KIRAN CHAUHAN
  • Home
  • What I do
    • Challenge 360
    • Strategy sprint
    • Design sprint
    • One day challenge sprint
    • Leadership
    • Mentoring
  • Case studies
    • Inclusive culture workshop
    • Guiding 100 UX/UI designers to design a new feature for a product
    • Metro website (Design sprint)
    • TMG development team (Design sprint)
  • Contact
  • Cycle For Good

Run effective meetings and efficiently solve problems

29/6/2022

0 Comments

 
Click herI’ve recently learnt some new techniques to help teams improve collaboration and run more effective meetings. Here is a small experiment you can run with your team which uses a simple framework to generate a large amount of ideas and decide upon a course of action.

THE TRADITIONAL MEETING:
1. Think of a challenge you want to solve in the meeting (something general that everyone can benefit from) E.g.
- How can we improve the office environment?
- How can we improve communication in the team?
- Which conference should we go to this year as a team?
- Something that make sense to your team

2. Give your team 10 minutes to come up with a solution

3. After 10 minutes ask them what the conclusion was and also ask them what they felt about the process. Was it fun? Was it easy? Are they happy with the solution?

A DIFFERENT WAY OF WORKING (10 minutes)
1. Think of another challenge that you want the team to solve. A different one.

2. Give each person sticky notes, small round sticky voting dots and a sharpie

3. Introduce the exercise to the team
- They will be writing down lots of ideas in a short time
- Don’t worry about the quality of the ideas, just the quantity
- One idea per post it note
- Needs to be legible and simple to understand

4. Generate ideas (5 mins)
- Tell everyone to write down at least 15 solutions to the challenge in 5 minutes.
- Focus on lots of ideas, not good ideas

5. Visualise the ideas (1 min)
- Ask participants to stick all ideas on the wall
- Remove obvious duplicates

6. Vote (2 mins)
- Give everyone 10 dots
- Tell them to silently vote on the ideas they like
- No voting rules. 
- They can vote on anything and place multiple dots in one place

7. Re-visualise (1 min)
- Separate out the top 5 ideas
- Order by number of votes

9. Straw poll vote (1 min)
- Give everyone 1 dot (ideally different colour or bigger)
- Tell them to silently vote on the ONE idea they like the most and they are willing to commit to.
- The idea with the most wins
- Alternatively the “decision maker” can decide which of the top 5 ideas will work for the team

10. Ask them what they felt about the process. Was it fun? Was it easy? Are they happy with the solution? Which way of working was better?

Let me know in the comments if this is something you’d be willing to try in your next meeting. If you do try it I would love to hear how it went in the comments.
0 Comments

Stealing other people's ideas is fun.

29/6/2022

0 Comments

 
I’ve been a UX designer for more than 15 years and a big part of the job involves looking at what other people have done for inspiration. Another, more cynical way of saying that is, the job involves looking at other people’s work for ideas that you can steal and use as your own. I’m kind of joking of course, it’s not really like that but borrowing and adapting are a huge part of any design work.

The first time I learned about Design sprints was in 2017 while on a course about web page optimisation. The trainer told us briefly about how design sprints allow you to develop ideas and test them with real users quickly. He also told us about something he called a “Design sketching session.” It’s a way for a team to generate lots of ideas quickly and it demonstrates why stealing ideas can be fun.

When to do this:
  • When you have a small problem to solve but you want some inspiration
  • When there are multiple solutions but you don’t know which one to pick
  • Usually it involves one screen of an app/website or 2-3 steps in a process for an app/website.

Example:
  • On long flights people can order 3 meals (Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner)
  • They should be able to do this with the screen in front of them (iPad mini size)
  • Breakfast, lunch and dinner are at set times
  • Passengers must order 30 mins in advance to give us enough time to prepare the meal to their requirements
  • Some passengers have allergies / dietary requirements
  • We want all users to tell us what they want

Who:
  • A team of people (Min 2 - Max 8)
  • Anyone can do this. You do not need to be skilled at drawing.
  • In fact it is best when it is a multi disciplined team
  • Bring the developers, testers, marketeers, product owners etc etc

​What you need:
  • 2 pieces of blank A4 paper for each person
  • A sharpie or marker pen for each person
  • A timer (can use your phone or a website)

Step 1: (10 minutes)
  • Introduce the problem you are trying to solve
  • Be specific and to the point
  • Allow people to ask questions and clarify any points
  • Confirm everyone understands the problem

Step 2: (10 minutes)
  • Sketching session round 1
  • Give everyone 10 minutes to sketch ONE solution to this problem
  • They may have several ideas but they should choose the one solution they think will work best

Step 3: (10 minutes)
  • Give everyone a few minutes to show their sketches and explain their solution
  • Allow everyone to ask a few questions for clarification
  • Everyone should be thinking about which ideas they like the best and which parts of the ideas they would like to steal

Step 4: (10 minutes)
  • Sketching session round 2
  • Give everyone another 10 minutes to sketch ONE solution to this problem
  • They can improve on their original idea by borrowing ideas from other people, they can come up with a totally new idea inspired by what they saw or they can just steal someone’s idea entirely
  • Their final sketch should simply be what they think is the best solution to the problem and it doesn’t matter whose idea it was.

Step 5: (10 minutes)
  • Give everyone a few minutes to show their sketches and explain their solution
  • You will find that in the second round ideas are more refined and that there is more consensus about what a good solution should be
  • You might even find that everyone has sketched the same solution

Step 6:
  • ​You now have some clear solutions for your problem!

This can be a great replacement for a typical 1 hour meeting where you can get you and your team together and actually achieve something productive and have fun at the same time.

Let me know in the comments if you try this out or let me know if you want other ideas for collaboration - I’ve got loads of fun exercises you can do.
0 Comments

    Author

    I started out on my own in 2022 to help teams of people collaborate and solve problems more effectively

    Archives

    June 2022

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.
  • Home
  • What I do
    • Challenge 360
    • Strategy sprint
    • Design sprint
    • One day challenge sprint
    • Leadership
    • Mentoring
  • Case studies
    • Inclusive culture workshop
    • Guiding 100 UX/UI designers to design a new feature for a product
    • Metro website (Design sprint)
    • TMG development team (Design sprint)
  • Contact
  • Cycle For Good