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Shaping your experience

How to structure your experience's agenda in the Content tab — adding, arranging, and refining sections and activities.

Written by Cody Iddings

The Content tab is where you build your experience, and shaping it comes first: structuring the agenda into sections and activities. This article covers shaping. To author the content inside a specific activity — its slides, questions, poll options, and so on — select the activity to open it in the content canvas, and see Activities and interactions overview for the details of each type.

The agenda is the ordered list of sections, each holding the activities your group works through. When you build a Makeshapes session, the agenda is what plays out, in order, from start to finish.

How the agenda is built and structured

Building an agenda is a lot like designing a facilitated experience: map out a clear flow, then fill it with the moments that bring it to life. Every agenda is made of two parts:

  • Sections are the chapters of your experience. They set the pacing and flow of the session.

  • Activities are the moments inside each section — a video, a discussion, a quiz, a poll, and so on.

Good group learning has a rhythm to it: present something, give people a chance to engage with it, then bring the group together to talk. Structuring the agenda into sections and activities lets you design for that rhythm, rather than a flat list of slides.

The editing surface

The Content tab has three areas:

  • the agenda on the left — the outline of your sections and activities;

  • the content canvas in the centre — where you edit whichever activity you've selected;

  • the screen options on the right — settings for the selected activity's screens.

The agenda: compact and Shape

The agenda has two views, and you switch between them with the expand toggle (its tooltip reads "Expand to shape experience" or "Compact to agenda"). The heading changes from "Agenda" to "Agenda · Shape", so you always know which view you're in.

  • The compact agenda is the narrow view — icons, titles, and an optional activity-ID badge. It's built for moving around quickly.

  • Shape is the expanded view. It reveals the rationale behind each section and activity, drag handles for reordering, and the activity three-dot menus. Expanding to Shape lets you see and edit the reasoning behind your experience, not just its contents.

Both views show the experience's estimated time — the total automatically computed from the activities in your agenda. Drag the agenda's right-hand edge to resize it; narrow it far enough and it snaps back to compact, or widen it to stay in Shape. In the compact view, a thin strip beside the activity list toggles the activity-ID badges (like 1.0) on and off. Your chosen width and view are remembered the next time you open the experience.

In Shape, a Shape experience card also sits at the top of the agenda — your experience brief, capturing its purpose, audience, and intended outcomes. See Defining your experience brief.

The content canvas

The content canvas in the centre is where you edit whichever activity you've selected. Select an activity and it opens here, ready to build out. For what each activity type does, see Activities and interactions overview.

The screen options

The panel on the right holds the settings for the selected activity's screens. Drag its left edge to resize it, and click the handle to collapse it. You can also show or hide it with the gear icon. Its width and open or closed state are remembered across reloads.

Working with sections

Click a section title to rename it inline, or use the section's three-dot menu for more options:

  • Rename section title

  • Add rationale or Edit rationale

  • Duplicate section

  • Delete section

In Shape, each section can carry a rationale — a free-text "why this section" note (the placeholder reads "Add section purpose and rationale"). Rationale is saved with your experience, so the reasoning travels with it.

Working with activities

Each activity row shows an optional ID badge (like 1.0), the activity's type icon, its type name, and its time.

Change an activity's type

In Shape, swap an activity for a different type by clicking its type icon to open a searchable type picker (your current type is ticked), or by using the three-dot menu and choosing Change activity. The activity keeps its place in the agenda — its slot, timer, and rationale stay put — but its content is replaced with a fresh template for the new type. Each activity type has its own template, so anything you'd already built in that activity is removed when you switch. It's best to settle on the type before you build out the content.

The activity menu

In Shape, each activity's three-dot menu offers:

  • Change activity

  • Add rationale or Edit rationale

  • Duplicate activity

  • Delete activity

Like sections, activities can carry a free-text rationale in Shape (placeholder "Add activity purpose and rationale"), saved with the experience.

Reorder activities

Drag handles appear in Shape. Use them to reorder activities within a section, or to move an activity from one section to another.

Adding activities to a section

An Add content button sits at the bottom of the selected section's activity list. It opens a short popover headed "Suggestions after [previous activity]" with a few recommended activity types, each with a one-line description, plus a View all activities… link.

View all activities… opens the full activity picker, titled "Choose an activity to add." It has a search box ("Search activities…") that filters by name, description, or tag, a tag filter, and a scrollable list of every activity type with its icon, name, and description. It also includes an Add break option, which always starts a new section.

For a rundown of every activity type and when to reach for it, see Activities and interactions overview.

Adding a section

The Add section button at the bottom of the agenda opens the Add new section window, where you name the section and stock it with activities in one step.

  1. Name your section. Section names appear in the agenda your participants see. The name needs at least two characters and can't start with a number.

  2. Choose what goes in it. Two tabs let you fill the section:

    • Activities — a grid of every activity type. Click a tile to add it. You can add the same activity more than once; a numbered badge shows each one's position, and clicking a badge removes the most recent. A tag filter narrows the grid.

    • Combos — prebuilt bundles of activities you can drop in as a starting point, then tweak. See Combos: prebuilt section bundles.

  3. Or make it a break. The Break tile turns the whole section into a break and names it "Time for a break!" (you can rename it). Picking any activity switches back out of break mode.

  4. Review and reorder. Everything you've added shows as a row of reorderable chips at the bottom — drag to reorder, remove individually, or choose Clear all.

  5. Add the section. The Add button stays disabled until the section has a valid name and at least one activity (or is a break). Cancel closes the window without adding anything.

Building together

Experiences are often built and reviewed by more than one person. In Shape, each rationale note shows the avatar of whoever last edited it, so it's clear who shaped what as your experience comes together.

Inline editing

Section titles, section rationale, and activity rationale all use the same inline editor:

  • Enter saves a single-line edit, like a title.

  • Cmd/Ctrl + Enter saves a multi-line edit, like a rationale note.

  • Esc cancels and reverts your change.

  • Clicking away saves.

What's remembered automatically

The Content tab remembers how you like to work:

  • The agenda's width, and whether it's compact or expanded to Shape.

  • Whether the screen options panel is open or collapsed, and its width.

  • The last activity you had selected.

Keyboard shortcuts

The Content tab has a full set of keyboard shortcuts for moving around and building quickly. Press Shift + ? at any time to open the shortcuts panel, or see Keyboard shortcuts for the Content tab.

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