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Do you speak LSP?

January 31, 2011 in Generic Discussion, News and Events

From the earliest days, the LEGO SERIOUS PLAY community was very much a multi-national community. People drawn to the approach shared a global affinity for the core beliefs and values underpinning the process and the outcomes.

Today it is approximately a year since the first T3 session under the new Open Source policy. The
diversity of facilitators joining the training has further confirmed that LSP is indeed a language that transcend many kind of boundaries. The participants in the past 12 month’s T3 sessions represents 26 nationalities that came together to learn how to speak LSP.

TRAINING SCHEDULE for the remaining part of 2011

Singapore (Singapore) November 1 – 4. Stage 1 and 2
December 12 -15, Copenhagen, Denmark: Stage 1 and Stage 2 (offered by Per and me in collaboration)

TRAINING SCHEDULE for first quarter of 2012
Atlanta (USA) January 24 – 27. Stage 1 and 2
Odense (Denmark) February 6 – 9. Stage 1 and 2
London (UK) February 24 – 27. Stage 1 and 2
Boston (USA) March 26 – 29. Stage 1 and 2

The purpose with our T3 facilitator training program is to provide the facilitator with the insights, confidence and commitments necessary to prepare and facilitate the LEGO SERIOUS PLAY method in a way that gives maximum value to the end-user and has lasting impact.

The train-the-trainer program for use of the LEGO(r) SERIOUS PLAY(r) method follows the updated program and use the new full facilitator manual developed by Per Kristiansen and myself. The program meets the standards set by the Association of Master Trainers in the LEGO SERIOUS PLAY methodology.

For more information about the training content and other questions regarding the training, please email me at robert@rasmussenconsulting.dk or direct message via my profile.

Certification Training in Facilitating and Designing workshops with the LEGO(r) SERIOUS PLAY(r) methodology

January 25, 2011 in News and Events

The LEGO® SERIOUS PLAY® method is a facilitated process, the impact of workshops based on the method are, consequently, directly tied to the quality of the facilitation.

Therefore, purpose with our facilitator training program is to provide the facilitator with the insights, confidence and commitments necessary to prepare and facilitate the workshops in a way that gives maximum value to the end-user and has lasting impact.

Training programs in first half of 2011

  • March 8-11, 2011; Copenhagen, Denmark. Stage 1 & 2
  • May 9-12, 2011; Dublin, Ireland. Stage 1 & 2
  • June 13-16, 2011; Brussels, Belgium. Stage 1 & 2
  • June 20-23, 2011; Houston, USA. Stage 1 & 2

We will be following the updated program and use the new full facilitator manual developed by Robert Rasmussen and myself. The program meets the standards set by the Association of Master Trainers in the LEGO SERIOUS PLAY methodology.

Stage 1 gives a strong introduction to the method and how to use it with teams in personal relations. Stage 2 gives an advanced training in the method and on how to use if or business and organisational development

For more details please feel free to contact me by email (per.kristiansen@trivium.dk) or direct message via my profile on seriousplaypro.com

Playing Seriously: Accessing your Capacity to Work with Complexity

December 1, 2010 in Pro Blog and Tweet

Hi all, here is a blog LeAnne Grillo and I wrote for the Systems in Action Conference. Enjoy and use any bits you may find interesting:

It is not just about playing more, it is about playing better! This was one of the key messages of Bart Victor, one of the professors who helped LEGO develop their play-based strategy process. And, one could argue, it has always been the very purpose of LEGO. Originally, LEGO wanted to help children play better, so that they could unleash their full potential while having fun—and they called it “hard fun.”

Bart put it that way—“better” rather than “more” playing, because while some organizations were indeed playing—it wasn’t intentional and it was not set up to get the most out of it. Organizations had so much more to gain. “Play is our natural way of adapting and developing new skills. It is what prepares us for emergence, and keeps us open to serendipity, to new opportunities.” (Brown Stuart: ”Play”, Avery, 2009).

Borrowing from Theory U terminology, we have observed that play creates a safe space where participants are comfortable with suspending judgement, fear, and cynicism and can really engage in co-creating shared solutions.

Paradoxically, the current economic climate calls out for the power that play holds when it comes to shifting thinking and reframing complex challenges, yet it (the current climate) induces a stifling fear or stress that means many senior leaders shy away from play. We find this sad because play is our key survival and adaptation mechanism. In addition it “gives us the irony to deal with paradox. Ambiguity and fatalism” (Brown Stuart: ”Play”, Avery, 2009), and who doesn’t need that in times like these?

So how do we fully use play as an organizational capacity?

One way is by simply allowing people to meet in order to play—to let them access and reclaim their imagination. Creativity and imagination are often shut down in the workplace because we need to “get real work done,” but those are exactly the capacities we need now. Some of our greatest innovations come from idle doodling on the back of a napkin or putting LEGO bricks together while we’re playing with our children. Without the opportunity to imagine new things, we all tend to reproduce the old solutions which are exactly what got us in the mess we are in!

If we build our capacity to access imagination through play—and become more intentional by focusing our play on specific challenges, we can tap into huge reservoirs of experience and understanding that often gets suppressed or left behind. We can also make the invisible visible—the implicit, explicit. When we construct models using LEGO bricks of what we think is happening in our organizations, we are not only constructing new knowledge for ourselves, we are also sharing our understandings–our mental models with others—and we are doing it in a compelling way. Then, by telling the stories of our models, we express a more vivid and real picture of how we see what’s going on. When a team does this together, they can see where models are similar and where they are different, and often are surprised by that. Plus, we can find leverage points for innovation and transformation. By working with our hands and playing with LEGO bricks, we can access our deeper knowing—and find options and possibilities that have not yet reached our consciousness yet.

Now, this may require a bit of a leap of faith. But there is actually science and the results to back it up, the previously mentioned work by Stuart Brown springs to mind.

As much as we would like to, we cannot make the world simpler and more predictable. But through types of structured “play,” like the LEGO SERIOUS PLAY method we can easily create better outcomes more predictably.

Research on Collaboration and Collective Intelligence

October 11, 2010 in Serious Play Research

 A team working on one of the tasks used in the study. Teams were asked to assemble complicated Lego® structures based on detailed instructions. Teams were randomly assembled by soliciting participation via Craig's List. Credit: MIT

A team working on one of the tasks used in the study.

NPR carried a news story on collaboration and collective intelligence. I tracked down the foundational research on the National Science Foundation web site and in a serious academic journal called “Science”.

In a study involving 699 individuals, a general collective intelligence emerged. Interestingly enough, this general collective intelligence, or C-factor, was not linked to average or maximum intelligence of individual members. It was linked to average social sensitivity, equality of distribution in turn-taking and in the percentage or women in the group.

For more information, see National Science Foundation (NSF) News – New Study Validates Factors That Enhance the Intelligence of a Group nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=117795

New release includes a great photo of a team working with LEGOs.

Mission and Vision of the SeriousPlayPro.com Community

October 10, 2010 in About Serious Play, Pro Community Rulebook

This description of the vision and mission of the evolving SeriousPlayPro community was developed through the collective work of a group of LEGO Serious Play practitioners who gathered in Lausanne, Switzerland during 27-28 September 2010, as a follow-up to the initial work carried out in Billund, Denmark, on 14 April 2010

The Full Story of SeriousPlayPro Community Vision and Mission:

This is our common understanding of the vision for the open, broad community of facilitators using the LEGO Serious Play methodology. It falls into different elements. Over here, it’s really about what this community is and the difference that it makes. So in a sense, we are the wake-up call about the way business works and the way organisations function.

Through the love of the brick, it takes organisations on a journey to a platform where they’re looking through a gate into a better future, the so-called “pax ludens” (the “pax romana” of play, so to speak). The community enables that transition to take place so that the world becomes a better place through play in organisations.

Read the rest of this entry →

Facilitator Certifications in “Designing and Delivering workshops with the LEGO SERIOUS PLAY method”

September 30, 2010 in News and Events

The impact of workshops based on the LSP method is directly tied to the quality of the facilitation. Therefore, purpose with our facilitator training program is to provide the facilitator with the insights, confidence and commitments necessary to prepare and facilitate the workshops in a way that gives maximum value to the end-user and has lasting impact.

Upcoming programs

  • Dec 1-2, 2010: Stage 1 in Dublin Ireland (Intro to the method and using it with teams and personal relations)
  • Jan 24-27, 2011: Stage 1 and 2 in Copenhagen, Denmark (including advanced training in the method, and using it for business and organisational development)
  • Jan 31 – Feb 3, 2011: Stage 1 and 2 in Dublin Ireland

We will be following the updated program and use the new full facilitator manual developed by Robert Rasmussen and myself. The program meets the standards set by the Association of Master Trainers in the LEGO SERIOUS PLAY methodology.

For more details please feel free to contact me by email (per.kristiansen@trivium.dk) or direct message via my profil on seriousplaypro.com

Developing scenarios with the LEGO SERIOUS PLAY methodology

September 3, 2010 in News and Events

I will be offering this workshop as a “pre-conference” workshop to this years Pegasus Systems Thinking Conference in Boston (I will also do short workshop on conference). Here is what Pegasus write on their website (http://pegasus.prod.ifpeople.net/pre-post-conference/pre-conference-workshops):

Scenarios are carefully constructed stories about how the world around us might—not will, not should—unfold over the years ahead. Scenario thinking challenges our mindsets about what could possibly happen so that we are able to develop robust strategies in an unpredictable and uncertain context. This seemingly simple yet sophisticated tool has a solid track record in improving the quality of strategic conversations and outcomes both within organizational teams and in multi-stakeholder, cross-organizational groups. By integrating the LEGO® SERIOUS PLAY™ method into the scenario construction process, we engage more than just our heads, but also our hearts and hands, enabling us to make our thinking more explicit, the stories we create more powerful, and our actions more effective.

In this workshop, you will:

  • Be introduced to the hows and whys of scenario thinking
  • Experience the unique LEGO SERIOUS PLAY method
  • Discover the rigor and value of using the process to make scenario thinking clearer and more explicit, leading to better strategy
  • Apply these tools to your own specific strategic challenges

For more info feel free to contact me, or even better, register on the Pegasus website

Lego Serious Play Open Source Brochure

August 19, 2010 in Generic Discussion

Seriousplay.com website has published Open Source document outlining the basic guiding principles of LEGO® SERIOUS PLAY® and its philosophy.

You can download it from clicking on the image. It is a large file (37 MB) and download may take some time depending on your bandwidth.

LSP Open Source Brochure

LSP Open Source Brochure

The core methodology of LSP has been transcribed and made public for people and facilitators looking to benefit from utilising this method. The Open Source document aims to empower and inspire people to become familliar with the LSP method as well as open up the experience to people who previously couldnt be a part of it.

By sharing the method of LSP, LEGO hopes to will illustrate the “power of thinking through your fingers” enabling individuals to unleash insight, inspiration and imagination, in a practical and direct way. The common language – the bricks – makes everyone equal and allows all opinions and aspects to be heard. The bricks allow people to communicate thoughts and ideas in place of traditional communication methods that can be too restrictive.

What is included in the document?
Over the past decade, the LEGO® GROUP has supported the rigorous and careful development of three types of LEGO® SERIOUS PLAY® resources:

  • The LEGO® SERIOUS PLAY® basic principles and philosophy, upon which everything else is built;
  • The LEGO® SERIOUS PLAY® materials – sets of specially selected LEGO bricks and pieces;
  • The LEGO® SERIOUS PLAY® ‘applications’ – detailed roadmaps of different workshops that make use of the principles, the philosophy and the materials;

In the past all three of these were only available to trained and certified consultants. From June 2010 however, the first two of these have been made ‘open source’. This document outlines the basic principles and philosophy, and the LEGO® SERIOUS PLAY® boxes (large sets of LEGO bricks and pieces) can be found here on the LEGO® SERIOUS PLAY® website under the products section.

The document does not include detailed applications, because LEGO® SERIOUS PLAY® is entering a new phase. New applications will be developed by the international community of users, and may be shared online. In this new phase welcome creative uses of the tools, and innovation in the community.

LSP Community-Building Workshop

August 5, 2010 in News and Events

As many of you know, the first open LSP Community of Practice workshop is being held in Switzerland on 27-28 September 2010. It is already listed in the Events section of this web site; however, many of you may not have noticed or received the June 29th email that was sent out by Helle Friberg of LEGO.

The objective of this workshop is to follow-up on a number of questions raised in Billund in April 2010, including:

  • Purpose and Scope of the Community or Communities of Practice
  • Rules of the Game; Operating Principles

If anyone (particulary those of you who will not be able to attend in person) would like to submit additional suggestions for the agenda, please feel free to do so. Denise Meyerson has already  suggested setting up a video-conference via Skype to provide an interactive medium with interested parties who are unable to attend. We are looking into the technical feasibility of this.

We have reserved a workshop room for 2 days ( September 27-28) at the Hotel Mövenpick in Lausanne, right next to IMD . CAPRESE will cover the cost for renting the room, as we recognise that you will be covering the cost of your flights and accommodation. We propose to share the cost of refreshments and lunch and will come back to you nearer the time with some ideas for the catering.

If you are interested in participating and have not yet done so, please inform me (Eli De Friend). Please organise your own accommodation (we can provide suggestions). For the logistics, it would help to eventually know where you have chosen to stay.

In the meantime, wishing you all a lovely summer.

Training in Designing and Facilitation with the LEGO SERIOUS PLAY materials and methodology

August 3, 2010 in News and Events

For the first time in South Africa!  I will be delivering a 2 day introductory program on the 30 and 31 August in Johannesburg, South Africa.  Please email denise.meyerson@mci.edu.au for more details.