thinkshop

Upcoming thinkshops

Where conventional thinking goes to die — by appointment, in selected rooms, with senior practitioners who arrived to work.

How a thinkshop differs from a panel

A panel asks four people to share their views in front of a hundred who came to watch. A thinkshop puts twenty to fifty senior practitioners in a closed room, gives them one named tension with data on both sides, and doesn't let them out until they've diagnosed it and named who's going to act on it. There are no observers. There is no audience. There is no recording. There is, at the end, a document the room can use.

If you would like to be invited to a future thinkshop, or sponsor one — write to us.