This is a focused working session for teams who need structure around a real project. Using the EAAT framework, the day turns broad intent into a practical execution plan with defined outcomes, clear ownership, actionable next steps and a delivery tracking model.
Designed for teams who need to move a real project forward quickly — not theory-based or remote training.
1-Day closed course for up to 3 attendees.
Delivered in-person to ensure hands-on working sessions, real interaction and practical delivery outcomes.
The workshop is built around one practical project. The team works through the project live rather than sitting through theory-heavy training.
It helps teams define the outcome, structure the work properly, assign ownership and put a tracking model in place before momentum is lost.
By the end of the day, the team has a defined outcome, a broken-down plan, clear responsibilities, immediate next actions and closure criteria.
The workshop is designed so attendees leave with both understanding and output. They do not just learn the framework — they apply it directly to a real piece of work.
Attendees learn how to turn broad goals into specific project outcomes with a clear definition of delivery and closure.
They learn how to structure work into real tasks, identify dependencies and surface hidden work early.
They learn how to remove vague shared responsibility and make accountability clear across teams.
They learn how progress will be tracked, how delivery will be measured and how the team will know the project is complete.
The day follows one project through the full EAAT sequence so the team sees how the method works in practice and leaves with a real outcome.
Short reset before moving into structured planning.
Break before action, ownership and delivery control.
Short pause before ownership and tracking.
A company can bring a live project of its own, or use one of these examples to shape the workshop design and discussion focus.
This short pre-evaluation helps shape the workshop so the day is matched to the team’s current level, project type and desired outcome.
It works best when a team has a real project that matters, but needs stronger structure, clearer accountability and visible delivery control before work moves further.