Wizard seeks apprentices
You’ve done your reading, you’ve done your homework, you’ve built tons of bowties in the past and you know all the ins and outs of every element and its supporting guidelines. As a bowtie expert it can be highly fulfilling to pass on this knowledge in a guiding role as a bowtie workshop facilitator. But how to do this? We listed some best practices from our own and partner network experience to get you started in becoming an effective workshop facilitator, leading the next generation of bowtie ‘talkers’ into bowtie ‘thinkers’.
Plan, prepare, perform
As the key to success lies in a solid and thoughtfully structured preparation, you need to take time to start preparing for the workshop itself. According to us, this consists of three phases: 1) scoping of the assignment, 2) account for any practicalities, and 3) set up the ground rules with the team.
1 – Scoping
Define the scope of the workshops and/or set a goal for the day:
- Can you use any HAZOP/HAZID input as a starting point?
- Do they already have a ‘top 5 hazards/top events’ identified?
- Are you building one or more bowties?
- Is it only the basic diagram you’ll focus on?
- Are you adding any reference data or other characteristics already?
Decide on a company template beforehand:
- Are you working with a top down or bottom up organization?
- What kind of existing data can and will be used?
- What will be the content of all bowties in the end?
Make sure to have the correct people at the table:
- Does the entire team have (identical?) basic bowtie knowledge?
- Is every stakeholder present?
- Does the group have a balanced mixture of experts?