Facilitation skills are the foundation of every successful design practice, yet training on this core competency has been largely unavailable—until now. Designing the Techniques for Successful Facilitation is a complete guide to developing the facilitation skills you need to communicate effectively and design fully engaging experiences. Learn to take control as Russ Unger, Brad Nunnally, and Dan Willis show you how to use your skills as a facilitator to deftly extract information from different types of people in various scenarios and address any problems and needs that arise along the way.
Russ Unger is the director of experience planning for Draftfcb, the largest advertising/marketing agency in the Midwest. He has been involved in the information architecture of large-scale public-facing sites for such companies as Oprah.com and United Airlines. He has taught courses in Web and interactive design and contributes to Boxes and Arrows. He also serves on the board of the Information Architecture Institute.
A kind of general book about facilitation in different situations: workshops, user research, presentations. The tips are very basic, so it's good for introduction. What is great: tons of nice stories from practitioners.
I enjoyed the different insights from experts. The book however tries to cover too much ground and I was looking for more depth into group facilitation, not user research.
Started strong, but quickly devolved into a series of insights that were pretty basic. Not focused - tries to cover too much territory in too little space. Possibly useful for college students, but not very useful for professionals with more than a year or so of experience.
Easy to read and follow, but it didn't quite offer much insight. I read it for my work UX bookclub and found it to be a good conversation starter for the group. Due to the fact that even if you didn't read it, it was easy to participate in the general themes of the book.
Not as relevant in an institutional research atmosphere. This book touches the surface in a reader-friendly fashion. However, deeper discussion would have been more appealing.