How to Design a Workshop Agenda for Innovation

Explore top LinkedIn content from expert professionals.

Summary

Designing an agenda for an innovation workshop requires a strategic approach to ensure collaboration, creativity, and actionable outcomes. By focusing on clear goals, dynamic activities, and inclusivity, you can create a productive environment for generating innovative ideas and solutions.

  • Define clear objectives: Start by setting specific and measurable goals to guide your workshop, ensuring all participants are aligned and focused.
  • Create engaging activities: Incorporate interactive exercises, such as brainstorming games or unconventional challenges, to spark creativity and encourage diverse thinking.
  • Plan for follow-up: Once the workshop concludes, establish a roadmap with actionable steps and assign responsibilities to ensure progress and accountability.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Aadhya K.

    Strategy and Design Leader | Award-Winning Designer | AI and Innovation Expert | Speaker & Mentor | Human-Centered Design | Digital Transformation

    4,346 followers

    #TGIF - Today, I'm sharing some learning from conducting workshops . These were value-driven product strategy workshops with impactful results as shared by my participants. Most of these are actual reasons for the packed workshops which you can use. Plan and Set an #Agenda: Start with a well-defined agenda to keep the session focused and on track. Never ever skip this. Keep phones on silent mode or away during the session. Consider All #Biases: Keep personal biases and feelings out of the room to ensure decision-making within/between and among participants is not compromised. Use #Factual #Data: Prepare in advance, get those real world use cases, collect, share and support strategic choices with facts to ensure credibility and effectiveness. #Prioritize #Ideas: After generating ideas, evaluate and prioritize them based on their potential impact, feasibility, and alignment with your product's goals and what the participants can prototype. Organize them by importance, size, or other relevant factors. Be Open to #Feedback: Actively seek input from participants and stakeholders such as co-facilitators, customers, and team members. Listen to their concerns and suggestions, and be willing to incorporate new ideas into your strategy. Don’t drive it alone. #Encourage Diverse #Thinking: Create a fun and inclusive environment where diverse perspectives are encouraged to drive innovative solutions. Give people room to speak without fear. Add joy. Build Participant #Consensus: From the beginning aim to build consensus among participants to ensure everyone is aligned with the strategy and is going along as a team. Look out for isolated members, get them involved. Set Clear #Objectives: Define clear, measurable objectives to provide a direction for your strategy workshop. Don't lose sight of the collective goals. Write them out, big and bold. Create a #Roadmap: Finally develop a strategic roadmap to outline the steps needed to achieve your objectives for every participant. #FollowUp: Ensure there are follow-up actions to implement the agreed-upon strategy and monitor progress, make sure everyone has a role to play, every gear has a rotary action, one stops, everyone stops.   Don’t forget to tell me how this works out for you and drag a comment, if you have any tips and recommendations. #workshop #facilitation #training #Strategy #innovation #india #USA

  • View profile for Elliot Roazen

    Director of Growth, Platter

    13,491 followers

    Back leading workshops for the first time since Unilever days. I love workshops/offsites. But it’s helpful to clarify what they are for and what they are definitely *not* for. The biggest mistake I see teams make is thinking that these are for “ideation” or “brainstorming”. While this kind of kumbayah creativity is common and feels good in the moment… it rarely produces anything of value. The conditions for creativity generally and ideation specifically cannot just be manufactured in a room with a fixed time box. That’s why you’re far more likely to come up with a brilliant idea walking your dog, rather than being locked in a room with senior SaaS leaders. These workshop sessions are for making decisions. Getting alignment. So here’s what you can do to make sure the outcomes actually drive your business forward: - Get all the right people in the room. You need representation from the departments that will be doing the work. - Encourage diversity of opinion. Arguments are healthy; you don’t want a room full of yes-people. Expect tension. - Make pre-work mandatory. Homework is good. This is where the ideas happen. Capture them and bring them to the sessions. - Map your agenda to energy levels. Be realistic about three 8-hour workshops, don’t put something heavy at 5pm on the third day. - Furthermore, be ruthless about agenda. Rabbit holes and tangents do not produce results, they just muddy your clarity. - Ditch the decks when you can. Nobody pays attention, they are poor communication tools, and they take too long to prepare. - Make the output digestible. No 40-page PDF. Make it shareable and easy to review.

  • Hack Your Team's Mindset: 5 Unconventional Warmups for Innovation Workshops 🧠⚡ Ever run an innovation workshop that felt like trying to start a car with a dead battery? That first 30 minutes determines whether you'll get breakthrough ideas or recycled thinking. Something that I call getting into the “psychology of innovation”. After facilitating several sessions, I've discovered something surprising: the traditional "let's go around and introduce ourselves" kills creative energy before it starts. Your team's brains are still in operational mode—not possibility mode. Here are five unconventional warmups I've tested that rewire neural pathways for innovation in under 20 minutes: 1. The Impossible Question Challenge 🔥 Start by asking questions that have no "correct" answers: "How would you design a restaurant on Mars?" or "What if sleep became optional?" This immediately signals we're breaking free from conventional thinking. 2. The Reality Bending Exercise ✨ Have everyone write down three "unchangeable facts" about your industry. Then challenge teams to imagine a world where each "fact" is no longer true. As Steve Jobs said, "Reality can be distorted"—this exercise trains that muscle. 3. The Reverse Assumptions Game 🔄 List 5-10 core assumptions about your business. Then systematically reverse each one: "What if we charged more for less?" or "What if our customers became our employees?" This shatters mental models almost instantly. 4. The "Yes, And..." Chain Reaction ⛓️ One person proposes a wild idea. Instead of evaluating it, the next person must say "Yes, and..." adding something to evolve it further. Continue for 3-5 minutes. This dismantles our innate criticism reflex. 5. Two-Minute Futures ⏱️ Give everyone two minutes to draw what your industry will look like in 2040. The time constraint bypasses the analytical brain and accesses the intuitive one. The crude drawings often reveal surprising insights about shared hopes and fears. Remember: Innovation doesn't need fancy frameworks—it needs minds free from invisible constraints. These warmups aren't just games; they're pattern-disruptors that help your team escape their mental programming. What's your go-to innovation warmup? Have you tried activities that break conventional thinking patterns? #InnovationWorkshops #CreativeThinking #DesignThinking #TeamFacilitation #Creativity #TransformativeMindset

Explore categories