// description
Round robin brainstorming structures idea generation by requiring each participant to contribute one idea in turn, going around the group in a fixed order. No one may pass, and no one may comment on another's idea until the generation round is complete. The format guarantees equal airtime and prevents the common dynamic where two or three dominant voices crowd out the rest of the group.
// history
The technique is a standard facilitation method with roots in group process research from the mid-20th century. It is often used in combination with other methods: round robin to generate a baseline of ideas, followed by free-form discussion or dot voting to evaluate them.
// example
A small KDP mastermind group holds a weekly round robin to generate niche ideas for each member. With five members and three rounds, they produce 15 niches in 10 minutes. A newer member who rarely speaks up in open discussion contributes "recovery activity books for children whose parents are in rehab" — a hyper-specific niche with genuine buyer need and almost no competition. The idea lands a product that becomes the group member's bestseller. The round robin format ensured the idea was heard rather than buried beneath louder suggestions.
// katharyne's take
If you're running a mastermind or a creator group, build round robin into your regular meeting structure for idea generation. The "no passing" rule is strict for a reason — it forces people to contribute something even when they don't feel ready, and those reluctant contributions are often the most original. You can run this in a group chat too: each person has to drop one idea before they can comment on anyone else's. The constraint produces better output than open discussion almost every time.
// creative uses
- Build a weekly "one idea each" ritual into your mastermind group: every call starts with each person contributing one product niche, content idea, or business strategy they've been thinking about — no passing, no discussion yet. 5 minutes per meeting, 52 meetings a year, and every member has contributed 52 ideas that the whole group benefits from.
- Run a round robin in a Discord or Slack channel: post the prompt, tag every member, and require each person to post one idea before they can react to or comment on anyone else's. The "comment only after contributing" rule is easy to enforce in text and produces significantly more diverse ideation than open discussion threads.
- Use round robin for Midjourney prompt generation in a creator community: one prompt variation per person per round, no evaluation until everyone has contributed three rounds. You'll end up with a diverse, community-sourced prompt set that reflects more aesthetic perspectives than any individual's list.
// quick actions
- Propose this to your mastermind for next meeting: spend the first 10 minutes on a round robin where each person contributes one niche idea they've been sitting on. No commentary until all ideas are on the table. Then spend 15 minutes discussing. You'll cover more ideas with more equity than an unstructured open discussion would allow.
- Set up a round robin in your community Facebook group or Discord this week: post a question ("What product do you wish existed in [your niche]?"), set the rule that each person must post their own answer before they can like or respond to anyone else's, and run it for 24 hours. The constraint alone doubles typical engagement quality.
- Run a solo round robin adaptation: write 10 ideas for your current creative challenge, one per minute, in strict sequence without revisiting earlier ideas. The sequential constraint mimics the round robin's ability to prevent premature fixation on any single idea — you have to keep moving forward.
// prompt ideas
Simulate a round robin brainstorming session for me. There are [number] participants, including me, all working in [describe shared context — e.g. KDP low-content publishing, Etsy digital downloads, niche creator businesses]. The topic is: [e.g. new product niche ideas, lead magnet concepts, email subject lines for [type of product]]. Give each participant one idea in strict rotation for three complete rounds, with no repeats and no commentary between rounds. Then present all ideas together for evaluation.
Help me design a round robin activity for my online community around [topic]. I want every member to contribute before anyone evaluates anything. Write: the prompt question that will generate useful ideas, the participation rule to include in the post, a way to enforce "contribute before commenting" in [Discord / Facebook group / Circle], and three example seed ideas I can post first to set the quality bar and make people feel safe contributing.
I want to run a solo round robin to generate ideas for [a new product / a content series / an email sequence]. Give me a strict sequential prompt: I'll spend 60 seconds on each idea, no going back, no self-editing. Set me up with the topic framing, a starting constraint to prevent obvious ideas, and 10 numbered slots I need to fill in one sitting. After I fill them in, help me identify the two or three ideas worth developing further.