Visual Thinking 【Recent】
: Using basic shapes (circles, squares, arrows) to explain a process.
Leo sat at the back of the conference room, his notebook open to a blank page. Around him, the marketing team for "Zenith Tech" was drowning in a sea of words. "Synergy," "leveraging pivots," and "paradigm shifts" flew through the air like invisible birds. Leo tried to listen, but the words felt like static. He didn't think in sentences; he thought in shapes. VISUAL THINKING
"Leo, are you with us?" Sarah asked, her brow furrowed. "We’re trying to figure out how to bridge the gap between our current user base and the new feature set." : Using basic shapes (circles, squares, arrows) to
: Simple sketches can clarify complex systems by stripping away unnecessary jargon. "Leo, are you with us
You don't need a canvas to think visually. Use these "vehicles for thought": : For connecting sprawling, related ideas. Storyboards : For planning a narrative or project sequence.
: All thinking is perceptual in nature, meaning we "see" ideas as much as we "think" them.