Unprofessionalism
Professional performance is exhausting. Maintaining the mask. Editing ourselves. Pretending we know when we don't.
This podcast is about people who dropped the performance. And what happened next.
Each episode features someone who broke professional conventions and found something better on the other side: the executive who disclosed grief in a corporate setting and found it opened new ways of relating; the coach who realised her authority came from integrity, not compliance; the designer who ignored the 'approved tools' and saved thousands of hours.
Conversations circle around three questions:
- What does it cost us to perform professionalism instead of showing up as ourselves?
- How do we create spaces where people can bring their full attention and humanity to work?
- When is the “unprofessional” move actually the most responsible one?
If you feel the tension between who you are and who you're expected to be at work, this podcast shows you what happens when people stop managing that tension and just stop performing.
Hosted by Dr Myriam Hadnes—behavioural economist and founder of workshops.work. New episode every week.
Unprofessionalism
056 - What Comes After the Prototype? with Douglas Ferguson
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Prototyping is a mainstay of the tech world, but nothing exists in a vacuum anymore. Disciplines are increasingly cross-pollinating and useful strategies from disparate fields are finding new life in places we may not have expected.
Prototypes are one of those strategies, and my guest on this week’s podcast can attest to that. Douglas Ferguson sits at the intersection of tech users and tech teams, with the workshops he leads creating positive outcomes and outputs for both parties.
But how does he integrate prototypes into workshops and what can we, as facilitators, learn from this traditionally tech-focused technique?
Start prototyping your understanding and dive into this fascinating episode of Workshops Work!
Learn about:
- The prototyping mindset and how almost anything can be prototyped
- How the interface between users and tech vs. teams and workshops share similarities
- Why you need to embrace either fidelity or ambiguity
- How to spot and manage typical issues that arise in prototyping
- What designing for frustration and managing expectations looks like
- Why labelling emotions build connection and empathy in a room
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Questions and Answers
[01:40] What led you write your book, Beyond the Prototype, and would you call yourself a facilitator?
[05:29] What do you understand by the word prototype? Is there something you cannot prototype?
[09:36] Are there prototypes that are prone to fail? How would you characterise them?
[16:36] Would you say you work at the interface between the user and a workshop?
[19:20] Can you give an example of a low resolution prototype?
[23:20] What are the minimum requirements for a prototype to survive the ‘beyond’ phase?
[28:54] How do you rebuild or maintain the excitement after the first prototype, especially if it is not well-received?
[32:43] Are expectation management and careful design the key factors in reducing frustration for teams developing prototypes?
[39:09] How would you distinguish the need for facilitative leadership versus the need for an external facilitator?
[42:06] At what point do you hand over your Design Sprint to the in-house leader?
[44:57] What are the key ingredients to help organisations keep momentum and move beyond the prototype?
[49:36] At what point do you craft the design narrative and how do you do it?
[50:38] What would be the strategy you use to design the narrative?
[52:16] Do you build a narrative with the entire group or subgroups? And how do you bring it together?
[55:04] What makes a workshop fail?
[56:44] If someone fell asleep after the first minute and doesn’t have time to relisten to this episode, what is the one takeaway you want them to have?
Links to check
Douglas’ company, Voltage Control
Douglas’ book,
Any thoughts? Share them with us!
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