At this point, you've got three key elements ready for your workshop:
- Audience Profile (you’ve already used it to shape your outcomes—set it aside for now).
- Schedule Chunks (with clear, generous coffee breaks planned).
- Workshop Outline (a sharp set of Learning Outcomes, each supported by clear sub-points).
Now, let's smash them together to create your Workshop Skeleton.
Your Outline sets the direction:
Learning Outcome 1: Say less. Mean more.
- Why people stop listening after 7 seconds
- The power of one idea per message
- How to cut half your words without losing meaning
- Practicing the "punchline first" method
Learning Outcome 2: Use structure to think out loud
- How to talk without prepping a script
- 3 formats to sound smarter (even spontaneously)
- Being spontaneous vs. being messy
- A go-to template for tough questions
Learning Outcome 3: Make it stick
- What makes messages memorable
- Why examples beat explanations
- When to pause, when to repeat
- How to end with impact
Your Schedule adds reality:
A typical 3-hour session might look like this:
[09:00 - 09:15] Arrival, coffee, mingling
[09:15 - 10:00] Learning Outcome 1: Say less, mean more
[10:00 - 10:30] Learning Outcome 2 (Part 1): Structure to think out loud
[10:30 - 10:45] COFFEE BREAK (non-negotiable!)
[10:45 - 11:00] Learning Outcome 2 (Part 2)
[11:00 - 11:45] Learning Outcome 3: Make it stick
[11:45 - 12:00] Wrap up, questions, buffer
2h15 of actual teaching. That's 45 minutes per Learning Outcome, a comfortable pace.
Now, do a sanity check: Does each outcome feel doable?
Is there enough time to teach clearly without rushing?
If anything feels tight, trim now, not later. Ignoring it means you’ll rush on the day, skip breaks, and drain goodwill. Do yourself (and your audience) a favor, cut early.
Why bother with this skeleton?
Because 3 hours of blank space is intimidating.
But breaking it down into smaller chunks makes everything manageable.
It’s easier to design a 45-minute session on “Why examples beat explanations”
than a vague 3-hour block labeled "communication."
This skeleton keeps you on track:
Easier to design.
Easier to run.
Easier to adjust on the fly.
During your workshop, keep your skeleton handy (folded paper in your pocket works great).
Quickly check off each outcome as you teach.
You’ll never forget a key point,
and you’ll know immediately if you’re off schedule.
Less stress.
Better sessions.
That’s the power of your Workshop Skeleton.
Thank you.
And Free Palestine.