Graphic Recording

From Sustainability Methods

What, Why & When

Ever lost the golden thread in listening to a lengthy talk or dry discussion?
Visualizations help!
Graphic recording is the process of LIVE translating complex ideas from a spoken event into drawn words and pictures. It is used in meetings, discussions, talks and conferences to help participants engage, comprehend and remember the contents better by making them graphically visible.

Goal(s)

  • ENGAGE - get people to think creatively about what they hear
  • COMPREHEND - illustrate complexity and interconnections for better comprehension
  • REMEMBER - people remember visuals more easily than words

Getting started

what you need:

graphic library

Your graphic library is your mental (and paper) collection of visuals and drawing ideas that you tap on when you do a live recording. While some visuals are easily imagined, more complex and abstract ideas need some reimagination. Get to know the key words for your recording session and find visuals beforehand. That way, you feel more confident in drawing when contents get difficult.

recording station

The graphic facilitator is usually placed somewhere to the side where she is visible to the audience but not distracting. Graphics can be drawn on boards, paper, flipchart etc. There are very good (and very expensive) special markers for graphic facilitation. Test which ones flow easily and suit your drawing style and technique.

courage to draw (because everyone CAN do it!)

The most important thing you need is courage to draw in front of others. The good thing is, that you don't need to be an artist, because graphic facilitation focuses on structuring content rather than artistic aesthetics. However, practice boosts confidence!

how to start:

practice essentials

(insert pictures here)

use sketchnotes

Try taking notes from your classes, seminars, lectures, or use TED talks to practice your visualization skills. Sketchnotes are essentially the private form of a graphic recording in your own notebook. It's the ideal (because purposeful) way to experiment and build your graphic library.

Links & Further reading

Learning Graphic Facilitation part I: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S5DJC6LaOCI
Learning Graphic Facilitation part II: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H0QZbwqp4lg
Mike Rohde (2012): The Sketchnote Handbook
Anna Lena Schiller (2017): Graphic Recording: Live Illustrations for Meetings, Conferences and Workshops
Martin Haussmann (2014): UZMO: Denken mit dem Stift
Bikablo (visual libraries)