High Performance Teamwork: Key to Business Success

A social scientist conducted an experiment; he asked groups of engineers, CEO’s, primary school kids and a random set of people to build a structure as tall as they can. The materials: spaghetti and chewing gum. The time: 30 minutes. The engineers built the highest structure, but what comes next is interesting. The primary school kids beat the CEO’s with a significant difference in structure height every time.

A social scientist conducted an experiment; he asked groups of engineers, CEO’s, primary school kids and a random set of people to build a structure as tall as they can. The materials: spaghetti and chewing gum. The time: 30 minutes. The engineers built the highest structure, but what comes next is interesting. The primary school kids beat the CEO’s with a significant difference in structure height every time.

A high performing team is more than a group of people who work together. It is a group of people with complementary skills, who trust each other, hold each other accountable and are committed to achieving outstanding results. The best organisations, whether they are multi-billion dollar corporations or small mom and pop shops accomplish this through building high-performance teams.

The rationale behind how this is even possible is the key to high-performance teamwork.

How does one build a high-performance team?

To build a high performing team, a business manager should look to developing

  • Trust
  • A clear brief
  • Procedures and processes
  • Purposeful Leadership

Trust

Create training activities that encourage trust among teams, various team building exercises can either be developed in-house or a learning and development firm can be hired to develop and implement one.

A Clear Brief

Create an excellent brief anyone can understand, it must be clear, concise and complete; it must not be ambiguous and contain no assumptions. Many teams go around in circles only because they do not understand what they were meant to do as opposed to being incompetent.

Procedures and Processes

Decrypt job roles with process maps and policy documents that enable each team member to know what to do and exactly how to go about it. Make sure everyone knows exactly what they will be held responsible for on the team.

Purposeful Leadership

Give them a leader. People need someone to look up to when they work; they need someone they can escalate issues to, and the absence of good leadership will only lead to a prolonged storming period among team members.

The three Pillars of High-performance teams.

A high-performance team is built on 3 main pillars

  • Design– What the team does
  • Relations- How the members relate
  • Charter- Why the team exists

The charter– every functioning team must have a reason for being, they must have a shared goal that they all want to see achieved above anything else. In our research story, the CEO’s wanted to show how smart they all were and implement their negotiations skills, while the kids just wanted to build the thing.

Relations– unlike adults, kids tend to get along quite easily. While the other groups were trying to figure out who to trust, the kids just moved to getting the job done since they didn’t have to worry about trust issues and back stabbing colleagues who want to steal all the shine.

Design– this is why the engineers won each time, they knew exactly how to do the job well and so spent less time debating who should do what and when. Standardisation of procedures and roles is a must have for every high-performance team.

The Outcome of High-Performance Teamwork

Members of high-performance teams achieve:

  • Excellent customer service
  • Increased profitability
  • Reduced operating costs
  • Improved efficiency and cycle time
  • Elevated behaviour to the highest level
  • Clarified roles and responsibilities
  • Motivation to achieve something big
  • Lowered turnover
  • Increased creativity
  • Lowered costs

Need help with developing your team building exercises or the standardisation of procedures and roles for your employees? Then you should be talking to us at Workforce Advisory.

Related Article