Facilitation Tool: Spaces outside Spaces

33 Spaces Outside Spaces.png

HOW? When you book a room for a meeting, stop and think. Is it the right one for this particular meeting? Will it set the right atmosphere? Does it do what I want it to do? Or should I change my mind and instead take the meeting as a walk-and-talk session out in the corridors, or perhaps at the round tables in the café?

A space is not necessarily defined by four walls, a table, six chairs, 14 square metres or a name in a booking system. Space is also an atmosphere, one defined by the view, by the distance between people (we sit closer together on a bench than around a table), by shapes, colours, fabrics and lighting.

There are spaces in the canteen, on the stairs in the sunshine, on a sofa, on a roof terrace and so on. Include all of these in your considerations when deciding which conversations to hold where.

Of course, some meetings demand a traditional set-up. But what about internal meetings? Would it be better to hold some of them somewhere else, for example when you sense a need to neutralise power imbalances?

TIP! When inviting people to a meeting, provide details of where you intend to hold it and why. Some people find it annoying to switch rooms because it takes them out of their comfort zone or because it shifts a power balance.
BUT...  Sounds like hippy nonsense to me. It’s not a matter of getting out of the meeting room just for the sake of it. I want you to use spaces more consciously, because they have a huge impact on whether your communication has the desired effect.