A forum moderator recently asked how to run a session on taking their group from good to great. The instinct is to brainstorm ideas. In my experience, that’s not what works best.
Here’s a simpler, more effective approach:
1. Start with real experiences (not ideas)
Ask each member:
- When has forum felt most valuable?
- When has it fallen short?
2. Look for patterns
What themes emerge?
(Depth? Energy? Quality of presentations? Protocol drift?)
3. Focus on just 1–2 priorities
Avoid the trap of 10 good ideas and no follow-through.
Ask: What would make the biggest difference?
4. Speak your truth
Improvement requires honesty.
A useful prompt:
- What are we not saying that would help us improve?
5. Turn insights into clear agreements
Make changes specific and observable:
- “Each scheduled presenter has a coaching call”
- “Moderator enforces timing”
- “We try to bring one uncomfortable, even taboo, issue at least once per quarter”
6. Keep the tone constructive
This isn’t about what’s wrong—it’s about making something good even better.
Bottom line:
Great forums don’t improve by generating more ideas. They improve by noticing what actually happens, telling the truth about it, and making a few meaningful changes—consistently.












