We time nearly everything during Brainzooming strategy and innovation workshops, spelling out upfront how many minutes we'll have to accomplish a task and what types of output we expect to produce within that window.
Often, we use noisy kitchen timers for the actual timing. Invariably, participants hate the timer alarm going off early in the collaborations; by the end, they are saying that they need to start timing activities at their own meetings!
Here are four advantages that Brainzooming participants routinely experience when we set time limits on generating ideas and developing strategies:
Setting a time limit helps you get what you want done promptly, thus avoiding running late or coming up short relative to your session objectives.
A time constraint and an aggressive goal on the number of ideas identified creates healthy pressure to generate, and not debate, new ideas.
It’s much more productive to divide 28 minutes into four different 7-minute exercises than a single effort. This allows varying the perspectives from which you’re addressing your challenge, yielding a stronger set of possibilities.
When you only have a few minutes to generate ideas, it dissuades people from analyzing ideas as they are shared. That can wait for an evaluation phase. Even then, when we're discussing ideas to prioritize, timing the activity precludes endless, unproductive debate that won’t materially change the group’s outcomes.
Setting aggressive time limits for collaborating is one of the most simple techniques to keep group meetings active, fun, and productive.