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How To: Get the Most Out of Brainstorming

January 25th, 2008 by Stephen

Posted in GTD, How To -, Planning |

Welcome back! It's good to see you again. Please note that I am now publishing all new material at my hub site: StephenPSmith.com

[Editor’s note - This post is an excerpt from my forthcoming e-course - Project Planning in Context ©. Read through to the end to learn how to get the premium E-book (no charge!).]

Affinity Diagrams

Organizing Ideas Into Common Themes

Is it ever a bad thing to have too many ideas? Probably not, but if you’ve ever experienced information overload or struggled to know where to begin with a wealth of data you’ve been given, you may have wondered how you can use all of these ideas effectively.

When there’s lots of “stuff” coming at you, it is hard to sort through everything and organize the information in a way that makes sense and helps you make decisions. Whether you’re brainstorming ideas, trying to solve a problem or analyzing a situation, when you are dealing with lots of information from a variety of sources, you can end up spending a huge amount of time trying to assimilate all the little bits and pieces. Rather than letting the disjointed information get the better of you, you can use an affinity diagram to help you organize it.

An affinity diagram helps to synthesize large amounts of data by finding relationships between ideas. The information is then gradually structured from the bottom up into meaningful groups. From there you can clearly “see” what you have, and then begin your analysis or come to a decision.

Affinity diagrams can be used to:

  • Draw out common themes from a large amount of information
  • Discover previously unseen connections between various ideas or information
  • Brainstorm root causes and solutions to a problem

Because many decision-making exercises begin with brainstorming, this is one of the most common applications of affinity diagrams. After a brainstorming session there are usually pages of ideas. These won’t have been censored or edited in any way, many of them will be very similar, and many will also be closely related to others in a variety of ways. What an affinity diagram does is start to group the ideas into themes.

From the chaos of the randomly generated ideas comes an insight into the common threads that link groups of them together. From there the solution or best idea often emerges quite naturally.

Affinity diagrams are not purely in the domain of brainstorming. They can be used in any situation where:

  • A single, best solution is not readily apparent from a series of choices
  • You want to reach a consensus or decision and have a lot of variables to consider, concepts to discuss, ideas to connect, or opinions to incorporate
  • There is a large volume of information to sort through

Here is a step-by-step guide to using affinity diagrams to show how the process works.

  1. Describe the problem or issue
  2. Generate ideas by brainstorming. Write each idea on a separate sticky note and put these on a wall or flip chart. Remember to:
    • Emphasize the quantity of ideas, rather than simply quality
    • Suspend judgment on creative or unusual approaches
    • Encourage “Piggybacking” on other ideas
  3. Sort Ideas into natural themes by asking:
    • What ideas are similar?
    • Is this idea connected to any of the others?
  4. If you’re working in a team:
    • Separate into smaller groups of 3 to 4 people
    • Sort the ideas IN SILENCE so that no one is influenced by anyone else’s comments
    • Keep moving the cards around until consensus is reached
  5. Create total group consensus
    • Discuss the shared meaning of each of the sorted groups
    • Continue until consensus is reached
    • If some ideas do not fit into any theme, separate them as “stand-alone” ideas
    • If some ideas fit into more than one theme, create a duplicate card and put it in the proper group
    • Try to limit the total number of themes to between five and nine
  6. Create theme cards
    • Create a short 3-5 word description for the relationship
    • If you’re working in a group, do this together, out loud
    • Write this theme/header on a blank card and place at the top of the group it describes
    • Create a “super-headers” where necessary to group themes
    • Use a “sub-header” card where necessary as well
  7. Continue to group the themes/headers until you have reached the broadest, but still meaningful, categories possible
  8. Draw lines connecting the super-headers, themes/headers, and sub-headers

You will end up with a hierarchical structure that shows, at a glance, where the relationships are. Grouping ideas under headings, and then grouping headings under super-headers in an affinity diagram is a practical way of “chunking” information generated in brainstorming sessions, during mind mapping, or even a planning exercise.

Affinity diagrams are great tools for assimilating and understanding large amounts of information. When you work through the process of creating relationships and working backward from detailed information to broad themes, you get an insight you would not otherwise find.

The next time you are confronting a large amount of information or number of ideas and you feel overwhelmed at first glance, use the affinity diagram approach to discover all the hidden linkages. When you cannot see the forest for the trees, an affinity diagram may be exactly what you need to get back in focus.

Get the Project Planning in Context E-book and get started

Project Planning in Context is a PDF format E-book that is available to subscribers only, for now. Click here to subscribe to Productivity in Context and get a link to your download.

For those of you that are really interested in digging into Project Planning, there is an E-course available at the HD BizBlog Shop.

Click here to get instant delivery.

Here are some more Project- and Planning-related posts from the Productivity Blogosphere. Check them out too.

From Matthew Cornell:

Where are you going? Use your actions and projects to reverse engineer
your goals

Does having fewer projects make us more productive?

And When inputs exceed your workflow system’s capacity

From Al at 7P: Five Steps to Get Back on the GTD Track

From Bill Tyler at BubblePlanner: When it comes to Goals, start small

And, last but not least, my friend Lodewijk at How to Be an Original points us to How to sabotage goals with 47 simple words and a whole series on Goal Setting Mistakes.

I am sure that this should keep you busy over the weekend. Stay tuned for more sample chapters from the full Project Planning in Context E-course.
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If you found this post useful, please share it with your friends on Twitter using the tinylink http://tinyurl.com/64fhc2. Thanks, I appreciate it! Feel free to comment below, I enjoy discussing these ideas. ~@Stephen


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5 Responses

  1. Al at 7P Says:

    Hi Stephen - thank you for the link. I also did not know about affinity diagrams until you introduced them in this post.

    It’s kinda like reverse mind-mapping, but I think affinity diagrams would have more coverage of ideas since you’re going outside-in, not inside-out. This is definitely a tool I’ll be using in the future… thanks!

  2. @Stephen Says:

    Reverse mind-mapping is a good description, for taking ideas that already exist and correlating them. I’m glad I could help.

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  4. My Get Things Done List » Blog Archive » How To: Get the Most Out of Brainstorming [HD BizBlog- The Blog: Productivity in Context] Says:

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