About the workshop

How does it work?

The workshop is divided into two parts. In the first part (1.5 days), participants will explore the concept of Design Thinking. In five steps, you will find the best solution to a problem.

During the workshop, this approach will be applied to a specific problem, resulting in a prototype of a mobile application.

The first three steps define who has the problem, what the problem is, and what the ideas for solutions are.

The last two steps focus on iterative (phased, incremental) finding of the best solution (prototype) and verifying that each step is moving towards solving the customer's or user's problem.

In these two phases of Design Thinking, Rapid Prototyping and SCRUM are particularly useful. Rapid Prototyping brings the philosophy of gradual production of prototypes from sketches to tangible prototypes, where the correctness of the solution is continuously verified, including the potential return to problem reassessment or idea phase.

The workshop concludes in the second part (afternoon of the second day) with a simulation of the Kanban method using a simple example, providing space for process and resource optimization.

Digital Tools

Learn to Work with Digital Tools!

We have revitalized our training with practical examples that will enable you to identify and evaluate potential project risks. In addition to using MOS and OpenOffice spreadsheet and word processing tools, our training will also incorporate advanced AI tools, including Chat GPT. With these, you will analyze stakeholders, improve communication, and enhance your skills in creating and managing backlogs in agile project management.

Through practical examples such as creating a Business Case, product-oriented planning, and creating a product breakdown, you will also learn how to work with the online creative platform Miro. Working with digital tools will not only increase your qualifications but also improve the overall efficiency of your projects.

Benefits for organizations

The Agile Experience Workshop is for those who aren't interested in book theory but want real examples from actual applications.

At the heart of the workshop is an approach called Design Thinking, used by companies like Apple, Microsoft, Nike, PepsiCo, Samsung, Toyota, and others.

Design Thinking aids in the process of questioning, challenging the problem, questioning assumptions, and questioning the consequences. This approach is especially useful for problems or situations where solutions are not defined.

If you're interested in problem-solving, you can practice Design Thinking in combination with Rapid Prototyping, Scrum, and Kanban, which are popular frameworks for the "Prototype" and "Test" phases. These methodologies also work well with the PRINCE2 Agile framework.