This exercise was co-created as part of a collaboration day between myself and Geoff Watts, and from frequent visits to watch the Comedy Store Players perform in London.
Timings:
5-10 mins
Materials:
4 willing volunteers
Instructions:
One person plays “the interviewer”
The other three people play the “interviewee”. The only rule they must follow is that they must answer any questions one word at a time, in sequence.
Any leftover audience members can help by giving the interviewer a subject. At the comedy store, the usual request is for an animal and an olympic sport. The interviewee is then interviewed as an expert on that very subject.
Learning Points:
This classic improv game illustrates the frustration and fun the interviewee/s get from answering questions one word at a time. It forces them to collaborate, knowing that they have to build on what the previous person has said, and still make the response make sense. Very funny to watch.
A secondary learning that I noticed from running this game, is the role of the interviewer is perhaps just as tough, because he or she has to listen even harder to piece the response together. Then he or she must answer another question to keep the interview flowing. It’s a great coaching scenario to show the importance of active listening and asking open questions to allow more than one word responses.
Paul is the founder of Agilify, has been an active Certified Scrum Trainer (CST) since 2006, and also became only the fourth UK-based Certified Scrum Coach (CSC) in 2011.
From developer to ScrumMaster, and from ScrumMaster to Agile Coach he has been working with agile development teams since 2000.
Paul was part of the coaching team which took on one of the largest agile transformations to date in a major UK telecoms company in 2003 and since then has been training and coaching other organizations, teams and individuals across the UK and Europe.
Another learning that emerged, was that, as an interviewee, you try and prepare for an answer before you have heard the previous answers. This relates to conversations that we have. Often we have an answer before we have fully heard what the other person has said.