Ways to Foster Innovation Through Creative Workshops

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Summary

Explore innovative ways to spark creativity and problem-solving in your team through dynamic and thoughtfully designed workshops.

  • Break tasks into phases: Structure workshops with intervals, allowing time for independent thinking and follow-up sessions to refine ideas and sustain momentum.
  • Integrate hands-on tools: Introduce new technologies like AI-powered prototyping tools to encourage experimentation and bring concepts to life with practical exercises.
  • Incorporate pre-work activities: Use AI-generated prompts or similar tools to engage participants before workshops, helping them arrive prepared and inspired to contribute.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Keith Hopper
    Keith Hopper Keith Hopper is an Influencer

    Driving discovery and experimentation in an AI-enabled world. Innovation instructor with 90k learners. Founder @Danger Fort Labs.

    5,070 followers

    Want more productive workshops? Try stopping them sooner. Workshops often lock people in a room for two or three hours and expect them to do their best thinking on demand. Do we really have to hold people hostage to be productive? Lately, I’ve been using a technique I call "Echo Sessions." Instead of forcing deep work to happen in real time, we kickstart an activity, get clarity, but then stop just as people are getting into it. That pause is intentional. It’s based on the same principle as the Pomodoro technique—when you leave something unfinished while still feeling engaged, you'll find it easy to return to it later and give it space to percolate. Instead of dragging out a long workshop, I schedule an Echo Session later—often in the same day—where everyone brings their independent or small group work back for discussion, iteration, and action. Why does this work? ✅ Encourages Deep Work – People get time to think, research, or create in their own way, rather than being forced into artificial collaboration. ✅ Optimizes Meeting Time – Workshops should be for shared understanding, decision-making, and iteration—not for quiet focus time. ✅ Respects Different Work Styles – Some need time to walk and think. Others need to sketch. Some want to research or tap into AI. Echo Sessions give people time and space to work in the way that’s best for them. ✅ Creates Natural Momentum – Stopping at a high-energy moment makes people want to continue later, giving them space to create, rather than leaving them drained from a marathon session. ✅ Reduces Calendar Lockdowns – Instead of monopolizing hours at a time, work is distributed more effectively and meetings are only used when necessary. Most importantly, this approach treats participants like adults. It gives them flexibility and agency while ensuring that meetings serve a clear, valuable purpose. We don’t need long workshops. We need better workshops. Curious—how do you approach workshop fatigue? Would this work in your team?

  • View profile for Nickey Skarstad

    Product builder & investor | Currently Director of Product @ Duolingo | Always hiring!

    11,672 followers

    [Steal this] Recently, I ran a hands-on "Building with AI" workshop that walked our Duolingo Product Managers through spinning up brand-new language-learning challenges using the latest AI-powered prototyping tools. Here's the exact workshop guide that you can use with your team. ⬇️ Why we did it: Great PMs ship fast and learn fast. The session let the team: → Practice modern visual-to-code tools (we used Lovable and imported real Figma files with Builder.io) → Stress-test AI chat interfaces for real product work → Walk away with a functional prototype they could show (or lovingly roast) in front of their peers What we learned: → AI tools aren't replacing PMs, but they are giving them a new storytelling tool → The barrier isn't the technology. It's giving people permission (and carving out time!) to experiment → Our team is creative af - we saw games, creative lessons, roasts, you name it! Try it with your team:  We're open-sourcing the entire workshop guide. Why? Because when more PMs can prototype at the speed of thought, better products get built. Period. Your PMs are sitting on massively creative ideas! This workshop unlocks them in one afternoon. How are you experimenting with new AI tools? 👇

  • View profile for Kian Gohar

    Coaching leaders to adopt AI and build high-performing teams | Author | AI Researcher | Speaker

    7,513 followers

    Thrilled to share a cool breakthrough I had today with AI in learning. It’s a method you can apply to any event you curate. ✨ I was running a full day workshop on innovation for the Entrepreneurs' Organization in Winnipeg (thanks Samantha Duha for hosting me!) and I wanted to give the participants some async “pre-work” to get their creative juices flowing BEFORE they arrived at the workshop. 🧠 As an entrepreneur and educator, I’m constantly exploring new methods to inspire and provoke thoughtful learning in my workshops. ✏️ So I ran an experiment and created an AI prompt that attendees could copy and paste in ChatGPT (or Claude, or Co-Pilot), which directed the AI chatbot to have a focused back-and-forth conversation with the participant about the workshop topic before they arrived. 💬 For any optional activity before a workshop, I’d normally expect only 20% of participants to follow through. 🤷🏻♂️ But 100% of the attendees did the optional homework! I was blown away by the engagement! I’ve never seen that before! 🤯 So going forward for all my workshops and important meetings, I will always assign async prework with an AI prompt to stimulate ideas. 💡 I want attendees to come engaged and excited to discuss solutions to a problem, and AI makes it so much easier! 🙌 Try it out and let me know what you experience! *** Here’s a VERY simplified version of the prompt: 🟢 Dear AI, please ask me these 3-5 questions about my knowledge of this workshop on topic ABC [insert topic]. Wait for my answer to each question, before going to the next one. 🔵 [Then you, the workshop curator, should create 3-5 important questions you want your attendees to consider, and insert them here, Q1… Q2…Q3…] 🟡 Based on my answers, please identify any assumptions I’m making, and offer suggestions for any alternative perspectives. Keep it simple.

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