What’s Gone Well Today? ®
Here’s an easy way to recognize others… and in turn change how we look at our day, and our life.
When has someone made your day with the service they’ve given, or something they’ve said or done for you? Sharing these moments may inspire others. They lift the spirit!
On another note asking someone What’s Gone Well Today? ®, becomes life-changing. Conversations have a fresh, inspiring perspective.
In the larger picture our tools help individuals and organizations become more empathetic. We would love to hear from you! Please share an experience that’s gone well in your day.

A school in northern Vancouver Island is using WGWT for class journals, and staff meetings. On the surface their alternative program has many challenges, but upon further reflection they are doing some great projects in the community.
Invited to a business network breakfast to share the idea of WGWT.
Starbucks is considering using the cards in their coffee shops
A day of conversations and consults yielded the idea for our wrapping for the deck. Grateful for the creative thoughtfulness I was able to tap into.
What makes it possible to keep going after decades of being in the music business, as a recording artist and performer ..
This is the funniest video I’ve eve seen on YouTube. I watched it first with some friends and then with my dad
Using WGWT in your life.
1. WGWT is a shift that can be used by any age.
2. For schools, WGWT can help shift parents conversations and reflections to What’s Gone Well in their days, or with their children.
On the lowest , most immediate level WGWT is helpful in reflecting, making sense of our own work and life.
The next level up is using it to engage others on a new level.
ConversationWorks provides organizations with the tools to integrate WGWT into all aspects of their work and culture.
Remarkable flexibility and passion for learning result when student feel empowered in school. Visual-based teaching brings teachers onto the same page
How an inner shift transformed me. The initial impetus came from a comment from a colleague at work when I was not happy with alot of my life.