World Café


World Café is a method to use to facilitate open and intimate discussions and link ideas with a larger group to create collective intelligence. In addition to speaking and listening, participants are encouraged to doodle, draw, and write down their thoughts so that when people change tables, they can see what previous participants have expressed.

World Café’s are used to share experiences, stories or results and can be useful for problem solving and planning activities.

When to use it?
To stimulate discussion and idea creation from a wide range of participants; create collective intelligence or ownership over issues and solutions.

How to do it?

  1. Seat four-five people at tables or conversation clusters

  2. Set up progressive rounds of conversations of approximately 20-30 minutes each

  3. Encourage everyone to write, doodle and draw key ideas on their table cloths or note ideas on large index cards / placemats in the centre of the group.

  4. After the first discussion, as one individual to remain at the table as the host while others move to other tables (not necessarily together). These table hosts will welcome new guests to the table, briefly share the main ideas from the previous discussion and ask participants to continue the conversation, either with new ideas or by adding on to ideas already brought out in previous discussions.

  5. At the end of the second round, people may return to their original tables to synthesize their discussions or continue to travel to new tables. So long as someone from the second discussion stays at the table, the table host from the first discussion may move on at this point.

  6. After all the discussion rounds are complete, initiate a period of sharing discovers and insights across the whole group in town meeting-style report backs.

Requirements
People:
While World Café can be used with a number of different audiences, including large plenary discussions, the tool may be best used with participants that are susceptible to open and honest discussion and those that are willing to have conversations.

Time:
World Café’s are done over an extended period of time broken into three or more rounds of discussion (each about 20-30 minutes in length); facilitators should plan for at least 2.5 hours to conduct a World Café (including the reporting back round)

Pros and Cons
Pros:

  • Engaging conversational process that allows for different mediums to convey ideas (speech, drawing, written)
  • Can collect multitude of ideas in a relatively short amount of time

Cons:

  • Success can be dependent on who is present and the degree to which they participate
  • Conversations at tables can be dominated by strong personalities, leaving some opinions unheard

Considerations
Ensure each table has a table cloth that can be written on or large sheets of paper that all individuals at the table can access and use at the same time. Deciphering what is written or drawn at each table can sometimes be difficult – facilitated guidance may be needed to aid table hosts.

Examples

Image Source: http://www.alvarezporter.com/what-we-do/meetings-and-retreats/membership-meetings/

Additional Resources

The World Café: http://www.theworldcafe.com/

Knowledge Sharing Toolkit: http://www.kstoolkit.org/The+World+Cafe