prepare," or "This seems ridiculous, but what if customers want it?"
2 viewsAbstraction Laddering
Escape tunnel vision using abstraction laddering. Move between strategic "why" and tactical "how" levels. Teams often get stuck at one level, missing opportunities. This exercise reveals new problem spaces by shifting perspectives.
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Recent Comments (3)
This workshop was incredibly effective for our remote team! We adapted it slightly for a virtual setting and it worked wonderfully. The key was breaking into smaller breakout rooms.
Great resource! One tip: prepare all materials the day before to avoid any last-minute rushes.
Used this for our quarterly planning session. The structured approach really helped us stay on track!