Sketch@work: The most versatile flipchart
Modern managers can handle the marker and visualize their visions quickly and easily. True to David Sibbet's motto "I see, what you mean", this results in a fast, direct transfer of information. The FlipChart sketch@work is the perfect tool for this. It can be infinitely rotated, tilted and height-adjusted. And it can be used in portrait format, landscape format or as a meeting table.
Anyone who has ever written or drawn on a flipchart knows the problem. First you have to set it up - assuming it's not so heavy and bulky that you can't transport it anyway. Then you need to adjust the height of each of the three legs so that you can work on it easily.
The locks are usually located at the very bottom of the legs, and it is certainly amusing for the audience if you get down on your knees and lift the flipchart slightly with one hand in order to extend the telescopic legs with the other - especially if one leg is stuck or cannot be unlocked at all. It's even funnier for the audience if the flipchart has wheels. Then your slapstick interlude will definitely attract the attention of those present and you can save yourself the trouble of "warm-up exercises" later on.
Full flipcharts do not ensure full attention
Once you've finally finished, you can get started: You get the first line onto the paper with gusto, and the participants join in so well that you have soon filled the whole sheet from top to bottom. Although the "bottom" is a bit tedious for everyone: You have to bend your knees so that your writing is still legible. However, this does not mean that everyone can read it - unless you are sitting at the very front. So the hilarious height adjustment starts all over again. If you're lucky, someone in the audience will take pity on you and give you a hand. And if you're even luckier, for once the markers don't fall to the floor during this procedure ...
By the end of the seminar, you're done. And you are seriously wondering whether you should develop your own flipchart: It should be height-adjustable like a blackboard. Easy to move. And you should be able to set it up and hang it up. And you should be able to use it in portrait or landscape format. And because they are on such a roll right now, they keep dreaming: instead of stubborn sheets of paper, their dream flipchart should have an endless roll like a filmstrip. And as the pinnacle of your utopia, you imagine that you can also use your flipchart as a conference table and write directly on it.
Yes, you dream such crazy things after such a crazy seminar. Of course, you soon realize that this would be completely new territory for many seminar rooms.
Order sketch@work in the Neuland Shop and write your own sequel story.