You’ve been in this meeting before:
The problem? There’s no shared workspace.
A shared workspace—whether it’s a Google Doc, a Miro board, or even a whiteboard in a room—is the difference between chaos and clarity. It’s the tool that ensures meetings are collaborative, equitable, and productive.
A shared workspace is exactly what it sounds like: a visible place where everyone in the meeting can see and contribute to the conversation in real time.
It acts as your group’s information radiator—ideas stay visible, alive, and actionable.
Why “Information Radiator”? Unlike “information refrigerators,” where ideas sit and grow stale, a shared workspace radiates the team’s thinking—it’s alive and dynamic, evolving as the conversation progresses.
They Level the Playing Field
Not everyone is comfortable speaking up—especially in a room dominated by louder voices. Shared workspaces allow quieter team members to contribute at their own pace.
They Keep Everyone on the Same Page
Literally. Shared workspaces act as the single source of truth during and after the meeting.
They Spread the Cognitive Load
Notetaking is often dumped on one person. A shared workspace allows the team to co-create notes, action items, and decisions together. Everyone owns the work.
They Focus the Group
A blank page can be overwhelming, so a pre-seeded workspace keeps discussions structured and intentional.
Creating a shared workspace isn’t complicated, but doing it well requires intentionality. Here’s how to make it effective:
Pick a tool that fits the purpose of your meeting and the type of work you’re doing:
Tip: Start by asking, “What does the team need to see or do during this meeting?” If the goal is to visualize dependencies and timelines, a visual or Kanban-style tool will serve you better than a static document.
Why It Matters: The right tool supports your goals, keeps the conversation flowing, and avoids unnecessary friction. A poor fit—like forcing a roadmap into a word processor—will slow your team down and undermine the workspace's value.
A blank workspace is intimidating. Seed the space ahead of time with structure so the team isn’t starting from scratch.
How to Seed the Space:
Example: For a meeting to improve onboarding, seed a Miro board with:
Bonus Tip: Share the workspace link before the meeting so people can think through ideas in advance. This helps quieter team members show up ready to contribute.
Make the workspace part of the meeting flow.
Silent Brainstorming:
Start with 3-5 minutes of silent contribution where everyone adds thoughts to the workspace.
Live Capturing:
Assign a note-taker (or rotate this role) to capture ideas, questions, and decisions in real time.
Grouping and Refining:
Once contributions are in the workspace, guide the team to organize, connect, and refine ideas together.
Why This Matters:
This step is where co-construction of knowledge happens. By organizing and refining ideas as a group, the team builds a shared mental model—a common understanding of the problem, the ideas on the table, and the direction to move forward.
A shared mental model reduces ambiguity and ensures everyone leaves the meeting with the same understanding of what’s important, why it matters, and what happens next.
Practical Example:
For a meeting about improving user onboarding:
By the end of the meeting, the team has co-constructed a clearer understanding of the onboarding problem and aligned on next steps.
The last 5 minutes of the meeting are for review:
For example:
Action Item | Owner | Deadline |
---|---|---|
Draft the revised onboarding flow | Jordan | June 5 |
Schedule follow-up user testing | Alex | June 8 |
Why It Matters: A good workspace acts as the source of truth—no one has to wonder, “What did we decide?” or “Who’s doing what?”
Let’s say you’re leading a 30-minute brainstorming session to improve user onboarding. Here’s what your shared workspace might look like:
Before the Meeting:
During the Meeting:
After the Meeting:
The Miro board shows all contributions, grouped insights, and action items—ready to revisit next time.
Building in a shared workspace, you don’t lose the rest of the input. If priorities shift or you find additional room on the roadmap, you already have a well-organized set of ideas ready to revisit.
A shared workspace is your facilitation superpower. It keeps meetings focused, collaborative, and equitable—but this is just the beginning. As you build your facilitation skills, you’ll find new ways to use shared spaces for brainstorming, prioritization, and decision-making.
In Part 4, we’ll tackle time-boxing: the secret to keeping meetings on track and ensuring every minute counts.
Because meetings that matter need more than ideas—they need structure.
Want to transform your meetings into clear, productive conversations?
Let’s build the tools and systems your team needs to succeed.