To be able to have a successful session, a facilitator should be proficient in the BRIDGeS framework. Here are the details of the main components that the framework is built upon. These are Subjects (stakeholders involved in the context), Subject descriptors (Benefits, Issues, Risks, Domain knowledge, and Goals of subjects ‒ BRIDGe), and Solutions that can be decomposed into epics and nested tasks.
A BRIDGeS session can take from 4 hours (if the discussed context is small, i.g., company process optimization) to 16 hours (if the goal is to ideate a new product, for example). The session usually starts with the Demo and Intro from the SMEs and facilitator. Later the whole BRIDGeS process is divided into four major steps: problem description, prioritization, solution variations, and solution breakdown.
No matter if it’s an offline or an online session, all the team members take the role of a facilitator helper (a person who deals with cards and boards) so that participants are actively involved and follow the discussion. The facilitator’s job is to pay attention to participants being focused on the process, and making sure no one is reading emails, or is shifting to non-related discussions. To keep the pace of the session and ensure its productivity, all phones should be set to silent mode.