I have the two triangles and a rectangle on a sticky note stuck to my monitor so that I have quick access to it when I have to talk about the fundamental structure of meetings, discussions, or workshops.
I really love that image: two triangles and a rectangle as a permanent companion on your monitor 😊
That’s exactly what I hoped for with the framework: something simple enough to remember, yet robust enough to anchor conversations when things get messy or abstract. When discussions drift, having a shared “mental map” helps everyone re-orient without over-explaining or over-facilitating.
It’s fascinating how a small visual reminder can quietly shape how we think, listen, and structure dialogue. Thanks for sharing how you’re using it in practice — that’s incredibly rewarding to hear.
I've been in UX/UI design for years, and your piece on workshop design really hit home. It's packed with clear, practical tips that'll help me run better workshops and explain the process more clearly to everyone involved. Super helpful for boosting engagement and making things click with my teams.
Great connection! the Double Diamond is definitely a close cousin. I’m glad the Emergent part resonated with you.
That middle space is where things often feel uncomfortable, ambiguous, even messy, and yet it’s exactly where deeper insight, shared understanding, and real learning tend to surface. Naming and legitimizing that phase helps people stay with the process instead of rushing to premature clarity.
Thanks for pointing that out. It’s a subtle but crucial distinction.
I have the two triangles and a rectangle on a sticky note stuck to my monitor so that I have quick access to it when I have to talk about the fundamental structure of meetings, discussions, or workshops.
Hi Steve!
I really love that image: two triangles and a rectangle as a permanent companion on your monitor 😊
That’s exactly what I hoped for with the framework: something simple enough to remember, yet robust enough to anchor conversations when things get messy or abstract. When discussions drift, having a shared “mental map” helps everyone re-orient without over-explaining or over-facilitating.
It’s fascinating how a small visual reminder can quietly shape how we think, listen, and structure dialogue. Thanks for sharing how you’re using it in practice — that’s incredibly rewarding to hear.
I've been in UX/UI design for years, and your piece on workshop design really hit home. It's packed with clear, practical tips that'll help me run better workshops and explain the process more clearly to everyone involved. Super helpful for boosting engagement and making things click with my teams.
Hola William!
I am both grateful and humbled by your kind and warm words.
As far as I manage to touch and inspired 1 soul, it makes all work worth :-)
Cool one. I was aware of a similar idea of Double Diamond. The Emergent part in the middle makes so much sense.
Hi Umes!
Great connection! the Double Diamond is definitely a close cousin. I’m glad the Emergent part resonated with you.
That middle space is where things often feel uncomfortable, ambiguous, even messy, and yet it’s exactly where deeper insight, shared understanding, and real learning tend to surface. Naming and legitimizing that phase helps people stay with the process instead of rushing to premature clarity.
Thanks for pointing that out. It’s a subtle but crucial distinction.