Workshops Feeling Flat?
72% of meetings are unproductive1. What about your workshops?
When a workshop feels flat, most teams don't stop to ask why. They just pick a new date, a new time, maybe a single activity that looks engaging; and hope this one will work better. It rarely does. The real issues start earlier; in how little thought goes into the participant experience or the path to outcomes.
That's Workshop Theatre
Too often, workshops just happen. Someone books a room (or opens a Miro board), gathers a group, and calls it collaboration. The room looks busy, the wall is full, but the outcomes? Unclear.
That's Workshop Theatre: when the performance of collaboration replaces the practice of it. Everyone looks engaged: colourful boards, structured timeboxes, dot votes, polite agreement. But no one makes decisions or commits to action because no one designed the session to make that happen. The structure prompts activity, not accountability.
It's not deliberate. Most teams genuinely want to collaborate; they're just following the same scripts they've seen before. The rituals feel familiar and safe, even when they produce little value. Over time, "collaboration" becomes synonymous with showing up, sticking notes, and moving on, rather than questioning, sense-making, and deciding together.
Check Your Vital Signs
The Workshop Diagnostic Scorecard helps teams see exactly where things break down. This 9-question checklist examines three vital signs across The Setup (Planning & Design), The Experience (Facilitation), and The Output (Delivery).
Where You Land
Run the diagnostic on your last 3 workshops. Are you:
Workshop Capable
You're already running structured sessions that deliver ROI. Your next step is refining to scale; replicating what works across more teams and complex projects.
Workshop Developing
You're getting some value but leaving opportunities on the table. Focus on strengthening your lowest-scoring section (Setup, Experience, or Output) to unlock better outcomes.
Workshop Curious
Your sessions look collaborative but function like meetings with sticky notes. Start with structure; build from clear outcomes backward, not activity forward.
Design Intentional Progress
Note your lowest-scoring section; that's where your biggest improvement lives. Going through the diagnosis surfaces specific gaps in your approach; maybe you're skipping pre-work that would make sessions more productive, or your outputs are raw data dumps instead of decision-ready artifacts. Teams who run it together often discover shared blind spots just from discussing the questions, creating instant alignment on what good workshop design looks like.
When you start designing workshops intentionally; working backward from clear outcomes and participant needs; you transform sessions from performance into progress that actually moves projects forward.
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