The Forge: A Walk-Through

Five people. One question. No meeting. Every step.

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The Forge is a pattern for getting everyone's real thinking without the group defaulting to whoever talks first. Blind parallel input — nobody sees anyone else's answer until all have submitted. Mandatory "why this might fail." Sealed until deadline.

This post walks through every step. The topic is deliberately trivial so you can focus on the process, not the politics.

The question

What should we have for dessert tonight?

Jordan
facilitator
Nadia
participant
Marcus
participant
Priya
participant
Sam
participant
Dana
participant
Build template Send to 5 people 5 blind responses Synthesize find clusters Senate vote on it Nobody sees anyone else's answer until all five are in.

Step 1 — Build the template

Jordan opens an AI session.

Jordan — building the template
Jordan: I need a forge template. Question: what should we have for dessert tonight. Five people answering. Fields: their pick, why it's right, why it might be wrong, what we'd need. Keep it simple.
AI: Here's your template. The "why it might be wrong" field is mandatory — that's what separates a Forge from a suggestion box.
forge_dessert.md
# Forge: What's for Dessert?
Question: What should we have for dessert tonight?
Facilitator: Jordan · Deadline: 5:00 PM today
Rule: Fill this in on your own. Don't discuss until all responses are in.
**Your name:**
**Your pick:**
**Why it's the right choice:**
**Why it might be wrong:** *(mandatory)*
**What we'd need:**

One file. Five fields. Takes two minutes to fill in. The mandatory failure analysis is the whole trick.

Step 2 — Send it out

Hey all. Dessert question. I'm running a Forge instead of a group text because last time we spent forty-five minutes debating pizza toppings and ordered from three places.

Template attached. Fill it in. Send it back. Don't discuss with each other until all five are in. Blind input — we get what you actually think, not what the loudest person thinks.

Use your AI if you want. Don't if you don't. Just fill it in by 5.

— J

That email took thirty seconds. The template took sixty. Ninety seconds in.

The responses

Five people sat down with their AI. Here's what each session looked like.

Nadia — 4 minutes

Nadia · 4 min
Nadia: ice cream. the answer is ice cream. help me fill in this forge thing.
AI: Got it. For the "why it might be wrong" field — any concerns?
Nadia: melts. if we eat outside it's a race. also we might not have bowls clean.
AI: Done. Here's your response —
forge_nadia.md
Name: Nadia
Pick: Ice cream
Why: It's hot. Ice cream is the correct response to heat. Also makes people happy, which is the point of dessert.
Why it might be wrong: Melts fast outside. Might not have clean bowls. Limited flavor options from one place.
What we'd need: Store run or delivery. Bowls, spoons. 15 min.

Marcus — 7 minutes

Marcus · 7 min
Marcus: ok hear me out. not just ice cream. sundaes. the full build.
AI: A sundae bar — everyone builds their own? That handles the flavor-variety problem.
Marcus: exactly. it's interactive. people love assembling things.
AI: For the failure field — what could go wrong?
Marcus: more stuff to buy. messier. takes up counter space. worth it though.
forge_marcus.md
Name: Marcus
Pick: Sundaes (ice cream + toppings bar)
Why: Upgrades ice cream from passive to interactive. Everyone customizes. Shared experience, not just food.
Why it might be wrong: More ingredients to buy. Messy. Takes up counter space. Someone has to set it all up.
What we'd need: 2-3 flavors, chocolate sauce, caramel, sprinkles, whipped cream, nuts, bowls. 20-min store run.

Priya — 5 minutes

Priya · 5 min
Priya: cake. it's the right answer. help me fill in the forge.
AI: What kind of cake?
Priya: doesn't matter. cake works for everyone. it's shareable, portion-controlled, looks nice, and you can make it ahead. no scrambling.
AI: And the failure case?
Priya: someone's going to say it's boring. fine. boring that works beats exciting that melts.
forge_priya.md
Name: Priya
Pick: Cake
Why: Universally liked. Make-ahead. Clean portions. Looks good on a table. No temperature race.
Why it might be wrong: Predictable. Some might want lighter after a big dinner. Requires baking time or bakery run.
What we'd need: Bakery order or 90 min baking time. Plates, knife, forks.

Sam — 3 minutes

Sam · 3 min
Sam: cake. fill in the forge for me.
AI: Sure. Why cake?
Sam: leftovers. cake keeps. ice cream doesn't. also I just like cake.
AI: What could go wrong?
Sam: if dinner's heavy, nobody wants a thick slice. that's about it.
forge_sam.md
Name: Sam
Pick: Cake
Why: Keeps well — leftovers for tomorrow. No melting clock. Tastes good.
Why it might be wrong: Heavy after a big dinner. Might feel like too much food.
What we'd need: Bakery run or box mix. 30 min either way.

Dana — 9 minutes

Dana · 9 min
Dana: everyone's going to say something sweet. I'm going cheese plate.
AI: A cheese plate as dessert? Unusual pick. Want to build the case?
Dana: it IS dessert. in France, in Italy, in Spain — the cheese course comes after the main. we just forgot that in America. a good cheese plate with honey and dried fruit is a perfect end to a meal.
AI: Strong argument. For the failure field — what's the countercase?
Dana: nobody's going to agree with me. people hear "dessert" and they want sugar. I'm fighting cultural inertia.
AI: Honest self-assessment. Here's your response —
forge_dana.md
Name: Dana
Pick: Cheese plate (honey, dried fruit, crackers)
Why: How most of Europe ends a meal. Light. Savory. Pairs with wine. No cooking. Elegant without trying.
Why it might be wrong: Most people expect sweetness from dessert. Cultural inertia. Might feel pretentious. Requires a decent cheese shop.
What we'd need: 3-4 cheeses, honeycomb, dried apricots, crackers, a board. $25-35.

Step 3 — Collect

Five responses in. All blind — nobody saw anyone else's pick. Jordan opens them at once.

Frozen Nadia: ice cream Marcus: sundaes merges → ice cream sundaes Baked Priya: cake Sam: cake already aligned → cake Outlier Dana: cheese plate different category preserved in record Senate question: sundaes or cake?

Two things happened without anyone coordinating:

Dana's cheese plate is genuinely different. Not wrong — different. The Forge doesn't discard it. It preserves it.

Step 4 — Synthesize

Jordan pastes all five responses into one session.

Jordan — synthesis
Jordan: here are five forge responses about dessert tonight. find the clusters. summarize each position. tell me what question the group needs to vote on.
AI: Three clusters —

Cluster 1: Frozen — Ice Cream Sundaes (Nadia + Marcus)

Both independently chose ice cream. Marcus's sundae version subsumes Nadia's plain — a sundae bar gives customization while satisfying the core ice cream desire.

Strengths: Fun, responsive to weather, makes people happy.
Risks: Melting, mess, requires store run and setup.

Cluster 2: Baked — Cake (Priya + Sam)

Both independently chose cake for different reasons. Priya: presentation and make-ahead convenience. Sam: leftovers and simplicity. Independent convergence makes this stronger.

Strengths: Universal, no temperature crisis, can prepare ahead.
Risks: Heavy after big dinner, requires baking or bakery run.

Outlier: Cheese Plate (Dana)

Different category entirely. Dana predicted she'd be alone ("I'm fighting cultural inertia"). Legitimate idea — lighter, savory, European tradition — but redefines "dessert," which is a harder sell.

Preserved in the record. If neither main option reaches consensus, cheese plate can re-enter as a compromise.

Proposed Senate Question

"Ice cream sundaes or cake?"

Dana's cheese plate noted as minority position with legitimate reasoning.

What just happened

Five people gave honest opinions without anyone's answer being shaped by hearing someone else first. The loud person didn't win. The first person to speak didn't anchor the group.

The mandatory "why it might be wrong" field did its job:

Nobody had to say any of that out loud in a room. They wrote it down in their own session, with their own AI helping them think clearly.

Ready for Senate

Senate question: Ice cream sundaes or cake?

Voters: Nadia, Marcus, Priya, Sam, Dana

Minority record: Dana's cheese plate — preserved, not discarded

Next: Named votes. Named positions. Dissent on the record.

The Forge took 28 minutes of combined human time across six people. Five AI sessions, none longer than nine minutes. No meeting. No group text. No forty-five-minute argument about pizza toppings.

The Senate walk-through is next →

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Disclosure: This page was generated by Claude (Anthropic) under Bill's direction. The Forge pattern, the simulation design, and the characters are Bill's. The conversations shown are representative — real sessions look like this but with more typos. The dessert question was chosen because it demonstrates the pattern without anyone having to pretend to care about infrastructure.