Geysers (What erupted with success?)

What went brilliantly and gushed with energy?

Our daily standups finally clicked and kept everyone aligned all sprint.
The new onboarding flow shipped ahead of schedule — huge win!
Pairing on the tricky migration saved us days of rework.
Bears (What hazards did we face?)

What dangers, blockers, or risks crossed our path?

Unclear requirements meant we built the wrong feature twice.
The staging environment kept going down at the worst times.
Too many context switches made it hard to find deep focus.
Vistas (What views are worth celebrating?)

What achievements or moments deserve recognition?

Shout-out to Priya for stepping up to mentor our new joiner.
We learned a ton about our CI pipeline this cycle.
The team stayed positive even during the crunch — proud of us.
Horizons (Where do we head next?)

What goals or actions should guide our next trek?

Let's define acceptance criteria before any story enters the sprint.
We should book recurring time to pay down technical debt.
Set up monitoring alerts so we catch staging issues early.

What is the Yellowstone Expedition retrospective

Embark on a guided journey through your team's recent work, framed as a wild expedition across the rugged landscapes of Yellowstone. Inspired by the spirit of exploration, this themed retrospective invites teams to reflect on the geysers of success, the bears they encountered along the trail, the breathtaking vistas worth celebrating, and the uncharted paths ahead. By mapping experiences to a memorable adventure, participants engage more deeply and recall insights more easily than in a traditional review. The Yellowstone Expedition works by guiding your team through four exploration-themed prompts that mirror the highs, hazards, and horizons of any sprint or project cycle. Each "landmark" on the map represents a different lens for reflection — from steady progress to unexpected dangers, from proud achievements to future goals. This narrative structure lowers defensiveness, encourages honest dialogue, and turns a routine meeting into a shared story that the whole team helps write. Themed retrospectives like this are an excellent way to break monotony, boost participation, and surface insights that more clinical formats might miss. Whether you run them quarterly to mix things up or as a special end-of-project celebration, the Yellowstone Expedition helps teams build trust, celebrate wins, and chart a clear course forward — all while having a little fun along the way.

Yellowstone Expedition retrospective format

Geysers (What erupted with success?)

What went brilliantly and gushed with energy?

Like Old Faithful, geysers represent the moments of reliable, powerful success. Invite the team to celebrate what worked exceptionally well this cycle — the wins, the breakthroughs, and the moments of momentum. Encourage specifics so the team understands what to repeat.

Bears (What hazards did we face?)

What dangers, blockers, or risks crossed our path?

Bears symbolize the threats and obstacles that slowed the expedition or caught the team off guard. Create a safe space to name blockers, risks, and frustrations without blame. Focus on the situation rather than individuals, and look for patterns worth addressing.

Vistas (What views are worth celebrating?)

What achievements or moments deserve recognition?

Vistas are the breathtaking views that make the climb worthwhile — moments of pride, learning, and gratitude. Use this landmark to recognise individual and team contributions, celebrate growth, and acknowledge the people who made a difference along the trail.

Horizons (Where do we head next?)

What goals or actions should guide our next trek?

Horizons point to the uncharted territory ahead. Turn the team's reflections into concrete, owned actions for the next cycle. Keep the list focused and achievable, and assign owners so the expedition keeps moving forward.

When to use this retrospective

  • When your team needs a refreshing change from standard sprint retrospectives and you want to re-energise participation.
  • At the end of a major project or milestone, where an expedition theme helps frame the whole journey and celebrate the summit.
  • When team morale could use a boost and you want a lighthearted yet meaningful way to surface both wins and challenges.
  • For teams that respond well to storytelling and metaphor, helping less vocal members open up through a playful frame.

Suggested icebreaker questions

  • If you could explore any national park or wilderness in the world, where would you trek and why?
  • What's the one item you'd never leave behind on an expedition into the wild?

Ideas and tips for your retrospective meeting

  • Set the scene at the start by briefly narrating the expedition theme — it primes the team to engage with the metaphor and have fun.
  • Encourage equal airtime across all four landmarks so the session doesn't dwell only on bears (problems) or only on geysers (wins).
  • Keep facilitation blame-free, especially around the Bears topic — focus on situations and systems rather than individuals.
  • Time-box each landmark to keep the expedition moving and ensure you reach the Horizons (actions) before time runs out.
  • Always convert Horizons discussions into clearly owned, specific action items so insights translate into real change.
  • Use anonymous contributions if trust is still building, so quieter explorers feel safe sharing hazards and honest feedback.

Frequently asked questions

How long does a Yellowstone Expedition retrospective take?
Most teams complete it in 45 to 60 minutes. Allow extra time for larger teams or if you want to dive deeper into the discussion at each landmark.
When should I use this themed retrospective?
It's ideal when you want to break the routine of standard retrospectives, boost engagement, or wrap up a major project with a memorable, story-driven reflection.
How is it different from a standard Start, Stop, Continue retrospective?
It covers similar ground — wins, problems, recognition, and actions — but frames everything as an adventure, which lowers defensiveness and makes the session more engaging and memorable.
What do the four landmarks mean?
Geysers are successes, Bears are hazards or blockers, Vistas are achievements worth celebrating, and Horizons are the goals and actions for the next cycle.
Is this suitable for remote teams?
Absolutely. In TeamRetro, remote and hybrid teams can contribute, group, vote, and create action items together in real time or asynchronously.
Can beginners facilitate this retrospective?
Yes. The themed prompts are intuitive and self-explanatory, making it easy for first-time facilitators to guide the team through a productive session.

New to retrospectives? Read our guide on how to run a retrospective →