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// framework

Liberating Structures

Henri Lipmanowicz & Keith McCandless, 2013

A collection of 33 facilitation microstructures designed to replace passive conventional meetings with formats that include and engage everyone — making collective intelligence actually accessible.

// description

Liberating Structures is a collection of 33 facilitation microstructures — each a simple, repeatable pattern with specific configuration (timing, grouping, sequence) — designed to include and engage everyone in a group. They avoid the passivity of conventional meeting structures (presentations, managed discussions, status reports, brainstorming) which tend to privilege loud voices and reinforce existing power dynamics. Each structure takes minutes to explain and produces qualitatively different participation patterns than the five conventional meeting formats. They can be used individually or strung together in "strings" for longer sessions.

// history

Henri Lipmanowicz and Keith McCandless developed Liberating Structures over two decades of facilitation practice in healthcare, education, and organisational development, publishing the collection in 2013 at liberatingstructures.com and in "The Surprising Power of Liberating Structures." The concept emerged from frustration with the five conventional structures dominating most meetings — which they observed reliably producing the same dysfunction: dominant voices, passive listeners, missed expertise, and decisions made before the conversation begins. The collection spread virally through healthcare and education communities where hierarchical dynamics are most damaging, and has since reached management consulting, military, government, and community organising contexts.

// example

1-2-4-All — the most widely used Liberating Structure: pose a question to the group. 1 minute of solo silent reflection (everyone, no exceptions). 2 minutes in pairs — share and develop ideas. 4 minutes in groups of four — combine and select the strongest ideas. Share key insights with the whole group. This simple structure surfaces input from every person in any size group in under 10 minutes, and produces dramatically more diverse output than asking "any thoughts?" in a meeting. The solo reflection step alone is the key — it prevents the first loud voice from anchoring everyone else's thinking.

// katharyne's take

Once you know a handful of Liberating Structures, you can never go back to running a normal meeting or community event. 1-2-4-All alone will upgrade almost any group session you facilitate. I also love TRIZ (use inversion thinking in a group: what would we do if we wanted to make this fail?) and Troika Consulting (triads where one person is the client and gets uninterrupted coaching from the other two). These aren't tricks — they're structural changes that make collective intelligence actually accessible.

// creative uses
// quick actions
// prompt ideas
Design a facilitation sequence using Liberating Structures for my [online workshop / community event / course cohort call] on [topic]. The group size is [number of participants], the session length is [duration], and the goal is [desired outcome — e.g. "surface what students are stuck on" or "generate ideas for the next product together"]. Recommend two or three structures in sequence, explain the timing and grouping for each, and write the exact prompt question I should use to open each structure.
Help me replace a standard "any questions?" ending in my [webinar / live call / workshop] with a Liberating Structure that actually surfaces what people are thinking. Describe how to run 1-2-4-All for a group of [size] in a virtual setting, give me the exact instructions to read aloud, and tell me how to harvest and use what comes up in real time.
I want to run a TRIZ inversion session with my [mastermind / accountability group / team] to surface hidden obstacles in our businesses. Write a facilitation guide: the exact framing question to use, step-by-step instructions for running it in [X minutes], and a debrief structure that helps participants turn the inverted answers into real action items.
See also: World Café, Red Team / Blue Team
← World Café Red Team / Blue Team →