Ten
Innovative Ideas for Successful Team Building Events
Team
building can give a powerful boost to the spirit and
effectiveness of any group. Well-designed and delivered
team building programs can lead your group to a better
understanding, clearer alignment and much stronger motivation
to work and succeed together.
Organizing a team building event is a big responsibility. The next time the responsibility lands on your shoulders, use these ten ideas to make your event a well-planned and memorable success.
1. 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 clients have used to motivate and communicate
with their teams: ‘Rocket to the Top, Together!’
(for a software company seeking to achieve dominant
market share), ‘The Winning Team’ (for a
financial services group seeking to overcome competitors
and economic adversity), ‘Forging a New Alliance’
(for a diverse medical services group managing a complete
reorganization of roles and departments).
2. Prime the pump for full participation.
Use internal communication
to get everyone interested and ready for the event.
Use e-mail, printed memos, websites, bulletin boards,
posters and meetings to arouse people’s curiosity,
and circulate a list of objectives and issues for the
meeting.
You could conduct a
survey prior to the meeting and announce the results
during the program. Have individuals prepare essential
business presentations. Create cross-functional teams
to deliver the evening entertainment.
3. 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).
4. Use a mix of energy, enterprise and entertainment.
Stimulate interest
and involvement by employing a full range of team building
activities. You can have ‘work hard’ sections
with speeches about the future and workshops on current
business problems. You can have ‘play hard’
sections with team games or outdoor challenges. And
you can include social sections with mealtime activities,
awards and evening entertainment.
Carefully sequence
your activities throughout the day and evening. Be especially
careful to follow lunches with some physical activity
and to end your program with a strong note of confidence
and commitment.
5. Allow enough time to process, discuss and apply.
Allow some time between
each activity for discussion about new learning and
application 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 but little time for reflection.
6. 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?’
Toward the end of your
program, have participants make a 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?’
7. Use photos and videos to extend the program’s impact.
Engage a photographer
to document your team building program. Give copies
of special photographs to your participants after the
event. Post the best photographs on your bulletin boards,
in the cafeteria or publish them in the company newsletter.
Put them on your company’s website so your teams’
family members can view them from home.
If you record on video,
have the footage edited with music and snappy graphics.
Show this entertaining vignette another time at a company
meeting or social event.
8. Harness the power of peripheral players.
When selecting participants
for your program, be willing to include those related
to, but not permanent members of, the core group. Internal
customers, suppliers, and neighboring departments could
all provide a few participants who are ‘closely
related’ to your core group.
These ‘peripheral players’ can add significant value, perspective and insight to your program. They can also help with appropriate communication inside and outside your organization after the event is over.
9. Get personal.
Make sure everyone
sees the link between ‘group team building’
and ‘individual action’ on the job. Have
each person complete a commitment card, action plan,
personal promise statement or some other means to ensure
they apply appropriate new behaviors.
Closing a team building
program by having everyone share their list of commitments
and action plans is a good way to gain buy-in from individuals
and unite the entire group.
10. 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 thoughtful gift, given in front
of everyone at the end of the program, will be appreciated
and remembered.
Next Article in Tips for Trainers >>
Twelve Tips to Make Your Corporate Conference More Successful
First Article in Customer Service Contact >>
Get Out of the Ivory Tower
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