Teambuilding opinio...
 

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[Closed] Teambuilding opinions please

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We have been asked to put together a "teambuilding" programme. Have you ever been on one was it any good? Have you ever sent people on one, if so why?


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 9:47 am
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make it relevant to your business activities, create outputs (or at least ideas) from it that can be used to progress and improve the way that people work together.
offer prizes.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 9:54 am
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Thanks, what sort of outputs would you expect from a day?


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 10:04 am
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[i]what sort of outputs would you expect from a day? [/i]

near drownings, broken limbs, fractured relationships, inter-departmental rivalries.

the usual 😉


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 10:05 am
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Is this about breaking down barriers between people or actually getting some business value beyond that?


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 10:05 am
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brakes - Member -
...create outputs (or at least ideas) from it that can be used to progress and improve the way that people work together.
offer prizes.

POSTED 11 MINUTES AGO # REPORT-POST
carboblock - Member
Thanks, what sort of outputs would you expect from a day?

POSTED 1 MINUTE AGO # REPORT-POST

This will depend on who is doing it, what their teambuilding issues are and what they need to get out of it.

If you just want to get out the office for a day call the local fire service, we did a team building fire safety thing with them.

If there are specific issues to deal with such as over competitiveness or everyone trying to be in charge then something focussed on working together and listening. If there is a moral issue then head down the fun side.

Also consider the health and fitness levels of everyone, not good doing team building if 1/3 have to go home early as they can't do stuff.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 10:10 am
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Battle Royale?


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 10:10 am
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We've had loads:

Lots of pointless exercises involving paper, scissors and string:

[url= https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5097/5393590185_4cbd46d235.jp g" target="_blank">https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5097/5393590185_4cbd46d235.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/9dByse ]Trying to control Ross (Mission Impossible)[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/people/75003318@N00/ ]brf[/url], on Flickr

[url= https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5214/5394181736_384eba0f9b.jp g" target="_blank">https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5214/5394181736_384eba0f9b.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/9dEAio ]Your mission is..[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/people/75003318@N00/ ]brf[/url], on Flickr

Drumming lessons....

[url= https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5060/5394209270_2fa62ed28f.jp g" target="_blank">https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5060/5394209270_2fa62ed28f.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/9dEJu7 ]Accounts team[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/people/75003318@N00/ ]brf[/url], on Flickr

[url= https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4102/5393624447_ce740d6783.jp g" target="_blank">https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4102/5393624447_ce740d6783.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/9dBJCX ]Finish in style[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/people/75003318@N00/ ]brf[/url], on Flickr

Bit of group massage therapy

[url= https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5179/5394216818_846e0fd996.jp g" target="_blank">https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5179/5394216818_846e0fd996.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/9dELJf ]Group Therapy[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/people/75003318@N00/ ]brf[/url], on Flickr


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 10:11 am
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IME it's just about getting people to interact in a non-work environment. Whenever some bloke starts talking about what we've supposedly learnt I find it a bit contrived but then I'v studied that sort of thing at Uni. I like the military style command task ones best.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 10:12 am
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footflaps. Do you work in purgatory?


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 10:14 am
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[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 10:15 am
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When you say a teambuilding "programme", are we talking about a one-off "away day" or a longer term thing? Most of the answers so far seem applicable to the former, but not so much the latter...

Also, as others have said, the existing dynamics will influence the best answer - the most approriate route for a team made up of high performing individuals who are struggling to be as effective as a group as they could be but are willing to work at this, will be different from a group of lazy wasters who hate each others' guts...


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 10:18 am
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There is a lot of Kleenex boxes in the pics, footflaps....


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 10:19 am
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footflaps. Do you work in purgatory?

🙂

There is a lot of Kleenex boxes in the pics, footflaps....

I just take the photos.....


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 10:31 am
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[quote=muppetWrangler said]footflaps. Do you work in purgatory?

Is he managed by David Brent ? Drumming workshop ? 😆


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 10:34 am
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I just take the photos.....

You are Satan's snapper! 😈


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 10:35 am
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Group massage? 😯

Yeah... Not for me.

I'm out!


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 10:37 am
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In our case, we have lots of sites all over the world, so getting everyone in the same place doing anything in mixed team (mix of sites) helps build relationships etc. The format is normally a whole day of stuff, pep talks, awards, games and then a free bar all evening, night and early am in a local night club, so people can get completely blatted.

More paper games:
[url= https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4135/4799030362_0bbb610524.jp g" target="_blank">https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4135/4799030362_0bbb610524.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/8j5hwN ]Team 4's master piece[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/people/75003318@N00/ ]brf[/url], on Flickr

Main event in the evening drinking session:

[url= https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4114/4799035118_510ac59c93.jp g" target="_blank">https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4114/4799035118_510ac59c93.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/8j5iWN ]Private Party[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/people/75003318@N00/ ]brf[/url], on Flickr

[url= https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4078/4799035416_9bb09bec6f.jp g" target="_blank">https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4078/4799035416_9bb09bec6f.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/8j5j2W ]The Vaults[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/people/75003318@N00/ ]brf[/url], on Flickr

I have to stop taking photos after about 8pm, it all gets a bit, well you can guess...


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 10:39 am
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I consider the group massage drumming teambuilding excercises a patronising cause for constructive dismissal.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 10:45 am
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I consider the group massage drumming teambuilding excercises a patronising cause for constructive dismissal.

They were actually very good: http://www.drumcafe.co.uk/

[url= https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5051/5393629843_8c0ea06ebe.jp g" target="_blank">https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5051/5393629843_8c0ea06ebe.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/9dBLeZ ]The Drum Cafe[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/people/75003318@N00/ ]brf[/url], on Flickr


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 10:55 am
 apj
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I started off thinking that corporate bongos looked like some kind of hell, but it does actually look like fun, which I guess is the point.

Motivational speakers on the other hand I think are 100% cheese.

Something I have done for hen/stag do's is a treasure hunt / puzzle where the clues you have to find are numeric in some way. Once you've got the numbers you have to rearrange / add / subtract to get a phone number, which is the number of the place to meet up for a "debrief", which of course you make a pub.

Had some self-defence training for work once which was basically an excuse to practice hitting "pressure points" on a colleague. Interesting mixture of reticence and score-settling enthusiasm that day.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:12 am
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We recently did a Forest ranger day -
few team games to kick off, then a fire lighting/backwoods cooking exercise.
We then built woodland shelters which were tested with a watering can full of water.
In the afternoon we did a navigation/orienteering exercise, then finished off with some woodcraft.

It was ace.

We have been looking at something first-aid related for our next one - as we might learn something useful at the same time.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:15 am
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Worked on a ship for a large Danish company. Got sent to Denmark for a week of drinking, rowing, axe-throwing,archery, rowing, orienteering, rowing, abseiling, and general partying. Was ace!


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:19 am
 Nick
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I'm just back from the Telemark region of Norway where my team and I spent four days chatting about ways to make the project better in the morning, then playing on snow scooters and taking walks in snow shoes in the afternoon, then eating reindeer and drinking in the evening.

Stayed in a hut in the mountains, no electricity, no running water, 50 odd candles lit the place in the evening, had a mate of Ray Mears come up from Rjukan in full winter commando gear to tell us the story (of his personal friends) the Hero's of Telemark.

Was a great experience, the nine of us, some of which had only ever met on the phone before, really got on well and got to know each other much better.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:23 am
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freeagent and paladin's teambuilding sounds great.

footflaps photos make me feel a bit ill. Sorry.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:23 am
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guys, this is great stuff, thank you.

edlong - it will be a one day thing.

footflaps - i think we are looking at similar, where the different business "sections" are brought together and can "bond"

Our big thing is to get people out doors, away from the office environment and in to nature. Anyone been on any outdoors events?


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:23 am
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We recently did a Forest ranger day -
few team games to kick off, then a fire lighting/backwoods cooking exercise.
We then built woodland shelters which were tested with a watering can full of water.
In the afternoon we did a navigation/orienteering exercise, then finished off by...

.. hunting, skinning, gutting and eating one of the under performing managers.

😈


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:23 am
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I really do not get these.

Surely any self-respecting professional will just knuckle down and get on and work with the team that they've been assigned to, because that's what they're being paid to do. The work *IS* the teambuilding, and vice versa.

You don't need to bang some bongos or get pissed to be able to work along side somebody productively, and if you do, then, I'm really not sure I'd want to be employing you anyway.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:25 am
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"freeagent - Member

We recently did a Forest ranger day -
few team games to kick off, then a fire lighting/backwoods cooking exercise.
We then built woodland shelters which were tested with a watering can full of water.
In the afternoon we did a navigation/orienteering exercise, then finished off with some woodcraft.

It was ace.

We have been looking at something first-aid related for our next one - as we might learn something useful at the same time. "

This is the sort of stuff we are looking at putting on - sounds like you enjoyed it?


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:26 am
 Nick
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The other thing I have done, back in 2009 was the Microsoft Challenge, our two teams raised over £50k for the NSPCC and we had an excellent time on the event itself.

It's called the UK Challenge now, think it's a bit lower key than when MS where the title sponsors, but still a really great way to build a team.

http://www.challengerworld.com/events/team-participation/the-uk-challenge.aspx


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:27 am
 br
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How big is your budget, without one you'll fail.

And even with one you'll fail if you think it'll cure crap management, folk who hate other folk, lazy gits and people who think exercise is something idiots do etc


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:28 am
 Nick
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I'm really not sure I'd want to be employing you anyway.

And I wouldn't want to work for you, so that's easy isn't it.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:29 am
 DrJ
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@JonEdwards - the point is that teams can be made of different types of people, with different characteristics and skills, and a team can be "built" by identifying what needs to be done and how different individuals can best contribute to that goal.

What that has to do with racing quad-bikes etc I have no idea. I do like that stuff, but it doesn't have much to do with team building.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:30 am
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JonEdwards - Member
I really do not get these.

Surely any self-respecting professional will just knuckle down and get on and work with the team that they've been assigned to, because that's what they're being paid to do. The work *IS* the teambuilding, and vice versa.

You don't need to bang some bongos or get pissed to be able to work along side somebody productively, and if you do, then, I'm really not sure I'd want to be employing you anyway.


Yep in an ideal world there would be no office politics and no crap going on, shame you sometimes have to deal with what you get, if there are problems or issues telling everyone to knuckle down might work once. Part of being an employer is to develop the people you have and work on the weaknesses that exist in a team.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:33 am
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We did an inspiring teambuilding exercise in the bank, after a couple of hours of absolute drivel, we all walked out as a team. That might sound sarcastic but it genuinely was a good team thing.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:34 am
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We recently had one that basically involved filling in a 24 question survey a couple of weeks before. We were then given a full 17 page profile on ourselves, our strengths, weaknesses, how we communicate, what we respond to and vice versa. I went into it really skeptical and was amazed by this profile that they had built up as it was scarily true. We then spent the rest of the day looking at each of the different teams and the kinds of characters in them and through doing that learning hows best to effectively communicate with them.

In a team like ours with quite a variety of characters it was really useful to see the differences and seeing what others responded to.

I disagree with what Jon Edwards has said, most people can 'get on' and get the work done in a professional sense but that doesn't mean that they're working together efficiently or particularly effectively. I agree some awaydays are pointless and immediately forgotten, but, done correctly with the correct follow-up work done. They can be extremely effective in improving the teams productivity.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:36 am
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Glory hole?


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:39 am
 DT78
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I'm going to show those photos to my team and threaten them with a team building day....


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:40 am
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These kind of team building excursions are a total waste of money and time.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:42 am
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we have lots of sites all over the world......... and then a free bar all evening, night and early am in a local night club, so people can get completely blatted.

not everyone drinks, some cultures positively don't - not anti drinking, actually can be enthusiastic but have worked for a couple of companies where excessive drinking was exclusive rather than inclusive


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:43 am
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The team that did the event for ekul has got it right. If you want development you need a clear brief and preparation from the participants and targeted follow up afterwards. Thats what we do and anything else is motivational play acting. Most things aren't team building they are events to break up the working pattern or justify someones job title.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:47 am
 beej
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We've done a few charity/volunteering days for "teambuilding". Redecorating a scout hut, various tasks at a wildlife place and working on a local common - digging up/cutting down invasive vegetation, building paths, that kind of thing. You should have some kind of local organisation that can put you in touch with charities that need manpower for a day.

Oh, just remembered - we built a garden at a primary school. Raised beds, paths etc.

All ends with BBQ/picnic/pub.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:55 am
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In all honesty, we treat our 'team building' days as a bit of a jolly for the staff. It's a simple way for the Company to say "Thanks for the hard work this year so far, have a day/night on us".

If any actual 'team building' comes out of it, then its a bonus in my eyes 🙂


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 12:03 pm
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Done one as Ekul, and I was also sceptical but was turned around.
Never actually got to work on the project that the team building event was for mind you...


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 12:08 pm
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These kind of team building excursions are a total waste of money and time.

Can't say I really agree. If you have teams which don't communicate a lot as part of their roles, these types of events can really help bond people and give a wider sense of who is doing what in the company. They are very good for moral as well. Everyone whose been on them generally has a pretty good time.

As for motivational speakers, I can recommend Ben Hunt-Davis. Was a very good speaker and quite relevant to business.

[url= https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4082/4798395301_7b4cd02ef6.jp g" target="_blank">https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4082/4798395301_7b4cd02ef6.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/8j22Kt ]Ben Hunt-Davis[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/people/75003318@N00/ ]brf[/url], on Flickr


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 12:12 pm
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I facilitate team / confidence building events for a charity that works with underprivileged yoofz (16-24 year olds). I've also been subjected to endless teambuilding events over the years. They can be very effective.

In my experience, they work best when the team is taken into a mutually alien environment. Therefore if they work in an office, then you'll be best off getting them outside and doing some hand-on stuff. You'll often find the individuals who are strong characters in their normal environment will become a different person once they're taken outside of their comfort zone.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 12:17 pm
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Best team building I ever did involved a long weekend in an austere-ish hostel, basic rooms, communal showers, lots basic food in the back end of the Lake District, several miles from the local town.

After a 6am start and several jolly hours in a LDV mini-bus we arrived to sandwiches before a group exercise in crossing a river with a tarpaulin and some plastic pipes after a few near death experiences and hissy fits we were allowed to shower and get ready for dinner, food was great not so sure about the quiz with way to much booze, but it was entertaining.

Early start with a choice of walking, caving or a days mountain biking, the BSOs weren’t that great but the route was awesome. The walkers/cavers swapped activities in the afternoon by all accounts fun was had by all.

The evening involved a presentation for most….. then a quiz and lots of booze, after breakfast we went abseiling before returning in the same LDV mini-bus. The return journey wasn’t jolly and my mini-bus had different people in it to those I drove up!

Several people didn’t speak to each other for weeks, a few were off injuries sustained, we didn’t have another team building for 3 years.

Years later I am still very good friends with several victims even though we no longer all work for the same employer.

So the point of my story, ask yourself do you [b]really[/b] need a team building event?


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 12:33 pm
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This is the best training day comedy, ignore the pictures it was on the radio.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 12:34 pm
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This must be the super efficient private sector you are all talking about? Here in the public sector we just keep being told we are shit and to do it better.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 1:16 pm
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Here in the public sector we just keep being told we are shit and to do it better.

I'd expect nothing less 😉


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 1:17 pm
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Here in the public sector we just keep being told we are shit and to do it better.

Think teacher training days 😉


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 1:42 pm
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Picnic on a narrow boat. Locks are a good team-building exercise. Surprisingly cost-effective when you factor out the day cost of a "consultant". It helps of one of you has done it before, but it is not essential.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 1:55 pm
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Take the budget and put it behind a bar somewhere. This tends to work best in my experience!


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 2:20 pm
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[b]Karaoke night, pubs, nightclub that's team building. Either you are in or out.[/b]

The rest are just glorify HR excuses to justify their own existence. Take note, the HR person(s) will then try to take photos of the events to justify everyone's "happiness" in the team building exercise, in order to proof that everyone is bonding and by report the result to their bosses.

HR, please stick to payroll and admin. Know your place! 👿

😆


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 2:53 pm
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Aren't team building exercises thing that large corporations have stolen from start ups in the hope of replicating their success without addressing the real problems the organisation is suffering from?

A bit like cargo culting?

If you want to know how to build a successful team then try reading A Year Without Pants by Scott Berkun. It's about his account of working as a team leader at Wordpress for a year. Now they have an interesting workplace.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 2:57 pm
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footflaps - Member

We've had loads:

Lots of pointless exercises involving paper, scissors and string:

My lord! How much is the company being charged for?

I want to be the company providing the team building exercise ... I want to charge money ... 😆

curiousyellow - Member

Aren't team building exercises thing that large corporations have stolen from start ups in the hope of replicating their success [b][u]without addressing the real problems the organisation is suffering from[/u][/b]?

SSssshhhhhh ... don't say that out loudly otherwise nobody can charge money for team building exercise and team building companies will go kaput. (*whispering* ... I may want to come up with ridiculous team building exercise to charge money, making me rich beyond belief 😆 )


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 3:02 pm
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The Apprentice had a task along these lines last series, worth watching... 😉


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 3:10 pm
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mudshark - Member

The Apprentice had a task along these lines last series, worth watching...

The Apprentice ones are shite because there is too little time to plan for outcome.

You can't simply come up with team building exercise unless you are planning for outings, which is far more relaxing and tick the corporate bureaucrat tick box form. Take few photos to justify and everyone silently agree not to rock the boat or else they would be ask for another team building session.

🙂


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 3:26 pm
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.. hunting, skinning, gutting and eating one of the under performing managers.

I was thinking maybe a design project for, I dunno, maybe a new company logo or something. Then tattoo it on the leg of one of the under performing managers.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 4:53 pm
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Highly ineffective and no long lasting mutual benefits, that's what these are.

If you are after a team, employ a team, employ a good coherent bunch who act on instinct and have the balls to call or talk to people.

I've been on many, the corporate world knows now that they are really just a waste of time and effort organising something that only the speaker and maybe one other, possibly two who invariably have just joined the company listen to. Same old hackneyed strap lines, tortuous blurb, irritating hours scratching yer bum whilst feigning attention.

Thankfully we've moved on from 1996.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 5:00 pm
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Agreed. I'm not sure if you really can build a team like that.

Best thing to do, imo, is to do it through work. Get people happy and engaged at work, and get them working with each other solving problems and using each other's skills. And chilling out when it's possible. No amount of raft building and smart arsed questions will make a difference when you're back to soul-destroying shit on your todd every day.

We often see factories on telly where the workers are a great bunch of friends and they are happy. Someone works at the same machine every day and they are asked if they enjoy their work and why. They usually say that they are happy because they are part of a team that get on well and have a laugh. Not because then went paintballing once with work.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 5:20 pm
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Think teacher training days 

I am. Got one next week. In summary openning speach by head telling us we are shit, then head of dept says we are shit go off into smaller groups and plan how to do it better with no idea how we can actually do it better.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 5:54 pm
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Teams will often go through 4 distinct phases-

Forming - The group is put together each with different skills, knowledge, aptitude and experience.

Storming - A lot of conflict arises due to the group members individual differences and opinions.

Norming - Individual differences become 'normalised' and accepted within the group.

Performing - The group starts effectively woking towards the common goal. Recognising individuals differing skills as positive and actively utilising those differences to achieve the end goal.

It doesn't matter what the task is, its group dynamics that great leaders understand.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 6:00 pm
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JacksonPollock - Member

Most "leaders" know jack apart from ring fencing their own position.

😈


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 6:24 pm
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A few years ago I took my team (about 10 of us) to the Land Rover Experience at Eastnor.

Fantastic day out, very professional as you would expect and surprisingly reasonable - I think we paid less than £150 per head.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 7:05 pm
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One we organised years ago involved teams earning money to buy things for a night out in the forests of Snowdonia. A couple of teams were very rich and cocky. So when the equipment was put up for sale in an auction they gayly out bid everyone else. They got their tents, food, wine etc. A couple of the poorer teams remained focused and only bid on a couple of essential items. Corkscrews and matches. They proceeded to trade after the auction and went out into the night fully equipped and provisioned. They were laughing all the way. The rich teams had time to reflect on their arrogance.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 7:08 pm
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grtdkad - Member

A few years ago I took my team (about 10 of us) to the Land Rover Experience at Eastnor.

Fantastic day out, very professional as you would expect and surprisingly reasonable - I think we paid less than £150 per head.

I see 10 x £150 = £1,500 ... ohhh! I like. 😯


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 7:13 pm
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Yeah I know £1500 but the boys still talk about it years later. Playing in £50k / £60k bits if Land Rover/ Range Rover kit, in the way it should be, axle deep in clarts. It was great.

...and cheap-as when compared to a one-day excel course at our place costs >£200 a head.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 7:27 pm
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My lord! How much is the company being charged for?

No idea, but the motivational speaker charges around £10k and that was just 1 hour of the whole day. http://www.nmplive.co.uk/viewTalent.aspx?id=1625


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 8:16 pm
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footflaps - Member

My lord! How much is the company being charged for?

No idea, but the motivational speaker charges around £10k and that was just 1 hour of the whole day.

My lord! That much! 😯 I don't get it. I mean the list of "motivational" speakers.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:43 pm
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We've done some volunteer stuff for a hospice where a good friend of mine spent his last days, gardening and general maintainence. Track building at the mountainbike park, a sort of urban orienteering course with cafe and pub stops. All optional but with 100% attendance rate. I hate forced stuff but also like the idea of my team being removed from work and putting some personal element to what they do.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:51 pm
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10k could be very reasonable depending on the outcome of the event, being able to be part of helping a group of people to achieve their goal which may be worth 100's of thousands or more. It probably cost more to get the people into a room for a day when you take into account salary, travel etc.

Elite team sport has a lot to offer business in terms of methods and commitment. As with all lists some are good and some are bad, Alister Campbell looks over priced unless it includes some sort of boxing/fight.

In nearly 15 years I'm yet to work somewhere that couldn't have benefited from some outside help.


 
Posted : 15/04/2014 11:53 pm
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It probably cost more to get the people into a room for a day when you take into account salary, travel etc.

This. Given we have a lot of overseas sites, the transport bill will dwarf the event cost.


 
Posted : 16/04/2014 8:28 am
 DrJ
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Take the budget and put it behind a bar somewhere. This tends to work best in my experience!

Except, of course, for employees who don't drink. Or ones who already have a problem with drinking too much.


 
Posted : 16/04/2014 8:34 am

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