Pam Slim World Tour meets Graphic Facilitation

by Julie on September 29, 2009

Escape from Cubicle NationSeveral weeks ago Pam Slim, coach and author of Escape from Cubicle Nation–the blog and recent book, swung through Atlanta on her world tour and I hung out with her for the day at her workshop, contributing my graphic facilitation magic. Fun-O-Matic!

I found Pam’s blog several years ago. We’ve been internet friends for a long time and this was the first time we spent time in person. And just as I expected—she rocks!

And because Pam attracts some incredibly interesting and gifted people, I made a couple of wonderful new friends. Yay for new friends!

Her workshop was full of great ideas to help brainstorm a business into being. At several points in the day, I captured the conversations in visual maps.

Hi, I’m Julie and I’m in Stage 3

Pam Slim's introduction Introductions were done using Martha Beck’s Change Cycle which has four stages: Death and Rebirth, Dreaming and Scheming, The Promised Land, and The Hero’s Saga.

We gave a brief description and identified where we were on the Change Cycle with our businesses. It was no surprise that most were in stages one and two: Death and Rebirth or Dreaming and Scheming as there were a lot of people in the brainstorming or formative stage of starting up a business.
Introductions for Pam Slim's workshop

You have an idea, then what?

A lot of the participants already had an idea, or a kernel of an idea, so the next step was to figure out “Who are my people?” We did this with two business ideas. One was for a business that helps other businesses start wikis and get engaged with social media. The second was for the Curvy Yogini, a yoga business focused on curvier people.
Who are my people?

“I’ll never be successful”

After lunch one of the areas Pam had us focus on was negative thinking—all those thoughts that come from the reptilian brain telling us we’ll never be successful, and we’ll end up living in a van down by the river.

One person volunteered to explore her fears around her coaching practice; specifically that she doesn’t provide enough value. Pam broke down her fear thoughts and asked her questions from Byron Katie’s The Work to see whether her fear was true.
Lizard fears come from your reptilian brain

Toward the end of the day I mindmapped while we brainstormed an idea for a travel-based business that gives innovative entrepreneurs the time and space they need to be creative. We thought of all the different aspects and questions to sort out when thinking about how this business could work.
Mindmapping an Idea for a travel-based business

Mindmapping + brainstorming=powerful results

I loved doing this work with Pam at her workshop. In fact, it’s one of my favorite ways to use graphic facilitation: to help you see your big dream clearly, in focus, so you know what to do next.

There’s always that moment (often more than one) during a personal mapping session when you can see all the moving parts and how they fit together and suddenly it starts to make sense. There’s an “a-ha!” And more importantly, the steps ahead become much easier to accomplish. That moment is magical.

Many thanks to Pam for such a fabulous day!!

Related posts:

  1. How did I get into this?
  2. Mindmapping different kinds of Time
 

{ 7 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Carrie Tallman September 29, 2009 at 10:42 am

Hi Julie,
This is awesome!! It was mesmerizing during the workshop and I’m so happy to see your work online. I think this is the wave of our right-brain future. Loved the creativity your brought to the workshop!

- Carrie
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2 Julie September 29, 2009 at 5:25 pm

Thanks! It was a joy to be there with such a fabulous group. Thanks for stopping by.

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3 Fabeku October 1, 2009 at 9:19 am

Julie, what you do rocks. In a big way.

Being able to see how it all came together, the way you’ve laid it out here, is awesome. Reading what was going on, and then seeing what was going on really gives me a much richer, much deeper sense of things.

I’m a visual person by nature. So what you do seems like a whole lot of magic to me. I loved this post, and seeing your awesome in action.

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4 Michelle Russell October 1, 2009 at 8:08 pm

Wow, Julie!!!

I thought I’d gotten the concept of what you do before this, and I *mostly* did, I guess…but having been to one of Pam’s workshops out here on the West Coast and being familiar with the material, I can really SEE how well you’ve captured it.

I think it’s amazing how you can do this right there in the moment and have your visual capture not only be a reference back to the event, but a work of art at the same time. Because these really, really are!
Michelle Russell´s last post … Please Tell Me What YOU Want! My ComLuv Profile

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5 Julie October 1, 2009 at 8:26 pm

@Fabeku, yes, magic is a good description because when I’m in the process of doing a map or mural, I have no idea how I do what I do.

@Michelle, glad to know I captured the experience you had at Pam’s workshop and was able to bring a little bit of it back to you now several months later.

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6 butterfly March 11, 2010 at 5:15 pm

Just a comment on your design really, excellent work.

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7 Julie March 11, 2010 at 5:28 pm

Thanks, tons of credit goes to my designer, who is brilliant, at Calyx Design.

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