|
EMILI deals with strategic development and consultancy on digital channels. Discover Digital Product Design services Anatomy of a workshop anatomy of a workshop A workshop is the combination of several individual and group activities , selected according to the objective and the source material for example, market data or the results of a series of customer interviews . The purposes of a workshop can be the discovery of opportunities or weaknesses, understanding user needs, devising solutions, prioritizing the features and proposals identified. Workshop activities make use of supports that allow users to visualize ideas and concepts typically post its, whiteboards and markers are used, or their digital counterpart in the case of remote workshops Mural , Miro , Jamboard . Usually a workshop is the combination of two or more of the following activities post up participants write their contributions ideas, problems, questions on post its and stick them on the wall or blackboard, so that the whole group can view them.
Sorting the contributions are grouped based on thematic affinities, and names are given to photo editing servies the identified groups; storyboarding contributions are organized along a timeline e.g. customer journey in order to build a narrative; drawings and sketches participants draw their ideas with pencils or markers in response to a problem or question especially used during ideation workshops such as Design Sprint or Design Studio ; voting participants have a number of votes available for example in the form of adhesive stamps or quantities of "money" to distribute among all the contributions to identify the best or priority ones; matrices contributions are organized on matrices made up of two or more dimensions e.g.

Feasibility and user impact to establish priorities, trends or themes. The advantages of having a workshop instead of a meeting The advantages of having a workshop instead of a meeting So what are the advantages of holding a workshop instead of a meeting? Concrete results at the beginning of a workshop, questions or problems are asked, and the aim is to arrive at shared solutions or actions. These actions must be concrete, not impersonal, vague or abstract, and must be able to be attributed to a person or department.
|
|