My experience of facilitating a remote workshop with breakout rooms

Breakout rooms were a useful way of splitting into groups on a video call, have separate discussions and then playback learnings.

🔊Listen to an audio version on SoundCloud

Let’s start by rewinding to a time when I was working in an office 5 days a week. I frequently facilitated in-person workshops and often split people into small groups to work on separate tasks. It would be something like:

  • Divide everyone into small groups scattered around the room (3-4 people)

  • Give them a topic or problem to work on as a team

  • Each team plays back a summary and key points to the whole room

It worked really well for getting through topics quickly and efficiently.

When I moved to working remotely in March 2020 due to the pandemic, this was not something that was easy to replicate. I found that remote discussions were slower and more rigid. When there’s more than about 5 people on a call, it can result in either total chaos or a few people dominating the discussion. Zoom breakout rooms helped bridge the gap. Google Meet and Microsoft Teams also have breakout room features.

I tried this recently for a design workshop and got a surprising amount done in an hour meeting with 10 people. The workshop structure was as follows.

Start together - align and brainstorm (20 min)

We started the call as one big group of 10 people. We discussed the goal for the workshop to set expectations and then brainstormed problems for focusing on in this workshop. For the brainstorming, we use the digital whiteboard tool, Miro. After grouping the brainstorm output into themes, we were ready to split.

Split into groups (30 min)

joining breakout rooms.png

I chose the members of each group to keep it simple and created the breakout rooms in Zoom. Everyone disappeared from the main room. It was weird, for a moment, suddenly being the only person left. As the host, I dropped into each room to check how things were going, kind of like floating around to each group when working in a physical space.

I noticed that splitting into groups created a sense of team for people and focused them on the solving the problem at hand.

Come back together (10 min)

After 30 mins, we came back into the main room as one big group. Each team played back the problem they chose and the ideas they had come up with. There were loads of fantastic ideas, some really well thought through solutions. This session was the start of a 6-week sprint for these problem areas and everyone felt focused and energised on what they needed to do.

My reflection on running the workshop

Afterwards, it struck me how productive the workshop was, which was something I hadn’t felt very often in remote meetings. I think breaking out into smaller groups worked really well for making progress in a short amount of time. On reflection, there were a few things that helped it work well:

  1. Align on an agenda and expectations at the start - everyone had a clear idea of what we were using the time for and what we wanted to achieve (I was skeptical we would get through everything)

  2. Create the content together - this is part of the alignment piece, but having everyone contribute at the beginning ensures people understand the content. In this case it was a list of problem areas everyone brainstormed.

  3. Give the teams a clear task / goal - it’s important to have simple and clear instructions for the teams. In this case the instruction was “in 30 min, brainstorm ideas on your chosen problem and choose one idea to take forward.”

How might you use breakout rooms in remote meetings or workshops?

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