Project Management Articles - Not Another Ice-Breaker! Team Building with a Purpose
“We just don’t work as a team!” Janet, a group manager for a
large insurance company, was complaining to Larry, her human
resources consultant. “Everyone just seems to do their own
thing, they don’t share information, don’t try to help each
other, and don’t seem to care about anyone else’s problems. What
we need is a team building offsite!” Janet and Larry decided to
put together a two-day offsite for the team at a resort about
two hours away from work. Janet wanted immediate focus on the
problem so Larry worked double-time to put together the event to
be held later in the month. Larry put together an agenda full of
trust-building exercises, ice-breakers, and brainstorming
sessions on how the team could work better together.
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On the first day of the offsite only about half of Janet’s team
had shown up; the other half were working on a hot project that
needed to be completed later in the week. The remaining team
members politely participated in the team building exercises,
but didn’t seem very interested in the activities as they felt
too “squishy.” Because Janet wanted to focus the offsite on team
building, there was no clearly stated business purpose for the
event. The brainstorming sessions were good, but no tangible
actions were taken down for the team to follow up on. In short,
the offsite was met with a resounding thud from the team and was
a dismal failure.
To some, this may be a gross exaggeration; but to others, this
closely resembles an offsite they attended or were responsible
for planning. Offsites are a very effective means to getting the
team focused on solving a business problem, defining a strategy,
or creating a revolutionary way of doing things. A very key
by-product of offsites, though, is the team-building that occurs
while addressing business issue at hand. Done well, an offsite
not only puts great minds together to address a business issue
but it also builds better teams that work more effectively
together and get more things done. Done poorly, an offsite will
be viewed as a huge waste of time and will poorly reflect on you
as a leader.
How can you ensure your offsites are successful at building
teams and getting things done at the same time? Consider the
following simple tips:
Have a clear purpose for the offsite – Define some clear
business reason for having the offsite. Consider things such as
developing strategic goals for the upcoming fiscal year, account
planning for strategic customers, or generating solution
alternatives for a key business problem. If you make the goal of
the offsite “Team Building” then your team is likely to look at
the offsite as a waste of time that will have no real business
benefit. Do your team building under the guise of solving a
problem or defining the future.
Balance work with play – All work and the offsite becomes
too fatiguing. All play and it becomes a boondoggle. Balance
your agenda with a combination of work sessions with some fun
team-building events sprinkled in. Make sure the “play” events
you define are something everyone can participate in and go
beyond the overused catch-me-as-I-fall-backwards event. Better
still, ask the team what types of things they’d like to do
during playtime.
Provide plenty of time for networking – Give ample time
during the day and evening for the team to have snacks, enjoy
beverages, and just talk about whatever strikes them. Team
building starts with building relationships, and building
relationships starts with getting to know each other. Allow for
networking time to be free and unscripted and let the team enjoy
some casual conversation with each other.
Don’t hold the offsite during a crunch period – When you
do hold your offsite, you don’t want your team members to be
checking email every five minutes or constantly leaving to make
important calls. Do your best to hold an offsite during a “slow”
time in your business. As with most businesses, there will
probably never be an optimal time to hold an offsite but do your
best to avoid times when team members are already burning the
midnight oil.
Make it an overnight event – Some of the best offsites
I’ve held were those where the team ate dinner together, enjoyed
a couple of drinks, and stayed up late discussing major business
problems or brainstorming on a radically new strategy. These
late night sessions were valuable in that team members put their
heads together to address some problem or opportunity. More
importantly, team members built relationships which provided an
outstanding foundation for strong teams.
Don’t make the team work overtime to “make up” the time spent
at the offsite – If you’re going to have an offsite, allow
the team to move some of their other commitments out a few days
so they don’t feel the pressure of needing to get their work
done while at the offsite. The last thing you want is your team
thinking about working late because of wasted time at a dumb
offsite. Relax some of the deliverables and let the team focus
on the offsite, not on what work isn’t getting done.
Put together a follow-up plan to continue the work from the
offsite – One of the most frustrating things I’ve
experienced with offsites was the lack of a follow-up plan to
implement some of the great ideas which came out of the offsite.
Put together an actionable follow-up plan with tasks, dates, and
owners and you’ll keep the excitement going out of the offsite
and will get some of the great ideas implemented. Neglect
putting together a follow-up plan and you’ll have an offsite
that the team sees as a waste of time.
Offsites can be a very effective means of getting things done
and building outstanding teams at the same time. Just make sure
to follow these simple steps and you’ll better ensure your next
offsite is a huge success.
Article Abstract
Offsites are a very effective means to getting the team focused
on solving a business problem, defining a strategy, or creating
a revolutionary way of doing things. Done well, an offsite not
only puts great minds together to address a business issue but
it also builds better teams that work more effectively together
and get more things done. Done poorly, an offsite will be viewed
as a huge waste of time and will poorly reflect on you as a
leader. Get seven tips for holding great team-building offsites.