Todos los métodos
DecisionIntermedio

Traffic Light

Participants use colour-coded cards (red = no/stop, yellow = maybe/slow down, green = yes/go) to respond to ideas, proposals, or statements simultaneously. The visual display of cards makes the group's collective position immediately visible, unsticks stalled groups, and ensures silent members are heard.

Duración
15m–30m
Tamaño del grupo
4–40 people
Materiales
Red, yellow, and green cards — one set per participant

Cómo ejecutarlo

  1. 1

    Distribute a set of three cards (red, yellow, green) to each participant.

  2. 2

    Explain the meanings: green = yes/go ahead, yellow = I'm unsure/slow down, red = no/stop.

  3. 3

    Read or display each idea, statement, or proposed action one at a time.

  4. 4

    After each item, ask everyone to hold up one card simultaneously (important: all at once, not sequentially).

  5. 5

    Observe the pattern. Where there's strong green consensus, move forward. Where there's red or yellow, open for brief discussion.

  6. 6

    Summarise the group's position after all items have been rated.

Consejos

  • Simultaneous reveal is critical — avoid letting one person's card influence others.

  • Yellow cards are your discussion triggers — they signal uncertainty worth exploring.

  • If the group is stalled, traffic light gives everyone a structured way to express a position without verbal confrontation.

Variaciones

Sticky dot version: write items on a poster, give each participant coloured sticky dots to place next to each statement — creates a visible heat map.Ongoing meeting version: distribute cards at the start. Participants can hold up a card at any time to signal their engagement with the current discussion.

Casos de uso

Decision-makingTemperature checkProposal evaluationStalled group facilitation

Métodos relacionados

🪡

Planifica tu próximo taller con IA

Workshop Weaver te ayuda a combinar métodos como Traffic Light en una agenda completa y cronometrada en minutos.

Probar gratis

Method descriptions on Workshop Weaver are original content written by our team, based on established facilitation practices. This method was inspired by work from University of Hawaii.

Traffic Light — Facilitation Method | Workshop Weaver