// description
World Café is a structured conversation process for groups of any size, organised around small tables (4–5 people) where participants discuss a meaningful question in timed rounds, then rotate to new tables. Ideas are recorded on paper tablecloths as each group writes, draws, and builds on the contributions already there. Cross-pollination happens as people carry insights from previous conversations to each new table. Designed to break down hierarchy and surface collective intelligence, the format generates insight that neither presentations nor open discussion reliably produces.
// history
Juanita Brown and David Isaacs created the World Café format in 1995 after hosting an unplanned conversation in a living room — structured by the intimacy and informality of the café setting — that produced remarkable insight through its small-group dynamic. They formalised the method and published "The World Café: Shaping Our Futures Through Conversations That Matter" in 2005. The format has been used in settings ranging from corporate strategy sessions to United Nations conferences to community planning processes across dozens of countries. Its power lies in breaking down hierarchy: at a café table, everyone contributes equally regardless of position or confidence in large-group settings.
// example
Running a virtual World Café for a creator community: three rounds of 20 minutes each in Zoom breakout rooms, 4–5 people per room. Question 1: "What's your biggest obstacle to publishing consistently?" Question 2: "What strategies have worked best for you in the last year?" Question 3: "What would you most want to learn from this community?" After each round, one person stays as "table host" and shares the highlights from the previous conversation to the new group. A final harvest in the main room surfaces collective themes and patterns across all tables — producing a community roadmap generated by the members themselves.
// katharyne's take
I love the World Café format for community events because it breaks the "presenter talking at audience" dynamic that makes most webinars forgettable. When you give people a good question and a small group to discuss it with, the quality of conversation is extraordinary. The tablecloth metaphor — ideas building as people move and mix — works even in digital breakout rooms. For a live cohort event or a community summit, this is my go-to structure for the "wisdom in the room" moment.
// creative uses
- Use a virtual World Café at the start of a live cohort to surface member goals, obstacles, and expertise — this replaces a generic icebreaker with something that generates genuine community intelligence and gives you content for the rest of the programme.
- Run a scaled-down two-round World Café inside a community Discord or Slack as a text-based synchronous event: post a question in a timed channel, have small groups self-organise in threads, then move to a second question. The structured rotation creates more depth than an open discussion channel.
- For a paid workshop or mastermind day, use World Café as the main morning session — it generates more engagement in 90 minutes than most full-day curricula, produces shareable insights members can take home, and creates connection that drives retention and word-of-mouth.
// quick actions
- Draft three World Café questions for your next community event right now — the best questions are open-ended, personally relevant, and slightly provocative. Test each against the criterion: "would a member feel engaged or bored by this question after a long day?"
- If you run a Zoom call with more than 8 people this month, replace 20 minutes of presentation time with a single World Café round in breakout rooms — give participants one focused question and a 15-minute timer, then harvest in the main room. Note the difference in energy.
- Document the output from your next World Café session and turn it into a community resource — a shared doc, a newsletter segment, or a video summary. The community generated the content; you just curated it. That's sustainable content creation.
// prompt ideas
I'm running a [live community event / cohort kickoff / paid workshop] for [describe your audience — e.g. KDP creators, Etsy sellers, digital product makers]. Help me design a 3-round World Café session: write 3 high-quality discussion questions that are open-ended, personally relevant, and progressively deeper. Each question should build on the previous one, and the whole arc should move from obstacles to strategies to collective vision.
Design a virtual World Café I can run in a [Zoom / Discord / Circle] event for my [community / mastermind / workshop group]. My audience is [describe them] and the topic I want to explore is [e.g. how to build consistent income from digital products, what's working in KDP right now, what members want from the community next year]. Give me the full facilitation script: setup instructions, question timing, table rotation format, and how to run the harvest at the end.
I want to use the World Café format to do market research with my existing audience without it feeling like a survey. Help me design a community event — either synchronous or asynchronous — that answers these questions I have about my audience: [list 2–3 things you want to understand]. Format it so members get genuine value from participating, not just from being research subjects.