Good workshops do not end when the workshop is over. A good Big Picture workshop can fill your head with so many thoughts that you can't discuss them all. But time flies, and the format requires that we wrap up and let everybody go.
But the room might still have potential for deep and useful conversations. Packing, leaving, and disappearing are dumb ways to destroy that potential.
Make yourself available for extra conversations after the official end of the workshop. Also, make yourself visible . You can keep the artefact visible too - as discussed in Leave stuff around - but don't lock yourself in a quiet room. You want to remove impediments to talking to you. If you look ultra-busy, you might scare someone into thinking you have something more important to do than talk to them.
Keep in mind that making yourself available also means not over-scheduling yourself. The empty slot in the calendar the morning after the workshop is not a waste; it's an investment.
What if the workshop is online?
Online workshops are clearly weaker in this regard. There is no shared dinner, and an online meeting right after another isn't a great idea.
Still, you can use the existing channels to signal your availability and aliveness. For example, posting additional content and clarifications on a shared digital board or in a shared conversation channel.
Make sure you check the shared channels in the days after the workshop.
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