Last week a whiteboard saved a conference. Or, at least, a whiteboard saved me from myself and my dramatically underdeveloped delegation skills. By forcing myself to fill every inch of space, to act like a misbehaved child facing a freshly-painted wall, I turned dozens of draft-only emails into realistic goals.


There are a lot of posts about whiteboards at Lifehacker. Tips on markers, on DIY whiteboards, on turning your desk into a whiteboard; the list goes on and on. But I think it might have been some time since we reconsidered why they work so well. So I'm going relay a short story about how a whiteboard turned approximately 110 nervous thoughts into a conference that actually happened.

In organizing TEDxBuffalo, I held bi-monthly meetings in classroom spaces at a local college. There was a projector, there were plenty of seats, and it felt like a democratic kind of meeting of the minds. But when you're talking and meeting, you're not necessarily getting a lot of things done. As it got closer to the launch date (Oct. 9), I realized I had a problem (and, by extension, we all had a problem). In many crucial ways, I had set myself up as the only person who really knew every task that every department had to get done for this thing to happen the right way. And it felt like no amount of caffeine, no amount of Magic Email Comprehension, could get it all explained to a group of about a dozen volunteers. Volunteers that had patiently put up with my "creative" leadership style, but now just needed some answers.


So we moved the meetings to a space that had desks, Wi-Fi, and, most importantly, a big ol' whiteboard. And that's how we got more things done, in two workshop sessions, than we had probably accomplished in the last six or eight Standard Meetings.

G/O Media may get a commission LG 75-Inch 8K TV Buy for $2150 from BuyDig Use the promo code ASL250

Writing things down on paper is always helpful. What makes a whiteboard more helpful than paper are a few things. Some are obvious. Some are less obvious, but something we all forget when we start working with others.

Whiteboards are big enough for everybody to see

Whiteboards make you want to fill the space, and therefore expand and branch your thoughts

Whiteboards inspire you to keep writing, to keep pushing on what's in your head, because it feels awesome to swing your arms that widely.

Whiteboards feel less like you're committing to an idea than throwing it out for consideration.

Whiteboards are nearly impossible to lose inside your backpack.

In particular, for a guy who's not very good at explaining what needs to get done, and why it needs to get done in a certain fashion, whiteboards give others the chance to give you funny looks when you forget to include entire sections of a project. They save you precious mental willpower by cutting the cost of making decisions—you write something, add a question mark, and people in the room can decide on it right then, instead of across days in an email thread. And if you can't draw out what it is you're worried about on a whiteboard, you probably don't understand why it's causing you problems, so you know you have to ask somebody. Hopefully, that somebody is in the room.


We talk a lot about technology and fancy collaboration software here at Lifehacker, but it's worth remembering that sometimes, a simple, cheap "analog" option is just the best way to go. I just wanted to thank whiteboards for being available, being relatively cheap, and for helping to make a goofy not-for-profit conference much less painful. You should consider whiteboards, too, the next time it feels like you're spinning your wheels very fast, but still coming up short of the goal line.