way of the whiteboard

108

Upload: j-david-goodman

Post on 06-May-2015

12.179 views

Category:

Business


1 download

DESCRIPTION

The Powerpoint from Dan Roam’s captivating talk from MIX '09 about persuading people with pictures. Whether convincing leadership to back a project, getting a VC to fund a business, building consensus on a project team, you’ll see how nothing is more powerful than a simple picture.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Way of the Whiteboard
Page 2: Way of the Whiteboard
Page 3: Way of the Whiteboard
Page 4: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved4

We can solve our problems with pictures.

Page 5: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved5

We’re going to need rules.“If you take off one of the legs of that stool, the stool falls down. That's not the answer. The answer for our party and for our country is to continue to fight for all three legs of that stool.” Governor Mitt Romney, July 26, 2007

"We're not going to come to a conclusion on a three-legged stool here, missing the fourth leg." Senator Chris Dodd, Sept. 26, 2008

There are three legs to the stool of American foreign policy: Diplomacy, development and military power. We are two of those legs.Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, January 22, 2009

"The recovery package that we're passing is only going to be one leg in, at least, a three-legged stool."President Barack Obama, January 23, 2009

Page 6: Way of the Whiteboard

Obviously, we need a stool.

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved6

Page 7: Way of the Whiteboard

It needs to be a strong stool.

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved7

Page 8: Way of the Whiteboard

First leg.

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved8

Page 9: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved9

Visual thinking unwritten rule #1

Whoever best describes the problem…

Page 10: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved10

Visual thinking unwritten rule #1

Whoever best describes the problem…

is the one most likely to solve it.

Page 11: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved11

Visual thinking unwritten rule #1

(Whoever draws the best picture gets the funding.)

Whoever best describes the problem…

is the one most likely to solve it.

Page 12: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved12

Let’s go to Washington.

Page 13: Way of the Whiteboard

Pictures in politics?

2008 © Dan Roam SOLVING PROBLEMS WITH PICTURES13

Page 14: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam SOLVING PROBLEMS WITH PICTURES14

Page 15: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam SOLVING PROBLEMS WITH PICTURES15

Page 16: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam SOLVING PROBLEMS WITH PICTURES16

Page 17: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam SOLVING PROBLEMS WITH PICTURES17

Page 18: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam SOLVING PROBLEMS WITH PICTURES18

Page 19: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam SOLVING PROBLEMS WITH PICTURES19

Page 20: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam SOLVING PROBLEMS WITH PICTURES20

Page 21: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved21

The ultimate political napkin story…

Page 22: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved22

In 1974 Laffer drew this picture:

Page 23: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved23

In 1974 Laffer drew this picture:

Page 24: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved24

In 1974 Laffer drew this picture:

Page 25: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved25

In 1974 Laffer drew this picture:

Page 26: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved26

Which he showed to these two guys…

Page 27: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved27

… who are, of course, these two guys:

Page 28: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved28

OK, NEXT...

Page 29: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam SOLVING PROBLEMS WITH PICTURES29

Page 30: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved30

Page 31: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved31

For example, what does a stimulus look like?

* American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, signed into law Feb. 17, 2009

Page 32: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved32

Hey folks, where is the picture?

Page 33: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved33

The big picture is in here, right?

Page 34: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved34

Somewhere?

Page 35: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved35

Anywhere?

Page 36: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved36

Help.

Page 37: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved37

That’s it?

Page 38: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved38

Exercise 1: the Who is ‘We’ self-assessment

Page 39: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved39

Page 40: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved40

The “napkin sketch” is the future:

Page 41: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved41

Let’s create a problem-solving napkin…

On your napkin, draw a circle and give it a name…

Page 42: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved42

Let’s create a problem-solving napkin…

On your napkin, draw a circle and give it a name…

Page 43: Way of the Whiteboard

Next leg.

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved43

Page 44: Way of the Whiteboard

Unwritten visual thinking rule #2:

We can’t solve a problem that overwhelms us.

2009 © Digital Roam Inc. 44

Page 45: Way of the Whiteboard

Unwritten visual thinking rule #2:

We can’t solve a problem that overwhelms us.

2009 © Digital Roam Inc. 45

Page 46: Way of the Whiteboard

Unwritten visual thinking rule #2:

We can’t solve a problem that overwhelms us.

2009 © Digital Roam Inc.

We need to first break it down into bite-sized pieces.

Page 47: Way of the Whiteboard

Unwritten visual thinking rule #2:

We can’t solve a problem that overwhelms us.We need to first break it into bite-sized pieces.

2009 © Digital Roam Inc.

There are only so many kinds of problems and they are all

composed of the same pieces.

Page 48: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved48

Another story of a few business guys sitting around talking…

Page 49: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved49

Another story of a few business guys sitting around talking…

Page 50: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved50

Another story of a few business guys sitting around talking…

Page 51: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved51

“Why can’t Wal-Mart be the company every day

that we were during those days of Katrina?” - H. Lee Scott,

Address to Wal-Mart employees, July 13, 2006

Page 52: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved52

Page 53: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved53

Wal-Mart sustainability data

Page 54: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved54

I suggested a simple set of pictures.

Page 55: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved55

What would happen if we drew out how Wal-Mart works?

Page 56: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved56

That’s what we did.

Page 57: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved57

Then we could break that model into separate layers…

Page 58: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved58

So people could finally “get it”.

In 2005, all Wal-Mart stores combined output 20,783,368 cubic tons of CO2.

Page 59: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved59

But this is the picture that mattered…

Page 60: Way of the Whiteboard

Last leg.

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved60

Page 61: Way of the Whiteboard

The more “human” your picture,

the more human the response.

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved61

Visual thinking unwritten rule #3

Page 62: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved62

Visual thinking unwritten rule #3

The more “human” your picture,

the more human the response.

(The mind likes to look at things that match the way we see.)

Page 63: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved63

Let’s look at how we see:

Page 64: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved64

Let’s look at how we see:

Page 65: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved65

Let’s look at how we see:

Page 66: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved66

Let’s look at how we see:

Page 67: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved67

The 6 ways we see:

Page 68: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved68

Back to our napkin…

Now cut our problem into 6 slices…

Page 69: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved69

The 6 ways we see: Who & What

Page 70: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved70

The 6 ways we see: How much

Page 71: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved71

The 6 ways we see: Where

Page 72: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved72

The 6 ways we see: When

Page 73: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved73

The 6 ways we see: How

Page 74: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved74

The 6 ways we see: Why

Page 75: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved75

The 6 ways we see: Why

Page 76: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved76

Back to our napkin…

Now cut our problem into 6 slices…

Page 77: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved77

The 6x6 rule

Page 78: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved78

Back to our napkin…

Now cut our problem into 6 slices…

Page 79: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved79

A portrait shows who & what… your members, for example:

Page 80: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved80

A portrait shows how to distinguish one thing from another:

Page 81: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved81

Let’s draw corresponding pictures…

The 6 ways we show…

Page 82: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved82

A chart shows how much:

Page 83: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved83

A chart shows how much:

Page 84: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved84

Let’s draw corresponding pictures…

The 6 ways we show…

Page 85: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved85

A map shows where to put everything:

Page 86: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved86

And shows where pieces are missing:

Page 87: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved87

Or where business perfection resides:

Page 88: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved88

Let’s draw corresponding pictures…

The 6 ways we show…

Page 89: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved89

When? 1969!

Page 90: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved90

When?? Better draw a timeline…

Page 91: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved91

(If you want lots of discussion, try a looping timeline)…

Page 92: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved92

Let’s draw corresponding pictures…

The 6 ways we show…

Page 93: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved93

A flowchart adds up what + where + when to show how…

Page 94: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved94

Let’s draw corresponding pictures…

The 6 ways we show…

Page 95: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved95

Last, a “multi-variable chart” shows why things are…

Page 96: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved96

Last, a “multi-variable chart” shows why things are…

Page 97: Way of the Whiteboard

Your visual thinking stool.

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved97

Drawing wins.Keep it human.

Use bite-sized pieces.

Page 98: Way of the Whiteboard

A last lesson…

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved98

Page 99: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved99

Page 100: Way of the Whiteboard

In 2002, the Thomson Corporation hired my company to help with their brand

strategy.

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved100

Page 101: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved101

Page 102: Way of the Whiteboard

Who is who?

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved102

Page 103: Way of the Whiteboard

04/11/23

How much?

Page 104: Way of the Whiteboard

04/11/23

Where do they overlap?

Page 105: Way of the Whiteboard

04/11/23

Where do they all sit? (And when?)

Page 106: Way of the Whiteboard

04/11/23

How are we going to make it happen?

Page 107: Way of the Whiteboard

Why?

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved107

Page 108: Way of the Whiteboard

2008 © Dan Roam THE BACK OF THE NAPKIN all rights reserved108

(It was a $17.2 Billion Dollar Chart)