Wednesday, February 9, 2022

Facilitation: Getting the Results you Need from a Workshop

 

By Catherine Elder

If you’re facilitating your first workshop it’s important to understand your role.

A facilitator is defined as someone who helps to bring about an outcome (including making decisions and achieving a result) by providing indirect and unobtrusive assistance, guidance, or supervision in a collaborative process.

Facilitating a workshop

You’ve done all the preparation and you now have people in a room (or virtual room). Start by thanking them for their time, stating the objective and reviewing the agenda. Then have them introduce themselves with their name, role and what they want to achieve from the workshop. You may be surprised by people’s perception of why they’re there and may get some valuable direction of what you need or what you need to clarify. If the people in the session haven’t collaborated before you may want to start to build trust and a team atmosphere with some fun icebreakers. You can also get them warmed up by having them do something, ideally together, even if it’s having them hand out sticky notes and set up the room (In a virtual setting you could have them practice on a whiteboard).

Its important to manage everyone’s expectations so keep to the agenda and make sure you’ve allowed for breaks. Outline any rules and protocols. People should feel comfortable enough to participate freely without judgement or criticism. Allow for a free flow of discussion but let participants know that if they get off topic the items will be put in a “parking lot” which could be discussed at another time. 

Types of Workshops

There are four main types of workshops according to David Kolb (1984) Model of Experiential Learning:

  • Reflecting on experience (e.g., putting people in pairs to discuss what they experienced then sharing with the group for further insights):
    • This is useful when the goal is to identify pros and cons of a product/ service/ process
    • This can be used as an icebreaker to build rapport
    • This can be part of a focus group
    • You can use Mind mapping and Collaborative Games like Affinity Mapping can to build an understanding of relationships
  • Assimilating and conceptualizing (e.g., providing new information or a demonstration and having people design or discuss improvements or give new ideas):
    • This is useful when the goal is to improve or create something new
    • This can be used to build engagement and excitement
    • You can use Prototyping, Brainstorming and Modelling  
  • Experimenting and practicing (e.g., having people try something new to change a behaviour or develop a skill to give them another perspective):
    • This is useful when testing something that exists and for training
    • This can be used for A/B testing, hypothesis testing and Lab, field, and natural experiments offer different levels of controls
    • You can use the Observation technique 
  • Planning for application (e.g., having people look into the future and create a vision based on discussions):
    • This is useful when you’re starting with a new product or service
    • You can use Brainstorming and Prototyping  


Your Role as Facilitator

As a facilitator you need to encourage participation, provide light guidance so participants don’t get off track, listen to the discussion and provide prompts if anyone is stalled (e.g., sometimes asking “Why do you think that is?” can reinvigorate the conversation).

Competencies you need to be a good facilitator are Communication skills including listening, public speaking and presenting; Negotiation and Conflict Resolution skills; Creative Thinking; and Organizational skills.

Have you achieved what you set out to?

You stated an objective at the beginning of the workshop. As a facilitator you need to guide the conversation enough so that the objective is achieved. Can you define needed actions (improvements, recommendations, new ideas) from the input you elicited in the workshop? It is important you capture the work either by having a note taker, recording an online session, taking photos of anything created in the workshop, and documenting your observations. 

Sometimes more than one workshop is needed, or other elicitation activities need to be planned to fill in gaps of missing information. Each initiative is different. Let your participants know what the next steps are.


The Five Techniques You Should Know

If you’re just starting out as a business analysis practitioner or consultant there are five basic techniques you should know for eliciting and gathering information.

Document Analysis

A good first question is “Are there any documents I can review?” This can also be tricky because you could be inundated with information or be faced with a culture of people not willing to share information. You need to determine what type of documents are relevant, credible, and current for your need. Then you analyze the documents and information, extrapolating relevant components and identifying any gaps in information, while ensuring that you keep track of what documents you have referenced. As you work through your initiative you may come across other information sources that you’ll analyze and track so be open to this technique not really being “finished”. If you’re not getting the information and documentation you need you may have to escalate the request, but it is worth pursuing. And finally, you need to be ready to communicate and validate any findings. You may be surprised at how much you learn about an organization or initiative by reading and analyzing key pieces of documentation, you may even become a subject matter expert that other people come to for information.


Interviews 

You may think interviews are easy, you just ask someone a series of questions. There is a lot more to it. You need to have a clear goal of what you want to find out. You need to craft a series of questions to elicit answers. Then you need to identify who you need to interview that can provide the information. You will have to organize the interviews. Conducting the interviews is when you get to ask the questions and this is where it can get hard. You need to listen. You might think that is self evident but if you have a series of questions you may start thinking about the next question while the interviewee is making a valuable point, but you miss it because your attention was on what you need to do next. You need to listen. Make eye contact. Ask for clarification. Empathize if they’re discussing a problem but don’t interrupt. You may want to ask questions to get a deeper level of information. Finish writing your notes (or if recording pace yourself appropriately), then ask the next question. You may find you have additional questions which you should make note of and ask if you have time. There are structured interviews that follow this method of having prepared questions, and there are unstructured interviews which are more conversational. If you are doing several interviews and want to compare different aspects, then you’ll want to keep to a structured approach. When you conclude the interview let the person know if there are any next steps, what you’ll do with the information they’ve shared, and thank them. Then you’ll finish writing up your notes and analyzing them – were there any surprizes? Do you have any gaps in information? You may need to do more interviews or seek out more documentation. It never hurts to ask an interview participant if they have or know of any documents you should look at and if there is anyone else you should interview. Interviewing provides you with an opportunity to build relationships. You’ll get to know people and may be able to identify advocates, supporters, mentors, friends, and people that may be resistant to the initiative.


Surveys 

While interviews can provide deep insights from a person, surveys can provide a broader spectrum of data that can be segmented, aggregated, and analyzed. As with all techniques you need to start with a plan of what you want to achieve. You need to identify who you want to send the survey to and how you’re going to send it and if you have a survey tool you can use. You’ll also need to determine how you’re going to communicate the survey as well as the benefits for your target audience in completing the survey. You need to craft the questionnaire carefully so it isn’t biased, and it achieves what you need it to. Surveys shouldn’t take more than ten minutes to complete otherwise you may have people abandoning it. That means around ten questions plus or minus a few demographic questions that the respondent doesn’t have to think hard about. If you are doing a comparative analysis with quantitative data you’ll use close-ended questions. If you’re doing a qualitative survey with open-ended questions to gain feedback or suggestions, you want to allow time for people to write out responses. If you’re asking people to rate something you want to keep your scale to an even number like four, this prevents people from choosing a middle number and forces them to choose on a positive or negative side which provides more insight. Remember you’ll have to analyze the responses, document the results, and then communicate your findings.


Focus Groups

You start with an objective and a plan that you want to achieve. Focus groups have about six participants plus yourself as a moderator and someone taking notes. Focus groups are useful for eliciting opinions, ideas, and feedback. Depending on what your goal is, having visual aids that the group can react to can be very helpful. You’ll need to identify not only the participants you want but how you’re going to group them. Its typical to do more than one focus group. You’ll need to develop a discussion guide to provide you with prompting questions to elicit the responses you need to achieve your goal. As a moderator your role is to guide the conversation, so it stays on track. You should have someone to record the session, documenting ideas and discussion points. Let the participants express their opinions and ideas freely. Make sure they know it is a safe environment to give their honest opinion. Thank the participants for their time and insights and let them know if you’ll be contacting them further or what you’ll be doing with the information. Consolidate notes from all focus groups, document agreements and disagreements, identify new ideas and write up a report. If you don’t feel you’ve achieved the objective or that you have enough information you may want to conduct additional focus groups or use another elicitation activity to complement the information you have. Focus groups are a great way to get to know a group of people – whether subject matter experts or teams etc. They provide additional insights into the way people interact, behave and even the culture of the organization.


Workshops

Workshops also start with an objective and a plan and it’s important that participants understand why they’re there and what the objective is.  As the facilitator you need to keep everyone engaged and on track as well as keep to any set timing. The purpose of a workshop is to get a group of people to collaborate to generate ideas, solve a problem, develop a plan, reach a decision or consensus, etc. Workshops require full participation and are not a form of meeting. Meetings are to discuss, share, and exchange information in short time periods in a relatively passive way. Workshops require participants to participate and collaborate and are several hours to several days. As such, they require a lot of planning and communicating. The plan should include an agenda of how the activities will be broken out and timing. All workshops start with a reiteration of the purpose followed by rules of behaviour covering respecting each others’ opinions to a parking lot for ideas that can’t be discussed at the time. There are four main types of workshops according to David Kolb (1984) Model of Experiential Learning:

  • Reflecting on experience (e.g., putting people in pairs to discuss what they experienced then sharing with the group for further insights)
  • Assimilating and conceptualizing (e.g., providing new information or a demonstration and having people design or discuss improvements or new ideas)
  • Experimenting and practicing (e.g., having people try something new to change a behaviour or develop a skill to give them another perspective)
  • Planning for application (e.g., having people look into the future and create a vision based on discussions)

How you use a workshop depends on what you need to achieve and the output you want. Outputs can include vision boards, roadmaps, and prototypes etc. They can be a great way to engage and collaborate to build a team and gain consensus. There are several different activities you can have participants do in workshops – from lively discussions to sketching to playing games. Once you’ve finished your activities you’ll need to collect any artefacts that have been created and document results which should be shared with the participants.


Summary

As you continue to practice business analysis you will find the techniques that work best in different contexts as well as those that compliment each other and those that help achieve engagement, consensus, or approvals. You’ll choose which works best for what you need to achieve in the context you’re in. You should try different techniques to understand their benefits and to engage your stakeholders. 


Thursday, July 12, 2018

Social marketers still missing the mark

Social Marketers Still Aren’t Giving the People What They Want

Sprout Social found a disconnect between brand priorities and consumer desires

It would be interesting to know more about the survey respondents as not all brands and their customers fit in with Facebook. The article talks about audiences engaging but not sharing so its unclear how they are defining engagement. If they are commenting it is unclear whether companies are responding and building relationships and respecting the customer conversation. 

Companies still aren't being strategic with their social presence. It requires understanding the customer, the experience, the social channel and the company's objectives. There is a lot of potential in the use of social if its used strategically and not just as a game to measure likes and shares.

Social Marketers

Wednesday, May 2, 2018

Writing to be read



Tests have shown that a sentence of eight words is very easy to read; of 11 words, easy; of 14 words, fairly easy; of 17 words, standard; of 21 words, fairly difficult; of 25 words, difficult; of 29 or more words, very difficult; so this sentence with 54 words, counting numbers, is ranked impossible.”

The 50 most frequently looked-up words by readers of The New York Times (1/1/2010 through 5/26/2010)(Alphabetically, not by number of look-ups)
 
alacrity — antediluvian — apoplectic — apostates — atavistic — austerity — baldenfreude — canard — chimera — comity — crèches — cynosure — démarche — desultory — egregious — epistemic — ersatz — feckless — hegemony — hubris — incendiary — inchoate — Internecine — jejune — Kristallnacht — laconic — Manichean — mirabile dictu — nascent — obduracy — obstreperous — omertà — opprobrium — overhaul — peripatetic — polemicist — prescient — profligacy — profligate — provenance — putative — redoubtable — renminbi — sanguine — sclerotic — solipsistic — soporific — sui generis — ubiquitous — verisimilitude

If your reader has to look up a word or more they begin to be disconnected to the content; they'll have to read the sentence more than once if they return from looking up the word. And they may think you're speaking over their head and that your content is not meant for them.

Tuesday, September 26, 2017

Strategic content and its management

Content management means different things to different people. In some cases it is the managing of website content, in others they tack on social media and maybe an app. And quite often it is a tactical activity that is responsive to internal requests - that is, there is no strategy and very little content created proactively based on business objectives, audience research and needs, rather content is treated like filler for a digital container. 

Content was called “king” in the digital space but it is being treated like something that can be mass produced and reused like a dishrag. If content is to achieve all the demands made on it - be engaging, relevant, current, personalized, customized, optimized for search and fit in the framework of the device being used to reference it, then it needs to have a strategic approach and plan on an ongoing basis.

Even “evergreen” needs review
There is some content that can be “evergreen” with the caveat that even it is reviewed at least annually. Content like error messages (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_HTTP_status_codes), instructional/informational text (close, swipe), field delivery content (welcome [name field]), and annual content (tax time, flu shots etc.). However, a decision needs to be made whether the content is created for the smallest delivery format or if different content is applied according to the delivery device.

Tagging
Tagging is critical, and whether you approach it with Darwin Information Typing Architecture (DITA) or taxonomies, the structure, organization and relationships you build are critical for the user experience. These structures should also be reviewed at least on an annual basis as new digital experiences are created and new audiences may be added to the mix.

CMS and processes
Content management systems are only as good as the strategic plan in place that helps develop any customization your system to meet your business needs as well as the accompany taxonomy and processes to review your content. And though Agile is the darling process of innovation implementation there will always be some content that requires more of a waterfall approach to get through cycles of writing, legal review and translation.

Make your content work
Creating content seems easy but it isn’t. Content should be put to work if it is truly to be strategic and therefore it needs to meet business objectives (drive conversion or educate/inform), be relevant and current, optimized for search (with keywords holistically incorporated into content), be written to brand guidelines including user-centricity, and where appropriate personalized and customized. In addition, content for digital needs to be concise and fit the device it is intended for. 

Freelancers are still being paid by the word however in digital it is often more difficult to be concise and get messages across in short pieces of content which is counter intuitive if you’re paying by the word. I recommend staying with hourly rates and having maximum limits.


Strategically manage your content

Content needs strategy and strategy needs people who can be analytical and strategic as well as creative in order to ensure that content does its job, otherwise its just a collection of words that aren’t relevant or engaging and won’t work for you.

(c)2017 Catherine elder

Friday, March 4, 2016

Video best practices

Videos should be short and have a defined purpose - are they meant to inform or entertain or both? What channel are you going to use it in? (Twitter, YouTube, web page, sales demo in person, etc.).

The basics for video:
  1. Title of file should be concise as it will be viewable (no “English Final” or version numbers); For French, the file name should be in French.
  2. There should be a title slide that is branded – YouTube picks the first 2-3 slides which you can use as the static reference – this slide should have logo AND the Title of the presentation
  3. A short description should be provided – in English and French (it should engage people so they want to watch the video; use keywords in your description)
  4. At least three keyword tags should be provided – in English and French
  5. You should turn on captioning
 In addition,  introductory content should go before any video on a web page to introduce the video and explain why someone should watch it; and it should indicate the length of the video (e.g. Watch this 2 minute video on ...).
 

Thursday, February 25, 2016

Google search results and adwords

Google has announced it is removing its right side-bar ads. So the search engine results page (SERP) can look like - 4 ads on the top, 10 results (plus an image results view), and 3 text ads at the bottom.

This means that ad words just got much more competitive. It's not clear whether SEO will be directly impacted.

Here is a search on Absence Management - the four ads at the top mean extra scrolling; Google has added the "Image" view as a result; and there are three text ads at the bottom.

Here is a good article the further elaborates: http://www.wordtracker.com/blog/google-confirms-a-four-ad-format-ending-sidebar-placements