The Storyboarding Workshop

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Storyboards are typically developed either at the end of the Ideation phase or at the start of the Prototype phase. By visually detailing the ideas, storyboards allow for a clearer understanding and assessment of each proposed solution's potential and practicality.

When to Use

Storyboards are typically developed either at the end of the Ideation phase or at the start of the Prototype phase. By visually detailing the ideas, storyboards allow for a clearer understanding and assessment of each proposed solution's potential and practicality.

How to Use

  • Sketch Three Stages: Use a black felt-tip pen and A4 paper to draw your solution. Choose the three most important steps in the journey and illustrate each on a separate sticky note or section.

  • Clarify: Add notes around your sketch to explain key points, aiming for your storyboard to be self-explanatory.

  • Title: Give your sketch a catchy title at the top of the page.

  • Display: Place or upload your sketch in the team's workspace.

  • Heatmap: Each team member adds dot stickers to parts of sketches they like.

  • Straw Poll: Everyone votes for their favourite solution sketch.

  • Round Robin: Each person gets 90 seconds to talk about their vote.

Use the vote and discussion to select one sketch for further detailed storyboarding or prototyping.

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Niamh O'Hora image
Niamh O'Hora
Educational Design & Lecturer@TU Dublin Enterprise Academy
Hello 👋 I'm an educator and designer, passionate about driving innovation and fostering positive change through design. I teach on the Creative Digital Media programme at TU Dublin, Blanchardstown, with expertise in Design Thinking, User Experience and Interaction Design. As Educational Developer with the TU Dublin Enterprise Academy, I help collaboration between learners and enterprise partners through live challenges and collaborative projects.
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