Six Thinking Hats Example Scenarios Ppt May 2026
Slide focus: Critical judgment, why something may fail.
In this slide, the presenter presents the scenario through a purely factual lens. For the four-day workweek example, white hat data includes: “Current productivity metrics show 400 units per week over five days,” “Pilot studies in three competitor firms showed a 15% drop in output but a 30% drop in sick days,” and “Labor laws require 32 hours to be counted as full-time.” The PPT should use clean charts, bullet points, and neutral colors (black/white/gray) to emphasize objectivity. The goal is to show learners how to remove emotion and speculation. six thinking hats example scenarios ppt
Following the black hat, the yellow hat scenario explores the upside. The slide could show: “Employees will gain 52 extra days off per year, increasing retention,” “We can market our brand as a well-being leader,” and “Energy and focus on working days will intensify.” Visuals might include sunbursts or upward arrows. This scenario teaches learners to actively search for value, even in risky proposals, balancing the black hat’s caution. Slide focus: Critical judgment, why something may fail
Here, the same scenario shifts to pure emotion. The slide might feature speech bubbles or thought clouds with statements like: “I feel anxious about losing Friday oversight,” “My gut says team morale will skyrocket,” or “I just don’t trust that employees will work harder in four days.” Crucially, the PPT must emphasize that no reasons, data, or apologies accompany these feelings. This scenario teaches that emotions are valid inputs, not flaws to suppress. The goal is to show learners how to
The power of a Six Thinking Hats PowerPoint lies not in colorful graphics alone, but in that show how each hat changes the lens through which a single problem is viewed. By walking an audience through the same example—such as adopting a four-day workweek—across the white, red, black, yellow, green, and blue hats, the PPT transforms de Bono’s method from a theoretical model into a repeatable, practical skill. For trainers, managers, and educators, scenario-driven slides are the difference between a forgettable lecture and a lasting cognitive tool.