intro2gr: Introduction the Graphic Recording Workshop

Do you?
Or do you know someone?
Or do you know someone who would know someone?
Who is interested in learning the fundamental skills of graphic recording??? 

Emily Shepard and Lynn Caruthers are offering our weekend graphic recording workshop again, Saturday and Sunday, October 16 and 17.  Their May pilot workshop sold out. They received great feedback and keep hearing success stories from participants, so they are offering our new and improved version.

The room is filling up. Register today to claim a spot on the wall!

Master Facilitator Journal: Be Your Material

Your "message" is far more than the material you present.

From Master Facilitation Journal:

Self-Facilitation Skill

Once long ago, when asked by a reporter if he had a message he wanted the world to hear, Gandhi replied, "My life is my message."
Whether we like it or not, this statement is just as true for you and me today as it was for Gandhi then. Who we are and how we are is the medium through which our message travels. That medium is far richer and truer than what we say in words. 

When we present our material to a group we are facilitating or training, what we're really presenting is ourselves. Our deepest, thoughts, feelings, fears, hopes, and aspirations come through as an unspoken wave of information that others pick up at a level usually below their conscious awareness. Yet this material influences others more powerfully than mere words. So in a very real way, you are your material, and your life is your message!

Application

So what if you just want to present something your audience has asked for or that you want them to hear? And you figure that you'll impress them by having all your data in order and your presentation impeccably organized and you're just humming along right on track and on schedule. You can see the audience is listening respectfully to what you have to say. And your presentation is clicking like a fine-tuned machine.

Then someone asks you a question and you spontaneously find yourself reminded of a real life experience from your past, and you begin to reveal it as if you were there again--unplanned, unbidden, unprepared, but entirely relevant.

When you complete your story and remember where you are, you look around and see that the audience is hanging on your every word as if you had touched their souls. They see you as you are--a real live human being just like them and they are with you. Many of them show up after the meeting and want to share their stories with you. They want to ask you questions. They know you and they trust you. You've delivered your message loud and clear ...you've given yourself.

Action

The next time you have the opportunity to facilitate or even participate in a group, take a chance and share yourself at a level beyond your agenda. Share a personal story or experience or an honest response at an emotional level to what someone else has shared. Notice how this changes the dynamic. I'm interested in hearing about your experience. Please Add Your Comments and share your thoughts, stories, and experiences around this topic. I'd love to hear from you!

Steve Davis
Founder, FacilitatorU.com

Labor Day Inspiration: Free and Cool (vol. 4)

It's free. It's cool. It's 36 pages of Magic.

And as always, the latest issue of the Free and Cool zine is exclusively available right here for download.

This issue features a whole slew of artists you'll want to meet: Aphte, Conor Keller, Anton Weflö, Maxime Francout, Rmk, Fafé, Fanny Claude, Florentin Bodet, Club Muscles, Corey Thompson, Anke Weckmann, Mathieu Lambert, Rand Renfrow, Aurélie Grand, Tristan Pernet, Jesse Robinson Williams, Connor Annal, Yohan Sacré, Bosque Studio, Antoine Orand.

Download your free copy, and then join them on Facebook.

 

Harvard Business Review: Graphic Facilitation Lives!

via hbr.org

It's official: Graphic Facilitation exists!

I know this because the Harvard Business Review (aka. Ye Olde HBR) has published an article about us, who uses us, and the main point... our work can help businesses.

Big ones, even!

Companies using the technique include HP, Dell, S.C. Johnson, and Charles Schwab. Kraft Foods has been utilizing graphic recording in its leadership training program since 2005. “For me, the drawings are really a trigger,” says Nicole Polarek, associate director of organizational development. “I can look at the picture and remember the conversation.” Jason Dirks, Kraft’s director of training, says graphic recording keeps people interested and engaged on two levels. “You have this initial ‘wow’ factor while watching this person draw the image,” Dirks says, and afterward people can study the depiction more closely. “The artists are able to capture a lot of depth.”

The article titled, "Vision Statement: Tired of PowerPoint? Try This Instead", by Daniel McGinn with illustration by Stephanie Crowley, appears in the September 2010 edition of HBR and on-line here.

Thanks Steph Crowley for raising the tide for all our boats. Congrats to Julie StuartBree Sanchez and the "San Francisco architects" (David Sibbet and The Grove) for the honorable mentions.

Study: Doodling Helps You Pay Attention

In a delightful new study, which will be published in the journal Applied Cognitive Psychology, psychologist Jackie Andrade of the University of Plymouth in southern England showed that doodlers actually remember more than nondoodlers when asked to retain tediously delivered information, like, say, during a boring meeting or a lecture.

Read more: http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1882127,00.html#ixzz0wsnK5irR