Team Building with a Large Group
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Title: Team Building with a Large Group
Word Count: 720
Author: Alan Hunt
Email: ahunt@sandstone.co.uk
Article URL: www.submityourarticle.com/articles/easypublish.php?art_id=4169
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Team Building with a Large Group
Copyright 2006 Sandstone Limited
Organising a team building session for, say, 25 people is
relatively straight forward. You have enough people to be
able to choose from a wide range of activities without
having so many that logistics becomes a problem. 40 people
and one or two options start to drop out as the extra
people can't physically be accommodated at a specific venue
or mean that a limited resource would need to be queued an
unreasonable amount of time for. The majority of team
activities really start to creak once you hit 50 people and
60 is an absolute upper limit for probably at least 80% or
more of the options.
So what if your group size is larger than this? For
example, if you are organising a team building event for
the entire sales force of a large organisation? Or even an
entire company? What are the challenges involved and how
can you pick something that delivers the outcomes you want
without making a Sir Elton John party budget seem tiny by
comparison?
The challenges are probably twofold: space and logistics.
Unless your team building event is being held in guaranteed
sunny climes, you are going to need (even if only as a
backup) something that can be run indoors. For many
options, you'll also need enough space to run it for that
number of people in addition to the space that they'll take
up just by being there. So if you have, say, 300 people at
the event, you could well need to book a venue with space
for 900 just to add the extra space you need.
Alternatively, you could select an activity that can be run
at the tables they'll be sat at anyway. There are very few
good options that cope with large numbers of people, yet
require little in the way of space or facilities. But they
do exist.
Logistics as a problem increases exponentially with the
size of the group. Most of the options that can handle
large groups do so by using more people and/or equipment to
increase the size of the bottlenecks. For example, if you
choose to offer people something based on the TV show
"Crystal Maze", the suppliers will bring in multiple copies
of each of the challenges (and maybe even the crystal dome
itself) and effectively run multiple concurrent smaller
events. This can add to the cost considerably - and also
feel like it isn't really one activity.
If you have in mind definite objectives that include
helping people appreciate that they are all part of a wider
team, then you are best off with something that targets
those objectives and has everybody working towards the same
goal at the same time. You might, of course, still choose
to create a competitive spirit by organising the group into
teams and offering prizes to the best performing. However,
it will be important to choose something that integrates
with your key messages and makes people feel that they are
part of the wider group and not independent of it.
Using technology as a base offers a great way of handling
large groups within a single, integrated team building
activity. Carefully chosen to meet the desired outcomes,
technologically based activities don't need to add large
numbers of expensive people, large amounts of bulky
equipment or multiple zeros at the end of the invoice
amount. What they can add is a sense of fairness to all
participants and teams and an extra dimension in terms of
how believable the activity is. Some team building
simulations really can "suck people in" to their scenarios
and deliver amazing experiences.
Another option is to keep to a very simple activity that
requires the whole group to work together to achieve it.
Your choice, as always, should be based to a large degree
around what you want to achieve, how long you are able to
dedicate and - of course - your budget. Simple activities
have the advantage that they are usually priced accordingly.
Whichever option you plump for, make sure that the activity
providers have a track record in handling groups of a
similar (or larger) size to your own. Hundreds of people
all moaning about an activity is an experience well worth
avoiding. On the other hand, there's nothing like the buzz
of a successful large group team building session!
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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