Team Building - from Fun Event to Genuine Team Improvements
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Title: Team Building - from Fun Event to Genuine Team Improvements
Word Count: 647
Author: Alan Hunt
Email: ahunt@sandstone.co.uk
Article URL: www.submityourarticle.com/articles/easypublish.php?art_id=4004
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Team Building - from Fun Event to Genuine Team Improvements
Copyright 2006 Sandstone Limited
What does the phrase "team building" mean to you?
Quad-biking? Abseiling? Propping up the bar with your work
colleagues? Allow me to disagree.
Let's look at the word "build" and see where that leads us.
The Concise Oxford English Dictionary defines the word
"build" as "Establish, make or accumulate gradually". This
definition implies a sense of time passing and growth.
This, in turn, implies a modicum of care and attention to
maximise the growth - or at the very least monitor the
development.
So what kind of process works best to turn a team building
session into something that improves team effectiveness
back where it matters?
It is not uncommon for trainers and facilitators to like
the sound of their own voice. Yet we all know that it is
far more powerful if people can learn something for
themselves rather than be told it. People turn off very
quickly even after a very enjoyable team activity if the
next thing they hear is the facilitator telling them his or
her view of their performance.
I'll go further - the tried and trusted technique of "What
did you do well? What could you have done better?" isn't
much better. All too often you can hear people leaving team
building sessions saying "every time we do one of these, we
fail at the same old things" closely followed by "we'd have
been better off talking about the real issues at work". If
you are lucky, they might add "I enjoyed it though". So
here's the dilemma. If you leave it up to the participants
themselves to come up with the improvements, their blinkers
stop them from seeing the obvious development opportunities
that the activity unveils to those observing. Yet if the
observers tell them what they see, the participants don't
listen - or worse, become defensive.
I can hear you thinking "but a truly skilled facilitator
will lead them to the learning without them realising it".
Don't you believe it. Only the most naive of the group will
fail to spot a facilitator guiding them somewhere they
don't really want to go. And that taints the learning - or
at least the chances of it being applied.
So if the participants can't see the learning and won't
listen if someone else tells them, is a team building
session doomed to mediocrity before it starts? No - there
is a third option.
A team building debriefing guide, tailored to the activity
and (ideally) to the participant group, is a superb
mechanism to guide the learning while not interfering in
the process. So what are the key characteristics that such
a guide should have? My experience suggests the following
seven elements are all key components:
1) It should be tailored to the activity and focus on those
aspects that have one or more direct parallels in the
group's real working environment.
2) It should provide an opportunity for individuals to
reflect before any discussion within the team on the points
it makes.
3) It should be constructed such that the input of every
member of the team is necessary to complete the process.
4) It should not make value judgements in the way in which
it describes particular aspects of the activity that might
have gone well or less well for the team. Rather it should
provoke discussion and encourage transfer back to the
workplace.
5) It should provide places for individuals to capture
their own learning and for the team to capture the group
learning.
6) It should be useable purely by the participants
themselves after brief instruction.
7) It should offer a framework for the team to invite
observer input so that any "external" comments are
requested by them rather than forced upon them.
Achieve all of these and you will have a superb base to
build team improvements upon. And that feels like what the
Oxford Concise English Dictionary is getting at.
About the Author:
Alan is Managing Director of Sandstone, a leading UK team
building company. He enjoys creating innovative activities
that combine fun with genuine team development. In his
spare time, he does voluntary work for the RNIB.
www.sandstone.co.uk
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