A Knowledge Cafe, also known as a Gurteen Knowledge Cafe, is a type of meeting in which participants immerse themselves in freewheeling conversations on a topic of common interest. They share knowledge, hatch ideas, gain insights, acquire new perspectives, strengthen relationships, and establish new connections.
Whenever you are planning to give a talk or PowerPoint presentation followed by a Q&A session, consider hosting a Knowledge Cafe instead. You will need more time but participants will have a richer and more rewarding experience.

The originator of the Knowledge Cafe format is knowledge management and conversational leadership exponent David Gurteen (pictured). Over the course of 15+ years, he has facilitated Knowledge Cafes in more than 30 countries.
These are some of the phrases used by David Gurteen to describe a Knowledge Cafe:
Ideas are shared freely
Barriers come down
Collaboration happens naturally
Encouraging trust and thoughtful dialogue
Fostering learning
Building connections
Sparking change through meaningful conversation
The Knowledge Cafe format
Principles
Studies conducted by David Gurteen and others reveal that the maximum group size for a proper conversation is four, or five at a push. I call this the Max4 Principle. Read more here.
No flipcharts. Individual note taking is OK but flipchart capture and subsequent report-outs hinder effective conversation.
The talk should be no longer than 20 minutes, with the opening session extending to 30 minutes maximum if a longer introduction is called for.
Facilitation during the final session requires a light touch.
The host does not invite or answer questions.
Room layout
Opening session: Participants are seated theatre-style. Cafe host speaks from front of room with visual aids if required.
Second session (formed of two or three rounds): Chairs are rearranged into groups of four. Host sits to one side and does not intervene.
Final session: Chairs are rearranged into a single circle. Host stands in the centre of the circle.
Process

- Cafe host welcomes participants, states the purpose of the Knowledge Cafe, explains the process gives a brief talk, 20 minutes maximum, and introduces a thematic question.
- Participants break into groups of four and have a conversation in response to the question.
- New groups of four are formed and conversations continue.
- When sufficient time is available, step 3 is repeated with new groups of four.
- Chairs are rearranged to form a circle. Participants take their seats and a discussion begins. Host ensures that all voices are heard and that no one dominates the proceedings.
- Host thanks participants for their contributions and closes the proceedings.
I am often asked how to keep a Knowledge Cafe on track, maintaining focus, encouraging active participation, and achieving clear, practical outcomes. However, this question frequently misses the point of what a Knowledge Cafe truly is. The essence of the Knowledge Cafe lies in its openness and commitment to emergent dialogue, not in making decisions or creating tangible results.
Here are some key points to consider:
Embracing Emergence: The Cafe process values the natural flow of ideas. It’s entirely acceptable and even desirable for conversations to wander off the set agenda if that’s where the collective curiosity leads.
Fostering Creativity: Participants can explore ideas more deeply without focusing on specific outcomes. This openness often sparks creative insights that might be lost in a more structured setting.
Organic Engagement: The process is designed to honour the authenticity of each participant’s perspective. When the focus shifts away from rigid outcomes, it creates a space for genuine, reflective dialogue.
Appropriate Context: If the goal is to drive controlled, decision-based outcomes, a different process is more suitable. The Knowledge Cafe is ideal for contexts where exploration and shared understanding are valued over immediate, concrete results.
In summary, the Knowledge Cafe isn’t about making decisions or sticking to an agenda; it’s about fostering an environment where open, thoughtful conversation can lead to unexpected insights and collective meaning-making.
David Gurteen, Gurteen Knowledge Letter: Issue 300, June 2025
Watch David Gurteen host a Knowledge Cafe for WINN (Worcestershire Innovation) in 2017
Running time 2:27.
Continue reading
External websites
Knowledge Cafe tipsheet, by David Gurteen and Steve O’Hagan
Knowledge Cafe articles by David Gurteen
This website
How to modify the Open Space meeting format to observe the Max4 Principle
The Max4 Principle | The maximum group size for a proper conversation is four
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