Like many people, I’ve been watching the fast-moving landscape of AI tools with equal parts excitement and horror. Will it put us all out of a job? Will it make us all better at our jobs? Who knows? I back my team and myself on our ability to bring a human touch to the work we deliver, but I guess time will tell.
What AI tools are definitely good for, however, is generating ideas. For example, a list of ways that visual thinking can be useful in the workplace. I asked ChatGPT?to give me a big list, and what it spat out was amazing. It reads like a bucket list for someone who visualises things professionally.
Behold, the monster list:
- Problem-solving:?Visual thinking can help in identifying and understanding complex problems by visualising them through diagrams, mind maps, or flowcharts.
- Brainstorming:?Visual techniques such as concept mapping or visual boards can facilitate creative brainstorming sessions and stimulate idea generation.
- Planning and organising:?Visual tools like Gantt charts or Kanban boards can aid in project planning, task allocation, and tracking progress.
- Process mapping:?Visual diagrams, such as process flows or swim-lane diagrams, can be used to map out workflows, identify bottlenecks, and optimise processes.
- Data visualisation:?Visual representations of data, such as charts, graphs, or infographics, can make complex information more accessible and facilitate data-driven decision-making.
- Communication:?Visuals, including presentations, illustrations, or visual aids, can enhance communication by conveying information more effectively and engagingly.
- Storytelling:?Visual narratives, such as storyboards or comics, can be used to communicate concepts, strategies, or project plans in a compelling and memorable way.
- User experience (UX) design:?Visual thinking is crucial in designing user-friendly interfaces, wireframes, or prototypes to create intuitive and visually appealing user experiences.
- Customer journey mapping:?Visualising the customer journey can help identify pain points, understand user behaviour, and enhance customer satisfaction.
- Training and onboarding:?Visual materials like instructional videos, infographics, or visual guides can aid in training new employees and conveying complex concepts.
- Decision-making:?Visual frameworks, such as decision trees or decision matrices, can assist in structuring decisions, evaluating options, and considering various factors.
- Strategic planning:?Visual tools, like strategy canvases or SWOT analysis diagrams, can support strategic planning processes and facilitate alignment among team members.
- Knowledge sharing:?Visual representations, such as mind maps or visual summaries, can simplify complex information and promote knowledge sharing within teams or across departments.
- Project management:?Visual techniques like project timelines, milestone charts, or burn-down charts can help monitor project progress, track tasks, and manage resources.
- Problem analysis:?Visual problem-solving methods, such as fishbone diagrams or mind maps, can aid in identifying root causes, exploring relationships, and developing solutions.
- Collaboration:?Visual thinking encourages collaborative work by fostering shared understanding, promoting participation, and facilitating group decision-making.
- Strategy development:?Visualising strategic objectives, action plans, or roadmaps can help align teams, track progress, and communicate the overall direction of the organisation.
- Mindfulness and reflection:?Visual journaling or visual reflections can assist in introspection, self-awareness, and promoting a mindful work environment.
- Marketing and advertising:?Visuals play a vital role in creating impactful marketing materials, designing advertisements, and conveying brand messages effectively.
- Change management:?Visual techniques like change impact analysis or change readiness maps can assist in managing organisational change by visualising its effects and planning mitigation strategies.
- Risk management:?Visualising risks through risk matrices, heat maps, or risk assessment diagrams can aid in identifying, prioritising, and managing risks within projects or processes.
- Innovation and ideation:?Visual thinking can stimulate creativity and innovation by using techniques like mind mapping, sketching, or visual brainstorming sessions.
- Customer feedback analysis:?Visual representations, such as sentiment analysis visualisations or customer journey maps, can help analyse and understand customer feedback more intuitively.
- Performance tracking:?Visual dashboards, scorecards, or performance heat maps can provide a quick overview of key performance indicators (KPIs) and track progress towards goals.
- Presentation design:?Visual thinking is essential in creating engaging and visually appealing presentations that effectively communicate key messages and captivate the audience.
- Prototyping:?Visualising ideas through sketches, wireframes, or mockups helps in rapid prototyping and gathering feedback for iterative improvements.
- Sales and pitch presentations:?Visuals are powerful tools in sales presentations, pitch decks, or product demos, helping to highlight key features, benefits, and value propositions.
- Training material design:?Visual thinking can enhance the design of training materials by incorporating visual aids, diagrams, or interactive elements for better engagement and understanding.
- Process improvement:?Visual representations, such as value stream maps or process flow diagrams, can aid in identifying inefficiencies, streamlining workflows, and driving continuous improvement.
- Knowledge management:?Visual knowledge repositories, like visual libraries or visual databases, can facilitate easy access, retrieval, and sharing of information within an organisation.
- Root cause analysis:?Visual techniques, such as fault tree analysis or causal loop diagrams, can assist in identifying and analysing the root causes of problems or incidents.
- Resource planning:?resource availability through visual tools like resource calendars or heat maps can aid in efficient resource planning.
- Quality control:?Visual methods, such as control charts, Pareto diagrams, or scatter plots, can help monitor quality metrics, identify trends, and initiate corrective actions.
- Competitive analysis:?Visualising competitive landscapes, SWOT analyses, or market positioning maps can provide insights into competitors’ strengths, weaknesses, and market opportunities.
- Human resources management:?Visual tools, such as organisational charts or competency matrices, can support HR processes like talent management, succession planning, or skills assessment.
- Knowledge transfer:?Visualising tacit knowledge through techniques like mind mapping, knowledge maps, or visual storytelling can facilitate knowledge transfer between employees.
- Stakeholder mapping:?Visual representations, such as stakeholder influence grids or power-interest matrices, can aid in identifying key stakeholders, their relationships, and engagement strategies.
- Conflict resolution:?Visual methods like conflict resolution diagrams or negotiation frameworks can assist in understanding conflicts, exploring resolutions, and promoting constructive dialogue.
- Recruitment and hiring:?Visual materials, such as job advertisements, visual job descriptions, or employer branding visuals, can attract and engage potential candidates.
- Goal setting and tracking:?Visualising goals and progress through goal boards, vision boards, or goal trackers can increase motivation, focus, and accountability.
- Project retrospectives:?Visual techniques, such as timeline analysis, fishbone diagrams, or impact-effort matrices, can facilitate project retrospectives and lessons learned sessions.
- Workflow optimisation:?Visual thinking can help identify redundancies, bottlenecks, or process gaps through techniques like value stream mapping, spaghetti diagrams, or process visualisation.
- Conflict resolution:?Visual methods like conflict resolution diagrams or negotiation frameworks can assist in understanding conflicts, exploring resolutions, and promoting constructive dialogue.
- Workforce diversity and inclusion:?Visuals can be used to promote diversity and inclusion initiatives through visual campaigns, awareness materials, or inclusive design approaches.
- Social media and content marketing:?Visual content, such as infographics, videos, or visual quotes, can enhance engagement, reach, and virality of social media and content marketing efforts.
I view this is a checklist of opportunity—a comprehensive collection of the ways that thinking, communicating, and collaborating in the workplace can be improved by picking up a pen. I’ve been through and checked off a bunch, but there are plenty of others that offer food for thought.
So, thank-you ChatGPT, for reminding me of the ways that my team and I can help people thrive—in ways that a computer cannot!
Facilitator and Leadership Coach @ Lane Change Consulting | Team Effectiveness | Visual Strategist
1 年This is a certainly a comprehensive list of the opportunities for visual thinking at work! The question for our profession is which of these require the efforts of a human who can draw or graphically record now that remote work has for the most part democratized graphic facilitation? Nearly all of these can be created and facilitated in Mural now so everyone becomes a visual facilitator. I believe where we have the most value and impact now as visual practitioners is in in-person gatherings where the focus is on co-creation and exploration. Brainstorming, storyboarding, prototyping, etc. We can also act as visual advisors, suggesting visual tools and methods that will support the goals of the client - and that's where knowing all of these possibilities comes in handy. I'd love to hear your thoughts!
Multi-Disciplinary Design Consultant
1 年So true! The list reads like a travelogue of my always-morphing career encompassing graphic design, information architecture, user experience research and design (esp. in and for large orgs), service design, human-centered design (using it and teaching it to others), instructional design, meeting design and facilitation, graphic facilitation, graphic recording, sketchnoting, nature journaling, and all kinds of illustration as storytelling. What a treat to recall your excellent workshop, too. ?? Frank and Laura
Visual Facilitator & Lean Six Sigma Master Black Belt
1 年Hi Matthew Magain, good to see you again :) I still have very fond memories of our whiteboarding exercise together with MJ Broadbent and Laura Leenhouts. I like the list as one of my favourite topics comes up top AND the understanding of visual thinking includes visual hierachies, spatial mapping etc. which I believe is not always represented in our profession, as it is often about pictograms, illustrations, "nice" visuals, etc.
Visual Facilitator, Coach, Trainer, bikablo? Certified Global Trainer and Official Neuland? Reseller
1 年Lovely share Matthew Magain! Great visual too. Is it yours?
Professional Graphic Recorder/Visual Scribe and Illustrator
1 年What a comprehensive list!!