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10 Innovative
Ideas for Successful Team
Building Events |
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Team building can give a powerful boost to the spirit and effectiveness
of any group. Well designed and delivered team building programs can lead
to better understanding, clearer alignment and much stronger
motivation.
Organizing a "team building event" is a big responsibility. Use these
ideas to make your event a well-planned and memorable success.
- Set the Tone With an Inspiring Theme:
Telegraph the tone
and purpose of your event with a theme that hits the mark. "The Third
Annual Team Building Program" is not going to excite many participants.
Here are examples of themes my recent clients have to motivate and
communicate their teams: "Rocket to the Top, Together!" (for a software
company seeking to achieve dominant market share), "The Winning Team"
(for a financial services company seeking to overcome competitors and
economic adversity), "Forging a New Alliance" (for a medical services
group managing a reorganization of roles and departments).
- Prime the Pump for Full Participation:
Use internal
communications to get everyone interested and ready for the event. Use
memos, bulletin boards, posters and internal meetings to arouse people's
curiosity.
You might circulate a list of objectives and issues
for the meeting. You might conduct a survey prior to the meeting,
announcing actual results during the program. You might task certain
individuals with preparing a business presentation, or selected teams
with creating and rehearsing an entertainment item.
- Conduct the Program Off-Site:
Major team building programs
are frequently conducted "off-site". This allows participants to get
away from the workplace physically (minimizing disruptions) and mentally
(opening their thinking to new points of view).
- Use a Mix of Energy, Enterprise and
Entertainment:
Stimulate interest and get involvement by using a
full range of team building activities. You may have "hard work"
sections with speeches about the future and workshops on current
business problems. You may have "play hard" sections with team games and
outdoor challenges. You may include social ingredients through mealtime
activities, awards and entertainment.
Be sure your range of
activities are well-sequenced throughout the day and evening. Be
especially careful to follow lunches with activity, and to end your
program on a note of confidence and commitment.
- Allow Enough Time to Process, Discuss and Apply
Allow
enough time between each activity for discussion, learning and
application back to the job. It's better to have a full day with two
team building games and enough time for discussion, than a "stuffed" day
with three or four games with little time for reflection.
- Focus on New Actions with "More", "Less", "Start" and
"Stop":
During the program, have participants develop clear
answers to the following questions:
- "What do you want (the other person, department, etc.) to do more
of?"
- "What do you want (the other person, department, etc.) to do less
of?"
- "What do you want (the other person, department, etc.) to start
doing?"
- "What do you want (the other person, department, etc.) to stop
doing?"
Towards the end of the program, participants can
make another list of personal commitments:
- "What am I committed to do more of?"
- "What am I committed to do less of?"
- "What am I committed to start doing?"
- "What am I committed to stop doing?"
- Use Photographs and Video to Extend the Program's
Impact:
Engage a photographer and/or videographer to document
your team building program. Give copies of photographs to participants
after the event. Post the best photographs on your bulletin boards, in
the cafeteria, or publish them in the company newsletter. If you put
them up on your company's World Wide Web site, then staff's family
members can log-in and view them from home.
Have the videotape
edited with music and some snappy graphics. Show this short but
entertaining vignette at another company meeting, social gathering,
dinner and dance, etc.
- Harness the Power of Peripheral Players:
When selecting
participants for your program, be willing to include those tangentially
related to the core group. Internal customers, suppliers, neighboring
departments, etc. can all yield a few participants who are "closely
related" to your core group.
These "peripheral players" will
often add significant value, perspective and insight to your program.
They can also help with communication back into the organization after
the event is over.
- Get Personal:
Make sure everyone sees the link between
"group team building" and "individual actions" on the job. Have each
person complete a commitment card, action planning list, personal
promise statement or some other vehicle to ensure application of
appropriate new behaviors. Closing a team building program by having
everyone share their list is a good way to gain buy-in from individuals,
and the entire group.
- Reward the Organizers:
Planning and preparing a team
building program is a major undertaking. Be sure to give recognition to
those who did the work "behind the scenes". A small but thoughtful gift,
given in front of everyone at the end of the program, will be
appreciated and remembered.
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