Keep Summer’s Play Alive (and Make It Your Edge)
Summer pulls us toward lighter rhythms: vacations, spontaneity, curious explorations. As September arrives, it can feel like the calendar snaps back to “serious mode.” Our invitation this month is to resist the false choice. Play is not the opposite of work; it’s the fuel for it. When we integrate play with our facilitation practice, we open space for emergence, loosening our grip on pre‑baked outcomes and discovering what a group can create together.
Hold things loosely so new things can happen.
In the conversations we’ve been having with Douglas and Erik, we returned again and again to this idea: when we reduce the stakes just enough for people to experiment, they discover sharper insights, stronger patterns, and more humane ways of working together. This month we’ll show you how to bring that spirit into your meetings—on paper, in Miro, and in the room or on Zoom.
Play as a Path to Growth (Not a Detour)
When kids play, they aren’t optimizing for perfect outcomes. They’re exploring. They re‑arrange the blocks, try a new angle, and—without judgment—see what emerges. As facilitators and leaders, we can borrow that stance. “Holding things loosely” doesn’t mean abandoning rigor; it means allowing discovery to shape the rigor we apply next.
Play widens the field of possible moves. It invites risk that feels safe enough for participation. In practice, that could look like a sketch‑before‑you‑speak prompt, a two‑minute “pass‑a‑move” energizer, or a quick remix of a trusted game to match the moment. These low‑friction moves unlock momentum for high‑stakes conversations later.
If your organization is wrestling with adoption of product operations, AI, or cross‑functional rituals, consider how a dose of play lowers resistance. People step in when it’s okay to try, learn, and change course—together. Serious outcomes often begin with serious play.
Try this prompt: “For the next 5 minutes, we’re just exploring. What’s one tiny experiment we could try this week that might move us closer to our goal?”
Make It Tactile—Even (Especially) in Digital Spaces
We love pen‑and‑paper warmups because they unlock the hands‑mind connection. But the same tactility is possible in digital tools. In Miro, modularize ideas into stickies and small clusters. Treat them like physical objects: drag, rotate, recolor, label, regroup. The more granular the ideas, the more freedom you have to sort and recombine.
Tactility also comes from simple constraints. Use dot voting to reveal energy. Add quick icons or imagery to turn abstract notions into visible metaphors. With the newest AI helpers, you can vary the representations rapidly—generate a handful of visual framings, then let the group react.
The goal is not decoration; it’s grip. When people can literally “get a handle” on ideas, they move faster and see relationships they’d otherwise miss.
Micro‑move: Break big notions into single‑idea stickies; name thematic clusters only after you’ve moved the pieces around.
Try Squiggle Birds from Gamestorming 2.0
This month, we’re spotlighting Squiggle Birds, a delightfully low‑stakes way to turn doodles into creatures—and hesitation into momentum. It’s pure play that sneaks in real practice: pattern recognition, sense‑making, and visual confidence.
Purpose: Warm up creative muscles, lower inhibition, and prime teams for sketching/ideation.
Time: 6–12 minutes
Materials: Paper + pen/marker (or Miro with a simple template)
Steps (analog):
- Ask everyone to draw 6–9 fast squiggles, each in its own little space. No thinking—just lines.
- Choose a squiggle and add a tiny triangle beak, a dot for an eye, and a couple of stick legs.
- Repeat with more squiggles. Optional: add feathers, environment, or names.
- Gallery walk: hold up your favorites; share what made a squiggle “turn into” a bird.
Steps (Miro):
- Provide a frame with scattered freehand lines (or have folks draw with the pen tool).
- Add beaks/eyes/legs with simple shapes and the pen tool. Duplicate to go faster.
- Use quick groups/clusters to notice patterns (“tiny birds,” “long‑neck birds,” etc.).
- Zoom out and reflect: what helped your brain see “birdness” in noise?
Debrief Questions:
- What changed once you added a single detail (beak/eye/legs)?
- Where else do small cues help your team make shared meaning fast?
- How can we keep this looseness as we shift into today’s core work?
Facilitator tip: Seed it before you need it. Introduce Squiggle Birds early so your group expects playful sketching later.
Remix with Purpose — Altitude as a Closer
One theme we’re modeling this month is purposeful remixing: once you understand the core of a method, you can repurpose it to fit the moment. Altitude (from Gamestorming) is often used to set perspective at the start of a session—sea level (ground truth), plane (systems view), satellite (strategy/vision). We’re experimenting with it as a closer.
Invite participants to check out at a chosen “altitude” and say why: “I’m at sea level—grounded with two next steps.” or “I’m in the stratosphere—my imagination’s buzzing.” This reinterpretation honors the game’s essence (perspective‑taking) while helping groups reflect and integrate.
The meta‑lesson: play with the plays. When facilitators remix openly, they license groups to do the same—adapting rituals to local realities while keeping purpose intact.
Callout: If someone later reads the book and asks why you used Altitude differently, celebrate the curiosity—and share your purpose for the remix.
When a Dance Break Re‑Wired the Room
During the Cardano Constitutional Convention (see our recent case study), visa restrictions created a hybrid dynamic: a large in‑person gathering in Buenos Aires and a parallel hub in Nairobi. Tensions surfaced in Nairobi as remote participants felt peripheral to decisions. Our facilitator on the ground, Reshma Khan, hosted an impromptu dance party—music chosen for cultural resonance and belonging.
The result? Smiles, connection, renewed energy—and a subtle but vital re‑balancing of power. The Buenos Aires room noticed the joy and, soon after, spun up its own music moment. Two separate rooms, one shared vibe. A playful move revealed a serious truth: sometimes you have to meet emotion with motion.
Takeaway for leaders: play is a strategic lever, not a garnish. When used purposefully, it brings people back into the circle and restores the conditions for productive work.
Do this tomorrow: Add a 90‑second “pass‑a‑move” in your next long meeting. Let each person invent a stretch and pass it around.
Turning Play into Practice
Play can’t be the whole meeting. After you loosen the room, translate energy into clarity. Three moves help:
- Granular artifacts. Convert ideas into single‑idea stickies or short statements. (If it’s two sentences, it’s two stickies.)
- Visible sorting. Cluster by patterns the group names together. Title clusters last.
- Proportionate commitment. Use dot voting, Fist‑to‑Five, or Impact/Effort to move from “fun” to “focus.”
Rotate through these moves quickly and you’ll feel the gear‑shift: from open, generative play to intentional, shared next steps. That rhythm—open → converge—is the practice.
Script: “We just opened up—great range. Now let’s converge. One idea per sticky, then we’ll cluster and vote.”
Normalize Play So It Doesn’t Backfire
Play works best when it’s part of the culture, not a surprise cameo. If you introduce a playful activity once, and it lands awkwardly, people may reject the approach. Normalize it.
- Set expectations early. Tell teams, “We’ll regularly use short playful warmups to build creative confidence.”
- Model the stance. Show your own willingness to experiment and remix. Narrate your purpose.
- Connect to outcomes. Always link the play to the work: “We doodled to loosen judgment so we can sketch product ideas now.”
When play is practiced, it becomes a trusted pathway to clarity and momentum. It’s not “fun for fun’s sake”; it’s how we work.
Leader’s nudge: Play gives permission. Purpose gives direction. Use both.
Bonus Moves & Micro‑Practices
- Music as momentum. Pair playlists to activities (tempo for time‑boxed sprints; thematic songs for laugh‑and‑learn moments).
- Parallel sketching. In design sprints, have everyone sketch at the same time; then reveal. Social energy multiplies courage.
- AI accents. Use Miro’s AI to generate quick frames or variations; let the group choose and edit. Keep it light, keep it human.
- The Classic Stretch‑and‑Share. Ubiquitous in 2020—and still great. It shifts gears in minutes.
Community Spotlight: Gamestorming 2.0 Launch (Giveaways!)
Gamestorming has been a cornerstone of our certification for years. With 2.0 out now, we’re celebrating across September and October (and likely into November) with distributed launch‑party vibes at our monthly labs. We’ll be practicing Squiggle Birds, Event Horizon, Hidden Variables, and our Altitude‑as‑Closer remix—and giving away books.
Share back: Post your birds and insights in the Hub. What did one small detail change about what everyone could “see”?
A Call to Practice (and Play)
Play isn’t a seasonal fling; it’s a stance. As you move into fall, keep summer’s looseness and combine it with deliberate practice. Let doodles become birds. Let sticky clusters become decisions. Let movement re‑set a room. And let small remixes become your signature as a facilitator and leader.
Call to Action:
- Join this month’s Facilitation Lab to practice Squiggle Birds and more.
- Bring a LabMate (or find one at our LabMate Matchup) and commit to one playful practice each week.
- Share your remix of a favorite game in the Hub—what did you change and why?
Perfectly practicing play won’t make things perfect. It will make them possible. And that’s how real work moves.