Nominal Group Technique
A structured brainstorming technique that solicits anonymous written contributions from all participants before any discussion. By collecting and randomly redistributing cards, it ensures every voice is heard equally — without the social dynamics that silence quieter participants.
Come eseguirlo
- 1
Hand one index card to each participant.
- 2
Pose a strategic question, issue, or prompt. Ask participants to write their idea, concern, or response on the card — anonymously and in silence.
- 3
Collect all cards.
- 4
Shuffle and redistribute the cards randomly — each person now holds someone else's card.
- 5
Invite participants to read the card they received aloud to the group.
- 6
Facilitate discussion around the ideas that emerged.
Suggerimenti
Anonymity is the key mechanic — it removes the fear of judgment and levels the playing field.
Works especially well when hierarchy is present in the room.
For a digital equivalent, use an anonymous form (Google Forms, Mentimeter) and display submissions live.
Variazioni
Collect and post all cards on a wall before redistribution — this allows for Affinity Clustering as a follow-up step.
Casi d'uso
Metodi correlati
Domande frequenti
Quando usare Nominal Group Technique?â–¾
Usa Nominal Group Technique quando vuoi: Anonymous feedback; Sensitive topics; Idea generation; Breaking hierarchy.
Quanto dura Nominal Group Technique?â–¾
Nominal Group Technique dura tipicamente da 15 a 30 minuti.
Per quanti partecipanti è adatto Nominal Group Technique?▾
Nominal Group Technique funziona meglio per gruppi di 4–30 partecipanti.
Di quali materiali ho bisogno per Nominal Group Technique?â–¾
Per condurre Nominal Group Technique avrai bisogno di: Index cards or small pieces of paper, Pens.
Quanto è difficile facilitare Nominal Group Technique?▾
FacilitationMethods.faqA5Easy
Pianifica il tuo prossimo workshop con l'IA
Workshop Weaver ti aiuta a combinare metodi come Nominal Group Technique in un'agenda completa e temporizzata in pochi minuti.
Prova gratisMethod 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.