Manifestos/Principles

Provocations

Teams often develop comfortable ways of thinking that become invisible constraints. The Provocations Exercise uses challenging statements to disrupt conventional thinking and surface limiting assumptions. This 2-hour exercise aims to make teams uncomfortable enough to examine unquestioned beliefs, revealing possibilities and sparking debate. This leads to better principles. This exercise works when teams are stuck in incremental thinking or when 'the way we've always done it' dominates discussions. It's powerful during strategy development, product innovation, or organizational change when breakthrough thinking is needed. The magic happens when someone questions an idea. Provocations require psychological safety. If your culture punishes dissent, provocations will fail. Expect discomfort and energy. Good provocations make people squirm before they spark insight. The 2-hour duration allows teams to move past resistance into exploration. You'll know it's working when teams generate their own provocations and question assumptions.

Duration
2 hours
Group Size
8-15
Category
Manifestos/Principles
Difficulty
Easy
Generate 15-20 provocative statements that challenge assumptions and norms. Create productive discomfort that opens new thinking. Debate provocations to surface underlying assumptions and beliefs. Make the invisible visible so teams can examine whether these assumptions still serve them. Distill insights from provocation debates into 5-7 design principles. Capture new thinking while remaining actionable. Build team comfort with challenging conventional wisdom as an ongoing practice. Establish permission to question and explore.
Teams will generate provocative what-if scenarios. They will challenge assumptions and mental models. They will expand the range of possibilities considered.
Before the session, establish psychological safety: 'We're exploring provocative ideas today. No idea is too wild. We're not committing to implement these. We're using them to examine our assumptions.' Pre-identify any sacred cows that teams avoid challenging. During facilitation, embrace discomfort. When a provocation makes people squirm, lean into it. Prevent premature dismissal. Balance provocation with grounding. Watch for defensive reactions and reframe as curiosity. Warning signs: mild tweaks rather than genuine challenges, teams dismissing provocations immediately, narrow thinking, restating current approach, psychological safety issues. Success indicators: discomfort and debate, surfacing unaware assumptions, challenging principles, generating ongoing provocations, team openness. After the session, document provocations and principles. Share principles with context. Use principles to guide decisions and report back. Schedule follow-up to assess influence.

  1. Setup & Provocation Framing (15 minutes): Explain that provocations are challenging statements designed to surface assumptions and spark new thinking. Show examples. Frame: provocations don't need to be implemented. They're thinking tools.

  2. Provocation Generation (30 minutes): Individually, participants write provocative 'What if...' statements that challenge how the team operates. Push for statements that make people uncomfortable. Aim for 40-50 provocations. Prompts: 'What if we did the opposite of our current strategy?'

  3. Provocation Selection (15 minutes): Read all provocations aloud. Teams vote for the 8-10 most provocative. Select a diverse set spanning different assumptions.

  4. Deep Dive Debates (45 minutes): For each provocation (5-6 minutes each): What assumptions does this challenge? Why does this make us uncomfortable? What would be true if we actually did this? What insight does this reveal about our current approach? Capture insights.

  5. Principle Synthesis (15 minutes): Review all insights from debates. Identify recurring themes or powerful ideas. Draft 5-7 principles that capture new thinking. Principles should be provocative enough to guide decisions.

  6. Principle Refinement & Commitment (10 minutes): Refine principle wording. Test each: Is this actionable? Is it memorable? Does it challenge us? Does it connect to our work? Identify how principles will be used.

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For Facilitators

  • Review participant profiles and expectations
  • Prepare all materials and supplies
  • Test technology and room setup

For Participants

  • Complete pre-session survey
  • Review background materials
  • Prepare examples or case studies

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  • Index cards or sticky notes for provocation generation (3-5 per person)

  • Markers

  • Large visible board for capturing insights

  • Voting dots for provocation selection

  • Example provocations (prepare 1 week ahead): 5-7 provocative statements relevant to your context to demonstrate quality

  • Domain framing (distribute 48 hours ahead): clarify what you're provoking thinking about

  • Safe space establishment: remind teams this is exploratory thinking

  • External provocations from other industries (optional)

  • Recorded examples of breakthrough thinking (optional)

  • Silent voting to prevent groupthink in selection (optional)

  • Pre-written provocations (backup)

  • Alternative debate structures (backup)

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  • Facilitator Guide (PDF)
  • Participant Workbook Template
  • Presentation Slides
  • Printable Materials

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