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Wednesday, December 11, 2024

match extra play into your day

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00:00:00: Introduction

00:00:16: The Profession Collective

00:03:26: play and work

00:10:58: Examples of being playful at work

00:14:45: Play as an antidote to emphasize

00:16:25: Concepts for motion…

00:16:50: … 1: pockets of play

00:17:17: a) Wordle

00:18:03: b) Protobot

00:18:48: c) LEGO

00:19:58: d) group video games

00:22:38: … 2: taking part in with presenting

00:25:42: a) imaginative and prescient boards

00:26:28: b) query playing cards 00:32:16: Closing ideas

Sarah Ellis: Hello, I am Sarah.

Helen Tupper: And I am Helen.

Sarah Ellis: And that is the Squiggly Careers podcast.  Each week, we speak about completely different a subject to do with work, and share some concepts and actions in order that we are able to all navigate this Squiggly Profession with that bit extra confidence and management.

Helen Tupper: And earlier than we get began on at the moment’s matter, which is all about how one can match extra play into your work, we simply need to let you realize about an occasion that we’ve arising that we might like to see you at.  It’s on 2 December, and as a substitute of simply doing Squiggly Careers Stay, which is an occasion that we have performed earlier than and has been very well acquired, we thought we’d be part of up with another podcasters, and we’re making a one-off particular referred to as The Profession Collective.  Many names had been quoted —

Sarah Ellis: Did you see how Bruce Daisley, who’s one in all our collective contributors, have you ever seen how he is described it at the moment?

Helen Tupper: What’s he mentioned at the moment?

Sarah Ellis: He mentioned, “Apparently, we’re just like the Avengers”!

Helen Tupper: Nicely, are you aware what?  On that time, I needed to name it one thing like that and I needed to promote it and put capes on all of us.  I believed I might go on to love Midjourney or DALL-E.

Sarah Ellis: Proper, I would really like being like a superhero for a day.

Helen Tupper: Proper, I will choose this again up.  However the cynicism that I’ve confronted on this collective of making this occasion!  So, I’ve gone with The Profession Collective, which feels very formal as a substitute of getting extra enjoyable.  But it surely principally is a number of podcasters who’re coming collectively for one evening to debate and debate what’s subsequent for work.  And we’ll take some matters, which I believe we’ll have some very enjoyable, however probably heated conversations, about our variations and opinions.

Sarah Ellis: Oh, yeah.  I believe it truly makes me fairly nervous, as a result of I simply suppose, you realize often, I believe we’ll nonetheless do that, often we do our finish of 12 months podcast, the place simply me and also you chat about our years, and I all the time actually sit up for that podcast; whereas this 12 months, we’re doing a little type of high-profile, 300 folks in a room with some —

Helen Tupper: It is 450, simply so you realize!

Sarah Ellis: Okay, with probably some fairly — I believe I will get completely dominated in these discussions!

Helen Tupper: You are not going to get dominated!   However everybody, if you wish to come, we’d like to see you there, but additionally a little bit little bit of help, as a result of I believe it might be a number of enjoyable, and a number of studying.

Sarah Ellis: I would like some Squiggly chanters within the room, “Squigg-er-ly!

Helen Tupper: “Squigg-er-ly!  Squigg-er-ly!”  Are you able to think about if everyone…!  I bear in mind after I labored at Microsoft and we went to this large occasion, and all of the completely different nations had been there and all of the nations had completely different jackets.

Sarah Ellis: Okay.

Helen Tupper: So, you may see the UK group and the German group.

Sarah Ellis: I believe I’d attempt to discover us some Squiggly stash to put on!

Helen Tupper: Nicely, our group are going to be in Squiggly stash, however I wonder if Squiggly Profession listeners can have a little bit badge.  That will be humorous.  However no, everybody, these persons are all of our mates.  And you have got Isabel Berwick from the Working It podcast.  You’ve got bought Bruce, who’s been an incredible mentor for us, on the Eat Sleep Work Repeat podcast.  And you have got Jimmy from Jimmy’s Jobs of the Future.  And we’re all coming collectively, it is one evening solely.  All of the earnings from the occasion, all the 450 tickets that can get offered, are going to charity.  They are going to Beam, and they are going to upReach.  So, not solely will it’s an evening of enjoyable and studying and reference to people who find themselves all for careers and work, all of these earnings are going to charity too.  So, we’d like to see you there. We’re posting about this an terrible lot on LinkedIn.  We are going to put the hyperlink to the occasion as properly within the present notes of the podcast.  And should you can’t discover the main points and you actually need to come, simply e-mail us, helenandsarah@squigglycareers.com and we’ll inform you how you can do it.

Sarah Ellis: So, on that observe about being playful, I can not determine whether or not that occasion sounds enjoyable or scary proper now, I am attempting to not get distracted.

Helen Tupper: Strive to not get distracted by that.

Sarah Ellis: Little bit of each.

Helen Tupper: Little bit of each!

Sarah Ellis: We will discuss a bit about play.  And once you say play and work, I suppose we need to take our work severely.  So, generally play can really feel like a humorous phrase to make use of, or it may really feel disconnected from work.  However I believe simply because we care about our work does not imply that we won’t have enjoyable and we won’t get pleasure from it.  And there is fairly a grown-up definition from a man referred to as Stuart Brown.  So, he is a health care provider who has written a complete e-book about play that I’ve learn.  It is truly actually attention-grabbing.  It talks about how play is so necessary and such a essential a part of studying.  He virtually makes a relationship between, he says play is like the way you truly facilitate studying, which you realize once you then begin to suppose again to, properly how do your children be taught or how do the children that you realize be taught?  It is by taking part in.  And the way do they be taught finest?  By tricking them into taking part in, is what I’ve found after I’ve been attempting to get Max to do his homework.  I am like, “Proper, how can I make this ‘enjoyable’, in inverted commas”, however I truly do actually need him —

Helen Tupper: So true!  I am attempting to make maths enjoyable in the mean time with Madeline.  I am like, “Let’s do maths with pasta.  What different issues can we discover which can be enjoyable to do our sums collectively?”

Sarah Ellis: I used to be attempting to make the patron saints enjoyable, which not that enjoyable.  I labored very arduous and I bought props concerned.  I imply it did technically work, but it surely took all of my inventive vitality.  And so Stuart Brown says, he describes it as, “An absorbing and seemingly purposeless exercise that gives enjoyment and a suspension of self-confidence and sense of time”.  So, that prompted us to suppose, “What does that imply?” in sensible phrases as ever, attempting to be helpful.  And we bought to, “This appears like taking part in at work and being playful along with your work in a very low stress approach”.  I believe as quickly as play loses the enjoyable, you cease taking part in.  If it is not enjoyable anymore, you are in all probability not taking part in.  And if it is too organised, if there’s an excessive amount of stress on an exercise, it stops being playful. I used to be studying a very attention-grabbing article by IDEO, the place they really very deliberately create these play instances in between set initiatives that they must do.  What works very well about that’s folks select what they need to play with and the way they play, however they’ve seen an actual watch-out. 

If play turns into that dreaded organised enjoyable and folks really feel pressured, or they cannot decide out, or they do not have many decisions about how you can decide in, you lose all the objective of what you had been attempting to do with taking part in at work within the first place, you lose all the advantages of the creativity and the connection that comes with taking part in.  So, I believe it is not a simple one to get proper I believe in teams, as a result of you possibly can’t simply say to everyone, “Oh, let’s simply play extra”.  I do not suppose anybody would do something in a different way.  However then equally, should you go too far when it comes to placing construction round it, you in all probability do not then get to a few of the advantages that you simply’re attempting to grasp.

Helen Tupper: It is simply made me suppose truly, as a result of I do suppose that folks have a unique opinion of what’s enjoyable.  If play is enjoyable, then —

Sarah Ellis: We positively have a unique opinion of what’s enjoyable!

Helen Tupper: Yeah, we positively have a unique opinion.  And so, having one exercise that works for everybody truly might be fairly arduous to do, and two issues got here in my thoughts once you had been speaking about it.  So, the one was, should you’ve bought like a group offsite, I fairly like the thought of getting, or you may do it just about, you may do it in digital rooms, however the thought of getting play stations, not just like the very well-known sport, however virtually like completely different, so there’s a selection, such as you had been saying with IDEO.  So, some folks can, I do not know, play with, there might be some word-based video games, some folks may need number-based video games, some folks may need these bodily issues, however there’s play stations that you would be able to choose primarily based in your play choice, I suppose, is one mind-set about it. Then the opposite factor I used to be eager about was ages in the past, that is going again now a few years, we did some work with ASOS.  And I bear in mind, I believe it was a part of their studying week.  And in addition to having folks like us from our firm, Superb If, getting into and operating some periods as a part of their studying week, additionally they had some workers periods.  And I bear in mind, as a result of I believe it was within the room subsequent to me, that they had any individual who was inside, like  workers member, who was utilizing one in all their abilities, they usually had been doing a session on, you will in all probability know since you like crops, however you realize these hanging baskets, however inside ones, the place you virtually like crochet it your self; what’s it referred to as?

Sarah Ellis: Oh okay, not like in a terrarium.

Helen Tupper: No, not like a terrarium, I all the time get these confused as properly.  However no, they’re like hanging baskets which can be made of just about like a crochet hanging basket.

Sarah Ellis: A crochet, like a knitting one?

Helen Tupper: Yeah, yeah.  And that is playful, proper?  And so they had that in like, it was a part of a careers week.  However that they had, in addition to the extra, I assume, severe skill-based periods, I am unsure I consider our periods as very severe, however in addition to these ones, these very playful periods that had been taught by different folks, and you did not have to be sensible at it.  However I believe having some selection round what the play is that folks get to play to their choice, I believe could be higher than this all the time feeling compelled.  And we’ll come on to a few of the choices that we have, so to give folks these decisions about what play may seem like for you or in your groups as properly. I used to be studying an article this morning which we’ll put within the PodSheet round play, and I fairly like the excellence it made between efficiency and play.  So, it talked about at work, a number of our focus is on efficiency and excessive efficiency, and that’s about reaching excellence towards expectations.  So, there are some benchmarks about what attractiveness like and we’re attempting to fulfill or beat these issues. 

That is what efficiency is.  And that is not unhealthy, however that is what it’s.  After which after efficiency, there’s observe, which is the place we’re consciously attempting to enhance, we’re attempting to develop and get higher.  And once more, that is not unhealthy, that is simply observe. However play is completely different to efficiency, it’s completely different to observe; play is judgment-free exercise.  So, it is not about getting higher at one thing and it is not being the perfect at one thing.  It’s simply doing one thing for the enjoyment of the exercise actually, with out worrying about how good you might be at it.  And generally, play, he talks about within the article, it may really feel a bit awkward or it’d really feel a bit uncomfortable or a bit embarrassing.  However truly, it is in these conditions the place we regularly be taught essentially the most, after we’re that little bit susceptible and we’re going right into a zone of labor that may generally really feel a little bit bit uncomfortable.  We find out about our abilities, we find out about ourselves, we find out about different folks as properly.

Sarah Ellis: And after I was studying some examples of organisations who’ve performed this very well, it typically does assist if everyone is ranging from the identical place.  So, if some folks have gotten extra experience than others, that may be tough as a result of then you definately’re like, properly, this entire level about you need to attempt to take away the stress, you need everybody to have the ability to be playful.  To illustrate you had been doing, I do not know, some improv, which is usually used for play, however some folks in that group had been truly sensible at it.  It then begins to really put stress on the opposite folks to be like, “Oh, however I am not nearly as good”.  So, attempting to consider and to decide on issues the place you are like, everyone will routinely be ranging from a really comparable place, sure, they may get to completely different outcomes, they may get to completely different locations by means of taking part in, however virtually in case you have some experience within the room, it may truly get in the way in which, which is why typically taking part in in a approach which is way away from what you do in your day jobs, I believe is absolutely useful.

Helen Tupper: So, when was the final time that you simply had been playful at work?

Sarah Ellis: I do not know.  So, firstly, I believe I did not discover this very simple to reply, so virtually to the extent the place we almost took the query out.  However then I believed, “Oh, that is attention-grabbing in itself”.

Helen Tupper: You might have additionally been in a little bit of a bubble writing a e-book for 2 months.

Sarah Ellis: I’ve.  I’ve emerged at the moment and I do not understand how I’ve emerged, to be trustworthy, primarily based on Helen’s suggestions about half an hour in the past; probably blended, nonetheless a bit upbeat however a little bit bit frantic on the similar time.  I have never had a lot downtime since ending, so I believe that is in all probability what I would like.  And so, the final time I believe I might bear in mind an instance I might level to, was on our Squiggly Staycation this 12 months, earlier this 12 months.  That is fairly a very long time in the past, so that is, what, 4 months in the past, 5 months in the past, we did an exercise with Play-Doh.  And it wasn’t simply, “Use some Play-Doh, have a play with some Play-Doh”, we did put a little bit of construction round it.  We mentioned, “Make one thing with Play-Doh that represents how you’re feeling in regards to the subsequent three months”.  And really, that did get everybody laughing since you’re all utilizing Play-Doh and it feels fairly joyful and kid-like, and nobody made any unbelievable creations, actually not that I can bear in mind.  Hopefully the group will not be like, “How dare you, Sarah!” I believe it simply gave us a unique approach, it gave us like a second of feeling light-hearted, which was good as a result of we might performed another extra centered stuff.  However then truly, folks additionally bought to share a little bit of a narrative and have a little bit of a play.

 And it did really feel a bit foolish, however then truly it appeared to additionally mix folks with the ability to share a narrative, and that did really feel playful.  I am unsure it was fully, you realize, plenty of the definitions round play speak about it being purposeless, or maybe seemingly purposeless, as a result of I believe that did really feel fairly purposeful.  I felt like I discovered about what was necessary to folks, however possibly the making of the Play-Doh bit, that bit felt very low stress.  And in addition, it actually felt like you may go wherever you needed to.  You would share what you needed to, you may make no matter you needed to. Some folks in all probability did issues that had been a bit extra deep and significant, some folks had been extra simply — I bear in mind truly one individual simply saying they liked the summer time, as a result of we had been nearly to enter the summer time, and I do bear in mind the flower, not too unhealthy to make with the Play-Doh, this wasn’t me, and any individual simply going, “That is the season I sit up for, that is my second.  I just like the longer days, I like the sunshine, I just like the solar”.  And you are like, “Yeah, that was nice”.  So, that was in all probability the one instance I might give you.

Helen Tupper: Nicely, I in all probability bought yet another lately, simply because I believe you had been in Guide Bubble, which was there was a Squiggly sculpture that we had seen in London.  I believe it had simply come to us on an e-mail or one thing.  And so, we had been having like a group — it occurred to be a group assembly, and we mentioned, “Oh, ought to we go and see what this sculpture is all about?”  And we wandered there.  It was a bit bizarre as a result of we did not know, is it nonetheless going to be there or what was it going to be like?  After which we bought there, and I bear in mind we had been simply fairly playful.  The group had been standing on the statue, we had been taking photographs, and it simply felt a bit foolish.  And I do bear in mind folks being like, “Oh gosh, is that this a bit foolish?”  But it surely was actually enjoyable and it was playful and it did truly create connection. One we did some time in the past was, we did a group improv session with Max Dickins.

Sarah Ellis: That was sensible.

Helen Tupper: He comes from an organization referred to as Hoopla!

Sarah Ellis: That felt like pure play, proper, I believe?

Helen Tupper: Yeah.  But in addition once more, improv is not simple.  I imply, Max creates an excellent state of affairs the place you’re feeling comfy.  However you might be doing issues that make you’re feeling a bit foolish.  However equally, you are doing it in an setting that feels secure, everybody’s coming at it from the identical place, and I positively suppose you simply create new connection and new vitality.  It takes you out.  In case your work is feeling fairly relentless, I believe play is a very great way of hitting reset a little bit bit, quite than simply maintaining doing the identical factor.

Sarah Ellis: And there’s a great deal of proof that play is a wonderful antidote to emphasize, significantly truly when utilized in smaller methods.  So, I believe what Helen and I’ve each described is sort of these moments of play that we have designed and considered.  However what we’ve not performed is, there’s truly some actually attention-grabbing examples in hospitals, of the place they’ve created very brief moments of play, however which can be extra every day.  So, it will be one thing that is like 5 to seven minutes.  And every day, they examined issues like, sooner or later they simply made some origami, which origami is all the time actually arduous, I believe.  Or they did one quite simple improv train. You’ll be able to learn an excellent Guardian article by a health care provider referred to as Heidi Edmundson, the place she principally says she launched enjoyable to the lives of A&E workers.  So, that is hardcore hospital, proper, of all of the bits of the hospital.  And she or he talks about how the laughter was infectious.  I bear in mind studying it.  It decreased illness.  So, nurses, it truly improved folks’s wellbeing, to the extent the place they might see it in folks coming to work every single day, much less folks left, but additionally simply folks’s sense of enjoyment of coming to work, in what should be a really hardcore setting, enhance.  And you’ll learn it, you can too hearken to her.  She was on Bruce’s podcast, I believe, fairly a number of years in the past, which I believe could be how I initially discovered her.  And I bear in mind pondering, if she will do it in that setting, there isn’t any cause that everyone else cannot, as a result of that to me appears like a troublesome place to start out.

Helen Tupper: So, we needed to provide you some concepts so to practise taking part in at work.  So, we have got two areas actually.  We have got issues that you are able to do at work, and we break up these between issues that you are able to do by yourself and issues that you are able to do collectively in a group; after which we have got some concepts for how one can play along with your work, so the issues that you simply do on an on a regular basis, how one can simply do this in a barely extra playful approach.  So, we’ll undergo every of these now for you.

Sarah Ellis: So, the primary thought we have got for you, we’re calling pockets of play.  So, these are actually small moments of play that you may add into your day.  So, that is impressed by the work that folks like Heidi Edmundson has performed in her hospital, the place persons are actually eager about taking part in extra continuously than in all probability Helen and I had been saying both of us do significantly as a part of our work in the mean time.  And so individually, a few examples of issues you may do.  We each do Wordle, and we determined Wordle counts.  I believe we had been desperately attempting to think about like, “Does that really feel like –”  I believe if Wordle is a sport, and I believe the way in which that I do Wordle implies that it counts. So, I do know some folks do Wordle, they usually’re a part of like a WhatsApp Wordle group, they usually speak about what number of they bought it.  Or, you realize should you had been to, “Oh, I am monitoring my streak, and I have to attempt to get it in two”, or no matter. 

I do Wordle actually quick.  I simply go, proper, I need to attempt to do it within the subsequent three minutes.  And I do not fear an excessive amount of if I am like, “Okay, properly, I must generally use a phrase to find out about what it is not as a lot as what it’s”.  And it’s positively enjoyable for me, and it is pure play.  So, I do not take it too severely, however I do discover it very satisfying. The opposite factor that you are able to do, and Helen and I had been saying we bought completely different ones, there’s a nice web site referred to as protobot.org, and every day it generates random product concepts that you would be able to have a go at.  So, at the moment I bought, “Design a birthday cake that matches in your pocket”.  What did you get Helen?

Helen Tupper: “Design a lawnmower that responds to voice instructions”.  I believe that might be nice.  I might love a kind of.

Sarah Ellis: Yeah, that might be fairly good.

Helen Tupper: I’ve bought a number of grass that wants…

Sarah Ellis: It could be fairly helpful for you!  And so, I assume the thought of Protobot is prototyping.  However I believe you may simply have a play with that.  You would simply be like, proper, you may do a sketch, you may do a thoughts map, you may use objects round your home, something principally that you simply felt was enjoyable.  And the opposite factor that I have been studying rather a lot about, and this is likely one of the causes I believe it is now so widespread with adults, individually or as a group, you need to use LEGO.  I learn an important e-book referred to as Construct Your self Comfortable, the Pleasure of LEGO Play, which is by a girl referred to as Abbie Headon.  And she or he talks about simply truly the method of taking part in with LEGO.  It is so good for you, when it comes to being relaxed at an finish of a day, simply one thing that you simply simply get pleasure from, you are not feeling like you have to take an image of it and add it on social media or something like that, you are principally identical to messing round with LEGO.  And although we generally consider LEGO as like, “Oh, I’ve bought to create an unbelievable fortress or an excellent constructing”, truly what a number of adults like doing is simply the low stress, “I am simply going to place some bricks collectively and see what occurs”, which is certainly how I exploit LEGO after I use it with my 7-year-old.  So, that might be attention-grabbing. We are literally experimenting with that.  So, we have got an occasion arising in a few weeks, and we’ll get 100 folks taking part in with LEGO at the beginning of the day.  So, we’ll let you realize, we’ll let you know the way that works out.

Helen Tupper: We’re additionally doing improv with folks on the identical day.

Sarah Ellis: We’re, sure.

Helen Tupper: So, we’re practising what we’re saying.

Sarah Ellis: And as a group, another concepts that you may attempt.  I’ve performed this earlier than, however not for a short while.  You do a self-portrait along with your non-dominant hand, and also you create a group gallery.  Everybody indicators their photos, and that is actually enjoyable as a result of clearly everyone’s are garbage.  We have not performed that in our group, so I believe that might be a very good one to do.  And you may use Play-Doh in the way in which that we have used it, or you may use Play-Doh, we have generally mentioned to folks, “Oh, create the form of your profession to date with Play-Doh”, and also you get all types of extraordinary shapes. 

That may be fairly a very good factor to do.  Something with drawing, in my expertise, as a result of we use a number of drawing within the work that we do, persons are all the time fairly nervous of drawing, after which masses higher than they provide themselves credit score for, often quite a bit higher than I’m, and we use numerous drawing.  But when you may get folks making or drawing or doing one thing the place you possibly can — I typically suppose play the place you possibly can see one thing, it is good that you’ve the bricks with the LEGO.  You are getting out of your head, I suppose, and doing one thing a bit extra sensible.  I typically suppose that works very well.

My recommendation could be, attempt to join play to a second that you have already got collectively as a group, as a result of I believe generally the place I’ve tried to do that and it is not labored, should you attempt to do one thing separate, it all the time appears like a nice-to-do after which you do not actually find time for it.  I believe the place we have seen this work finest in our group is, “Oh, we’re getting collectively, let’s make sure that we have got a second of purposeless play”.  And I believe a few of what we have performed to date has been extra accidentally than design.  However having researched this and spent a little bit of time eager about play, actually over the previous few months, it makes me suppose it is value being extra — it is humorous, you have to be intentional about then being purposeless about play.  However in any other case, I am unsure as a group, it might be arduous to make it occur should you simply mentioned to everybody, “Oh, we should always simply play extra”.  I simply do not suppose something would change.

Helen Tupper: I believe after we do PodPlus, I’ll ask our group for a few of their concepts, as a result of I believe plenty of folks do that enjoyable stuff, however I do not suppose it is actually, I do not know, I do not suppose folks share it and I believe we are able to borrow some concepts for one another.  I used to be eager about doing group paper airplane challenges, and stuff.  It is a actually fast factor to do and sometimes takes folks again to that childhood.  I believe possibly a few of these workout routines that take you again to that childlike state of play, just like the LEGO or the paper airplanes, these issues are fairly useful to do. 

So, possibly having 5 minutes of play at the beginning of your month-to-month group assembly might be a very good technique to simply make this a part of how your group comes collectively and creates vitality at the beginning of that second. So, the subsequent factor, in order that was all about taking part in at work, both by yourself or with the folks that you simply work with.  The opposite factor we needed to provide you some concepts for was taking part in along with your work.  So, how do you add a little bit of play into the stuff that you’re already doing?  So, plenty of us are in all probability doing presenting at work.  It is one thing that plenty of folks do in the identical approach.  And so, they do not essentially join that with play.  We open up some PowerPoint, we put some phrases and pictures on slide, after which we share that factor.  Enjoying with presenting might be a great way that you simply take a little bit of stress off, and also you deliver a bit extra playfulness into that factor that you simply’re doing very often.  What we’d say with presenting is clearly, there are in all probability some displays at work which can be extra necessary than others.  If that is to your senior, if this can be a board assembly —

Sarah Ellis: “I am simply going to make use of some AI to do that for me”!

Helen Tupper: “I am simply going to speak by means of the artwork of juggling”!  Perhaps not then.  “Catch the balls to get the info factors”!  I might like to try this, are you able to think about?!  Oh pricey, possibly do not do this.  Thought I’ve seen, like Danielle, who’s our Finance Supervisor, she was at our group assembly that we had been at, and he or she was actually playful with how she communicated some actually necessary numbers.  She did greater or decrease, did not she?

Sarah Ellis: Oh yeah, she made us do this quiz factor.

Helen Tupper: Yeah, she made us do a quiz.  And it was a quarterly replace on the efficiency of the enterprise.  It was fairly an necessary assembly, however she had managed to deliver play into that in a approach that bought everyone engaged, even when numbers weren’t the factor that was most placed on the agenda.

Sarah Ellis: I believe I knew a few of the numbers and nonetheless bought the sport incorrect.

Helen Tupper: However once more, I believe these like, I do not know, the Era Sport or the higher-and-lower issues, once more folks have gotten an affiliation of these issues that I believe you possibly can deliver into work.  However the level with presenting is, choose some low-pressure displays that you’ve got arising and play with the way you current.  So, for instance, you may attempt drawing.  That’s one thing that Sarah and I do in how we current.  So, we simply use an app.  We get requested about this on a regular basis.  It is the WeTransfer Paper app, although there are many different drawing apps that you need to use.  However that one’s free.  And once more, you may simply current by drawing as a approach that you may play with the way you do it.  Or there’s PechaKucha, which limits what number of slides that you would be able to have and means you simply have to make use of photographs and do it inside a sure period of time.  You would solely use photographs that you have created with AI, for instance. I used to be remembering my presentation that I created.  That is very bizarre, I all the time bear in mind it.  I believe the software program does not exist anymore, however I believe you may in all probability do one thing comparable with Mural, or one thing like that.  The software program was Prezi.

Sarah Ellis: Oh, yeah.

Helen Tupper: Do you bear in mind Prezi?

Sarah Ellis: I do.

Helen Tupper: I bear in mind I created a presentation for Richard Branson to launch a enterprise on Prezi, and this was essentially the most random, but it surely was fairly playful, you zoomed throughout.

Sarah Ellis: I do know, yeah.

 

Helen Tupper: As a result of Prezi, do you bear in mind?  However I believe simply taking part in with presenting, I believe, it simply makes it extra enjoyable than simply sticking photographs and bullet factors on a slide.  So, have a go together with that, that might be one factor that you may do.  After which the opposite factor you are able to do is play with the conferences that you’re doing.  So, we’re recording this in direction of the top of the 12 months, recording it in November.  So, in case you are listening when this goes out, you may need some end-of-year group conferences arising, or possibly you are eager about a January assembly once you’re all getting collectively.  We’re doing that in our group, for instance, and we’ll do a vision-board train.  So, it does have a objective, to Sarah’s level, the aim is on the finish of it, folks could have a imaginative and prescient board for the 12 months forward, however we’re doing it in a very playful approach.  Individuals will principally have photographs, they’re going to be slicing and sticking.  It is fairly low stress, these items wouldn’t have to be excellent.  However I believe vision-board workout routines are fairly a great way that folks can join and be playful about how they’re coming collectively. Only one final thought, and we thought we’d simply take a look at this stay so that you can finish at the moment on, is one different factor you are able to do is, have you ever seen these connection playing cards?  I believe Steven Bartlett created them, I believe Faculty of Life have them, however they’re like little packs of playing cards the place there’s only a query on it and also you ask one another the query, and people questions might be fairly random.  We thought we’d create — I am going to put this on our LinkedIn web page when the podcast goes stay.  So, go to @amazingif on LinkedIn if you wish to obtain this and use it out of your group.  However we thought that you may use a few of these query playing cards for play and to create a little bit of connection, maybe in your end-of-year or start-of-year group assembly.  And to point out you what that may look and sound like, we thought we’d take a look at one out on ourselves.  So, Sarah and I can see in entrance of us proper now, I believe, what number of have we bought right here?  We have got 12 random and playful questions and we do not know what query the opposite individual goes to ask.  So, we are able to see them and we each get to select.  So, Sarah, you go first.  What are you going to ask me?

Sarah Ellis: What’s your favorite film of all time, and why?

Helen Tupper: That is truly a bit embarrassing, I believe.

Sarah Ellis: Oh no, I believe everybody’s a little bit bit nostalgic or embarrassing, yeah, certainly.

Helen Tupper: Okay, yeah, it is each of these issues.  Do you bear in mind a movie referred to as Flight of the Navigator?

Sarah Ellis: Completely not.

Helen Tupper: I can not imagine I am saying this!  Oh my gosh, you are lacking a deal with, although I did attempt to get my kids to look at it, they thought it was terrible.  Flight of the Navigator options Sarah Jessica Parker, aged about 20, and it is about a little bit boy who falls down a gap, I imply I do not need to give any spoilers away, however a little bit boy who falls down a gap.

Sarah Ellis: Okay, I will must google this.

Helen Tupper: I believe he results in an area —

Sarah Ellis: Flight of the Navigator.

Helen Tupper: Oh, it is actually good.  He results in a spaceship, okay, and he is flying round on this spaceship and there is this actually cute little animal after which all of it — his dad and mom get —

Sarah Ellis: To be truthful, it will get fairly good evaluations.

Helen Tupper: It’s totally, Sarah.

Sarah Ellis: It is 6.9 out of 10 on IMDB, they usually’re all the time fairly essential, is not it?

Helen Tupper: It is superb.  However the cause why, I believe, is I used to have a childminder and he or she did not have many movies.  You understand, it is again within the day!  So, I used to go after faculty to her home and I might watch Flight of the Navigator over and time and again.  So, I simply suppose it simply has a little bit gentle spot in my coronary heart for that stage of my life.  Proper, shall I choose one for you?

Sarah Ellis: Go for it.

Helen Tupper: What’s your favorite day of the week and why?

Sarah Ellis: That is a very good query, I like that query.  Favorite day of the week and why?  Do you suppose that features weekends?

Helen Tupper: Yeah, it is an apparent reply, however should you’ve bought a very good cause why.

Sarah Ellis: Not a Monday or a Friday, not a Sunday, so I am going by elimination.  Both a Saturday, as a result of I believe I’ve all the time preferred the Saturdays of a weekend, I really feel are sporty and also you’re doing enjoyable stuff and also you’re out and about and it is a good change from the way you spent the remainder of your week.  I believe a number of my favorite actions are all the time extra doubtless, to be trustworthy, in all probability on a Saturday, extra personally.  I believe in per week, I like a midweek second.  So, I believe I ramp up because the week goes on.  So, I believe by Wednesday, my mind is firing, I am pondering, however I am not too drained.  And you realize generally, I assume, then you definately fall off because the week goes on.  So, I will go for, I like a midweek Wednesday.

Helen Tupper: Midweek Wednesday.  So, yeah, you have discovered some stuff about Sarah and I.  You in all probability did not must find out about Flight of the Navigator or that Wednesday’s Sarah’s favorite day of the week.  However the level is that you’ve this vary of questions.  You’d choose one, you’d pose it to somebody in your group, it is vitally random, it is vitally playful.  And in addition, you be taught a bit extra about one another too.  So, we’ll create a model of these questions, we’ll put it on Superb If on LinkedIn.  So, if you wish to do this along with your group as a part of one in all your end-of-year or start-of-year workout routines, head there, obtain it, after which you can do it.

Sarah Ellis: I really feel like what this begins to get to, and there are some good examples truly you possibly can learn of organisations doing this, however you realize the dreaded marshmallow problem?

Helen Tupper: Yeah, I like that one.

Sarah Ellis: Yeah, however everyone hates it, as a result of everyone who’s labored in large firms has performed it as a part of issues like evaluation centres, and I really feel like that has ruined the marshmallow problem, which should you’ve not performed it, it is marshmallows, it is spaghetti, make a tower as tall as you possibly can.  And I really feel like that had good origins, like its origin story may need been, “Oh, it is enjoyable and you’re employed as a group and artistic”, after which it turned compelled enjoyable and like, “I am being assessed on this”.  And that is why persons are like, truthfully, should you google it, persons are like, “Not once more, I’ve performed it so many instances”, or it simply appears like the other of what you are attempting to attain. 

So, I really feel like we want new variations of play that genuinely really feel playful, and that simply provide you with that moments of sunshine aid that, I believe, show you how to to be taught.  And I do not suppose these must be like large adjustments or like, “Oh, we have got to spend half a day doing an enormous team-building train”. I believe all the examples I’ve learn, all the inspiring ones, like within the NHS or folks like IDEO, they are much extra like small — that is why I believe ‘pockets’ works very well as an outline — they’re small pockets of play that folks begin to actually sit up for, and also you simply know you possibly can simply flip up and have a go and then you definately transfer on with the remainder of your day.  So, I am actually intrigued to see, as a result of we’re attempting a number of extra issues out within the subsequent month or so, after which I might additionally like us to consider rhythms and rituals and the way you do this too.  So, we’ll let you realize in six months whether or not we have been taking part in a bit extra, as a result of I do not suppose we do a great deal of this in the mean time and I believe there’s some actually good alternatives to do extra of it that truly aren’t that onerous to make occur.

Helen Tupper: And we might like to crowdsource some concepts from our Squiggly Careers group as properly.  So, if there are enjoyable issues that you’re doing in your group that you simply suppose that plenty of our listeners might be taught from, please tell us.  You’ll be able to both message us on Instagram or LinkedIn, if that is the place you might be, or simply ship us an e-mail, helenandsarah@squigglycareers.com, and simply share with us what moments of play you are already doing in order that we are able to possibly put a highlight on them and share them with the group at scale.

Sarah Ellis: However that is every little thing for this week.  Please do be part of us at The Profession Collective, if solely to see how a lot I get dominated in these discussions and/or to lift some huge cash for 2 very worthwhile charities.  So, we’d like to see you there if you may make it to London, and clearly we’ll launch that as a podcast episode as properly, as we do know London does not all the time work for everybody.  However that is it for this week, thanks a lot for listening and we’re again with you once more quickly.  Bye for now.

Helen Tupper: Bye everyone.



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