Every workshop lives or dies by two things:
1) what people take away (new insights, skills, connections, ...)
2) and how they feel in the room (their energy, focus, mood)
Most people focus on the first.
Too few take ownership of the second.
But here’s the thing:
- You can’t teach someone who’s tired, distracted, or zoned out.
- You don’t get learning without attention.
- And you don’t get attention without energy.
Attention is the first step in learning.
We don’t understand or remember what we don’t first notice.
That’s why workshops are different from lectures.
They demand more from you, the person running them.
In a lecture, you talk.
They listen (hopefully).
In a workshop, you take responsibility for how people feel in the room.
You design moments that wake them up.
You build flow that holds their focus.
You bring the room back to life.
Again and again.
And then there's the other gift a workshop gives you:
- you’re not stuck with one way to teach.
- you can shape the method to fit the message.
- you can stop talking and get people moving, testing, reflecting, trying.
That’s the magic.Because no one wants to be talked at for two hours.
Especially when they came to learn how to lead, coach, decide, build, move.
You wouldn’t go to a cooking class where the chef just read the recipe.
So why run a workshop that sounds like a textbook?
Here’s the truth:
- the real work happens before the room fills up.
- if your workshop is well-designed, it does most of the heavy lifting.
- you’re not scrambling to keep attention. It’s built into the flow.
But no matter how charming or skilled you are,
if the design is weak, the room will feel it.
Thank you.
And free Palestine.