
group
workshops
skillset workshops for teams
Hands-on workshops that help teams communicate complex ideas with clarity by understanding how attention works and how design shapes outcomes.
These sessions are practical, grounded in real work, and designed to strengthen how teams think, not just how their slides look.
Virtual or in-person.
Single or multi-session options available.
what it looks like
ALIGN ON THE MOMENT
01
We start by understanding your team, goals, and the moments that matter most in their work.
This ensures the workshop is grounded in real needs and tailored to the challenges your team is actually facing.
02
DESIGN FOR ATTENTION
Teams learn how attention works. What draws it. What loses it. How design choices guide it.
We explore structure, hierarchy, contrast, and pacing so participants understand how messages are received and remembered.
This creates a shared foundation for better design decisions.
SHAPE THE STORY
03
Participants learn how to clarify the core message, decide what truly matters, and structure ideas so they land with intention.
This helps teams move away from guesswork, default templates, and overloaded slides - toward clearer storytelling.
APPLY & EXTEND
04
We work hands-on in PowerPoint, applying concepts to real slides and live examples.
Participants practice simplifying content, shaping flow, and making intentional design choices with guidance and feedback.
The goal is immediate improvement and repeatable skills teams can apply long after the session ends.
What participants leave with...
Every workshop includes two practical resources designed to extend the learning beyond the session.
Zhuzhy Workshop Cheat Sheet
A one-page reference covering the core principles we discuss. Attention, structure, slide flow, and hierarchy.
Designed as a quick reminder teams can return to when building decks.
The Zhuzhy Dice
A tactile prompt for better design decisions. Each side highlights a different design lever such as contrast, color, hierarchy, spacing, and focus - encouraging teams to pause and rethink how a slide could work harder.
Small tools. Big impact.