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Games are fun, silly, not based in reality…
We can take our serious selves into games and embrace playfulness, but it’s a lot harder to take the playfulness back with us as we return to the ‘real world’.
But what if we see that ‘real world’ as a game itself?
What if we saw every interaction as a game?
We could press certain buttons, move certain facets, and play with expectations and beliefs that change everything. When a meeting is a game, when an interview is a game, and when relationships are a game, we can have fun – we can open up possibilities and find new meanings within established systems.
Join me and Lily Higgins in this week’s episode as we explore game design, facilitation, and the spaces in between.
Find out about:
Don’t miss the next show: Subscribe to the show with your favourite podcast player.
Click here to download the free 1-page summary.
Thanks to our sponsor Deckhive. Click here to find out more about the new platform for using card decks in online facilitation. Use the code workshopswork to get the first month for free.
Questions and Answers
[01:01] When did you start calling yourself a facilitator?
[02:00] Do you recall what caused you to shift to finally calling yourself a facilitator?
[06:06] What inspires your work? Is it a particular school of thought or practice?
[07:57] What’s the difference between game thinking and gamification?
[10:47] What are the helpful, deeper ways we can apply game thinking to create intrinsic motivation?
[14:13] Do you have to draw a line between seriousness and fun when applying game thinking?
[20:17] How much of the background, the rules, the detail do you share with clients?
[22:07] What tools are there within game thinking that help flatten the room?
[33:24] What are your thoughts on finite vs infinite games?
[36:14] What makes a workshop fail?
[37:08] What is an urban game?
[43:45] What did you take away from this urban game in Central Station that you apply in professional spaces?
[46:30] What would the equivalent be in an office?
[48:25] Do you have a favourite exercise?
[56:28] Was there anything else you wanted to bring today that you haven’t yet been able to?
[01:05:51] What is the one thing you would like listeners to take away from this episode?
Links
Lily's business
Lily's website
Share your thoughts about our conversation!
Support the show
✨✨✨
Subscribe to our newsletter to receive a free 1-page summary of each upcoming episode directly to your inbox, or explore our eBooks featuring 50-episode compilations for even more facilitation insights. Find out more:
https://workshops.work/podcast
✨✨✨
Did you know? You can search all episodes by keyword to find exactly what you need via our Buzzsprout page!
5
99 ratings
Games are fun, silly, not based in reality…
We can take our serious selves into games and embrace playfulness, but it’s a lot harder to take the playfulness back with us as we return to the ‘real world’.
But what if we see that ‘real world’ as a game itself?
What if we saw every interaction as a game?
We could press certain buttons, move certain facets, and play with expectations and beliefs that change everything. When a meeting is a game, when an interview is a game, and when relationships are a game, we can have fun – we can open up possibilities and find new meanings within established systems.
Join me and Lily Higgins in this week’s episode as we explore game design, facilitation, and the spaces in between.
Find out about:
Don’t miss the next show: Subscribe to the show with your favourite podcast player.
Click here to download the free 1-page summary.
Thanks to our sponsor Deckhive. Click here to find out more about the new platform for using card decks in online facilitation. Use the code workshopswork to get the first month for free.
Questions and Answers
[01:01] When did you start calling yourself a facilitator?
[02:00] Do you recall what caused you to shift to finally calling yourself a facilitator?
[06:06] What inspires your work? Is it a particular school of thought or practice?
[07:57] What’s the difference between game thinking and gamification?
[10:47] What are the helpful, deeper ways we can apply game thinking to create intrinsic motivation?
[14:13] Do you have to draw a line between seriousness and fun when applying game thinking?
[20:17] How much of the background, the rules, the detail do you share with clients?
[22:07] What tools are there within game thinking that help flatten the room?
[33:24] What are your thoughts on finite vs infinite games?
[36:14] What makes a workshop fail?
[37:08] What is an urban game?
[43:45] What did you take away from this urban game in Central Station that you apply in professional spaces?
[46:30] What would the equivalent be in an office?
[48:25] Do you have a favourite exercise?
[56:28] Was there anything else you wanted to bring today that you haven’t yet been able to?
[01:05:51] What is the one thing you would like listeners to take away from this episode?
Links
Lily's business
Lily's website
Share your thoughts about our conversation!
Support the show
✨✨✨
Subscribe to our newsletter to receive a free 1-page summary of each upcoming episode directly to your inbox, or explore our eBooks featuring 50-episode compilations for even more facilitation insights. Find out more:
https://workshops.work/podcast
✨✨✨
Did you know? You can search all episodes by keyword to find exactly what you need via our Buzzsprout page!
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