Participants:
2-10
11-25
25+
Prep Time:
10 min
Time to run:
1-3 hours

Brainstorm & Idea Prioritization template

Brainstorm, group, and prioritize concepts as a team

Courtesy of our friends at

Use this template in your own brainstorming sessions so your team can unleash their imagination and start shaping concepts even if you're not sitting in the same room.

Brainstorming provides a free and open environment that encourages everyone within a team to participate in the creative thinking process that leads to problem solving. Prioritizing volume over value, out-of-the-box ideas are welcome and built upon, and all participants are encouraged to collaborate, helping each other develop a rich amount of creative solutions.

The Brainstorm & Idea Prioritization template helps you:

  • Prepare for your brainstorming session
  • Define your problem statement
  • Collect ideas and gather feedback from everyone
  • Group ideas by theme
  • Prioritize your solutions and get aligned on next steps

How to use the Brainstorm & Idea Prioritization template

To use the Mural Brainstorming & Idea Prioritization template with your team, follow the steps outlined below.

1. Define goal and invite stakeholders

The first step in the process is to clearly define the goal(s) of your brainstorming session. What problem(s) are you trying to solve? At this stage, you should also carefully select a list of stakeholders who will participate in your brainstorming session.

2. Define your problem statement

The next phase is to create a problem statement that clearly identifies the issue. Frame your problem statement as a ‘How might we?’ question (e.g., ‘How might we shorten wait times for customer service calls?’).

3. Brainstorm!

Have each stakeholder brainstorm as many ideas for possible solutions as they can in a given time.

Pro-tip: Use Mural’s private mode feature to avoid groupthink while brainstorming, allowing everyone to work independently even while synchronous.

4. Group ideas together by theme

Once you’ve generated as many ideas as possible with your team, it’s time to look carefully at the results. What are the natural themes that emerge from your ideation? How should they be grouped together to inform potential solutions?

5. Prioritize solutions

Now that you’ve refined your ideation into themes, you can effectively prioritize the results using the chart tracking importance vs. feasibility.

Tips for running a brainstorming & idea prioritization session

To run a successful brainstorming session and build an idea board, you should:

  • Make sure you invite stakeholders representing all aspects of the issue at hand so that you can avoid blind spots when brainstorming solutions
  • Use Mural’s timer feature to keep things on track while brainstorming, and use private mode to avoid groupthink; then, you can leverage a voting session to determine the best next steps!
  • Keep a record of your brainstorming so that you can return to your ideas and revisit questions over time — this may help generate even more solutions in the future

Brainstorming examples and techniques

There are many established (and highly effective!) brainstorming techniques that you can use to help boost your team's engagement and creativity. We've built out a definitive guide to brainstorming, as well as tips for how to facilitate brainstorming sessions, so that you can get the most out of your time together — regardless of where you are.

But before you begin, it's important to establish the rules of engagement — check out our piece on 7 ground rules for brainstorming to see why.

Some common brainstorming techniques include:

  • Rapid ideation: This approach is just like it sounds — generate as many ideas as you can (quantity over quality, then filter later)
  • Brain-netting: This is focused on connecting hybrid and remote teams, capturing everyone's feedback with digital tools, and then connecting related ideas
  • Round robin: Here, participants write their ideas down during a set time period, before setting them aside to return to later, or passing them along to the next participant to build or comment on
  • Rolestorming: Participants role-play to place themselves in the mindset of a customer or persona (or even a famous person) to help build empathy and examine things from different perspectives
  • Mind mapping: This is a way to brain-dump and build out as many related ideas as possible, starting from a central theme (note: Mural now offers AI-assisted mind mapping tools)

If you're really stuck, we've also built out a list of 25 brainstorming questions to kickstart your creative thinking.

How to create a Brainstorm & Idea Prioritization template

Brainstorm & Idea Prioritization template

Get started with this template right now.

Courtesy of our friends at

Use this template in your own brainstorming sessions so your team can unleash their imagination and start shaping concepts even if you're not sitting in the same room.

Brainstorming provides a free and open environment that encourages everyone within a team to participate in the creative thinking process that leads to problem solving. Prioritizing volume over value, out-of-the-box ideas are welcome and built upon, and all participants are encouraged to collaborate, helping each other develop a rich amount of creative solutions.

The Brainstorm & Idea Prioritization template helps you:

  • Prepare for your brainstorming session
  • Define your problem statement
  • Collect ideas and gather feedback from everyone
  • Group ideas by theme
  • Prioritize your solutions and get aligned on next steps

How to use the Brainstorm & Idea Prioritization template

To use the Mural Brainstorming & Idea Prioritization template with your team, follow the steps outlined below.

1. Define goal and invite stakeholders

The first step in the process is to clearly define the goal(s) of your brainstorming session. What problem(s) are you trying to solve? At this stage, you should also carefully select a list of stakeholders who will participate in your brainstorming session.

2. Define your problem statement

The next phase is to create a problem statement that clearly identifies the issue. Frame your problem statement as a ‘How might we?’ question (e.g., ‘How might we shorten wait times for customer service calls?’).

3. Brainstorm!

Have each stakeholder brainstorm as many ideas for possible solutions as they can in a given time.

Pro-tip: Use Mural’s private mode feature to avoid groupthink while brainstorming, allowing everyone to work independently even while synchronous.

4. Group ideas together by theme

Once you’ve generated as many ideas as possible with your team, it’s time to look carefully at the results. What are the natural themes that emerge from your ideation? How should they be grouped together to inform potential solutions?

5. Prioritize solutions

Now that you’ve refined your ideation into themes, you can effectively prioritize the results using the chart tracking importance vs. feasibility.

Tips for running a brainstorming & idea prioritization session

To run a successful brainstorming session and build an idea board, you should:

  • Make sure you invite stakeholders representing all aspects of the issue at hand so that you can avoid blind spots when brainstorming solutions
  • Use Mural’s timer feature to keep things on track while brainstorming, and use private mode to avoid groupthink; then, you can leverage a voting session to determine the best next steps!
  • Keep a record of your brainstorming so that you can return to your ideas and revisit questions over time — this may help generate even more solutions in the future

Brainstorming examples and techniques

There are many established (and highly effective!) brainstorming techniques that you can use to help boost your team's engagement and creativity. We've built out a definitive guide to brainstorming, as well as tips for how to facilitate brainstorming sessions, so that you can get the most out of your time together — regardless of where you are.

But before you begin, it's important to establish the rules of engagement — check out our piece on 7 ground rules for brainstorming to see why.

Some common brainstorming techniques include:

  • Rapid ideation: This approach is just like it sounds — generate as many ideas as you can (quantity over quality, then filter later)
  • Brain-netting: This is focused on connecting hybrid and remote teams, capturing everyone's feedback with digital tools, and then connecting related ideas
  • Round robin: Here, participants write their ideas down during a set time period, before setting them aside to return to later, or passing them along to the next participant to build or comment on
  • Rolestorming: Participants role-play to place themselves in the mindset of a customer or persona (or even a famous person) to help build empathy and examine things from different perspectives
  • Mind mapping: This is a way to brain-dump and build out as many related ideas as possible, starting from a central theme (note: Mural now offers AI-assisted mind mapping tools)

If you're really stuck, we've also built out a list of 25 brainstorming questions to kickstart your creative thinking.

How to create a Brainstorm & Idea Prioritization template

Mural makes it easy to bring everyone together, elevate every voice, and brainstorm (much) better

With Mural, every voice is heard and valued, making your brainstorming sessions more impactful and productive — not to mention fun!
Sticky notes & text

Sticky notes & text

Add ideas, action items, and more as a sticky note or text box — then change the colors and cluster to identify patterns and new solutions.

Timer

Timer

Keep collaboration moving forward with a timer to structure and time-box activities.

Real-time collaboration

Real-time collaboration

Add more productivity and engagement to meetings and calls with features to guide collaboration.

Anonymous voting

Anonymous voting

Gain consensus and reach alignment quickly, either in real time or asynchronously.

Private mode

Private mode

Avoid groupthink and get authentic feedback by allowing collaborators to add content privately.

Drawing

Drawing

Visualize ideas, prototype, and quickly annotate for a better-than-a-whiteboard experience.

Brainstorm & Idea Prioritization template frequently asked questions

What is a brainstorming template?

How do you structure brainstorming?

What are the four levels of idea prioritization?

Can Mural build a brainstorm diagram?

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