Leadership Caffeine™—4 Keys to Building Your Great Team

Apr 30, 2017

The general guidance on building effective teams is right, it's just often not specific enough. Here are 4 keys to building your great team that don't get enough consideration in most workplaces:

We all know the short-list of things we need to do to build an effective team at work:

  • Create a common purpose
  • Ensure clarity of roles
  • Provide clear, supportive leadership.
  • Promote accountability.
  • Support learning.
  • Provide coaching.

I like those as general rules. Like breathing, they’re a good habit. But they’re not enough. You can follow them and still end up with a mess.

There are at least four other actions that often go missing in our workplace teams.

When they’re present, the odds of great things happening go up considerably.

4 Keys to Successful Team Building:

  1. Quit surrounding yourself with people who look and think like you.
  2. Find people who respect and trust you enough to disagree with you. And then listen to them.
  3. Ask them: What do you need me to do to help you succeed? And then do it.
  4. Hire for values. Fire for not living up to the values.

[bctt tweet=”Find people who respect you enough to disagree with you, and then listen to them.” username=”artpetty”]The first two bring the ideas of diversity and inclusion to life. It’s not an h.r. or corporate program, it’s about tapping into the experiences and gray matter of people who experience the world differently. This may be the X factor for success in our world today.

The word trust on a chalkboardNumber three goes to trust. Deep trust. Without it, performance will suffer. Most people on teams in the workplace don’t trust each other. Or, they don’t trust each other enough. Solve this or prepare to struggle.

The last one goes to character. If character is a question, it’s a problem. In every circumstance where leaders support and sustain individuals whose values don’t tangibly and visibly reflect the firm’s or team’s values, the resultant toxicity destroys morale and performance.

I’ve almost been fired for going to the mat on firing toxic people. It’s that important. You should stake your job on it. It’s more than your job—it’s your character and reputation as a leader.

The Bottom-Line for Now:

It does not matter whether you are leading projects or a function, building an effective team requires deliberate effort on the right activities. If you have to invest your time and energy somewhere, focus on the four outlined here. Don’t skip the others, just don’t count on them to be enough.

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Leadership Books by Art Petty

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