Could You Have Your Dream Job Now? It’s Easier Than You Might Think

 

 June 10, 2019

Could You Have Your Dream Job Now? It’s Easier Than You Might Think

Sadly, most of us are not satisfied with our jobs. According to a recent study by the Conference Board, only 45% of us like our jobs, down from 60% in 1987. There’s a popular theory that dream jobs require discovery; if you’re lucky you find the job that makes your heart sing. Most people, however, don’t manage this feat.

For the rest of you, consider the work of Amy Wrzesniewski, a Professor of Organizational Behavior at the Yale School of Management at Yale University. She’s studied what does or does not make people feel fulfilled at work and argues that most of us can engage in what she calls “job crafting”, the ability to tailor our job so that it creates more satisfaction – with or without the organization’s support.

She studied a hospital cleaning staff, for example, and found that both their level of satisfaction and how they defined their roles varied wildly. Some staff defined themselves as “cleaners” while others considered themselves “ambassadors”, or even “healers.”

What Should You Do?

If you want to change how you or your staff feels about work, Wrzesniewski suggests the following:

Think about what part of your work you enjoy and how it contributes to the world. What tasks give you the most satisfaction? How does any of your work contribute? The cleaners in her study, for example, went above and beyond their job descriptions by interacting with patients and their families, noticing if someone seemed sad or had no visitors, and reporting those findings to nurses or doctors.

Redefine your relationship with others. Work relationships can be the source of our greatest joy or the most frustration. Almost everyone, however, can find a way to improve relationships at work, spend less time with those they loathe or forge new friendships with people who seem interesting or fun. The most fulfilled cleaning staff, for example, loved being a part of a team and developed deep relationships with doctors and nurses.

Reframe the way you think about your job description. Cleaners who saw themselves as “healers” found the most satisfaction in their work.

What Do You Think?

Have you been able to change the way you find satisfaction at work? Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

Did You Know

All of our leadership and management classes consider how to help those you lead find meaning and satisfaction at work.

Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

Learn more about our training offerings and check out our team members at:  www.workplacesthatwork.com

Read Lynne’s book Stop Pissing Me Off! What to Do When the People You Work With Drive You Crazy

Workplaces That Work | (303) 216-1020 | lynne@workplacesthatwork.com
3985 Wonderland Hill | Suite 106 | Boulder, CO 80304

The Best Four Steps to Reduce Your Own Anger

 

 May 28, 2019

The Best Four Steps to Reduce Your Own Anger

What if you’re angry? I’ve written before about dealing with angry, bullying or condescending people, but what if you’re the one who’s angry at work?

Accept that difficult people work everywhere: Even on a good day, I’m sure you can name at least one difficult person at work. On a bad day you can probably rattle off four or five without even pausing. Be they slackers, sneaks, liars, tyrants, boors, bullies, wimps, whiners, workaholics, or everyday incompetents, you’ve got your hands full with people who are making it difficult for you to do your job well and stay sane. How do you move from pissed off to powerful?

What Should You Do?

Accept that suppression usually doesn’t work. My favorite Emerson quote is: “who you are speaks so loudly I can’t hear a word you’re saying.” People may not know you’re angry but you will feel worse and hurt the relationship. Unless you’re Meryl Streep, your staff or co-workers will know SOMETHING is wrong.

Don’t vent. Communication is good, but research has shown that venting just increases anger. Find a way to distract yourself instead. Listen to your favorite song, solve a crossword puzzle, take a walk and smell the flowers.

Understand that reappraisal does work. What’s reappraisal? Psychologists may call it reframing. Basically, reappraisal involves telling yourself a different story about the situation and giving what happened a different meaning.

If a new staff member missed a deadline, for example, tell yourself that they must have had a good excuse this time and that they will do better in the future as they understand your rules. Tons of research has shown that reappraisal will make you less angry.

For example, in the Handbook of Emotion Regulation:

Experimental studies have shown that reappraisal leads to decreased levels of negative emotion experience and increased positive emotion experience (Gross, 1998a; Feinberg, Willer, Antonenko, & John, 2012; Lieberman, Inagaki, Tabibnia, & Crockett, 2011; Ray, McRae, Ochsner, & Gross, 2010; Szasz, Szentagotai, & Hofmann, 2011; Wolgast, Lundh, & Viborg, 2011), has no impact on or even decreases sympathetic nervous system responses (Gross, 1998a; Kim & Hamann, 2012; Stemmler, 1997; Shiota & Levenson, 2012; Wolgast et al., 2011), and leads to lesser activation in emotion-generative brain regions such as the amygdala (Goldin et al., 2008; Kanske, Heissler, Schonfelder, Bongers, & Wessa, 2011; Ochsner & Gross, 2008; Ochsner et al., 2004) and ventral striatum (Staudinger, Erk, Abler, & Walter, 2009).

  1. Try forgiveness. Whether you rely on a religious framework or science, forgiveness can make you happier and less angry.

But don’t accept abuse or poor performance! Of course, none of this means that you should accept poor performance, mistreatment, bullying, discrimination or harassment at work. If you’re involved in any of these situations, you may need to manage someone’s performance, file a complaint or even leave the organization. Yet it’s easy to make the wrong decision about what you should do in a bad situation when you’re angry. Use the steps above to calm down and then decide on the best course of action.

What Do You Think?

How do you deal with your own anger at work? Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

Did You Know

We deal with anger – your own and others – in all our management and leadership courses.
Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

Learn more about our training offerings and check out our team members at:  www.workplacesthatwork.com

Read Lynne’s book Stop Pissing Me Off! What to Do When the People You Work With Drive You Crazy

Workplaces That Work | (303) 216-1020 | lynne@workplacesthatwork.com
3985 Wonderland Hill | Suite 106 | Boulder, CO 80304

Lean Back? Are Most Male Managers Now Afraid to Mentor Women? 

 

 May 20, 2019

Lean Back? Are Most Male Managers Now Afraid to Mentor Women?

Good News/Bad News: The good news is that most companies are now taking sexual harassment and discrimination more seriously. The bad news is that “60 percent of male managers say they are uncomfortable mentoring, socializing or having one-on-one chats with women. That number is 14 points higher than last year,” according to a recent survey by LeanIn.org and Survey Monkey.

The Paranoia Problem: Since most leaders are still men, this kind of paranoia severely limits the advancement of women. Mentoring is the way that people learn what I call “unwritten rules”. If men are afraid to mentor women — most likely out of the backlash from #METOO — women won’t know what those rules might be. All organizations have unwritten rules. They couldn’t write everything down or the rule book would be 1,000 pages long. If you walk into a conference room, for example, and don’t know that a certain chair belongs to the leader, sitting in that chair could be a huge faux pas. A small example, of course, but these kinds of “insider rules” add up if you don’t know about them.

Not harassing is not enough. We need men to support women’s careers. That’s how we’ll achieve a workplace that is truly equal for all.

– Sheryl Sandberg, COO, Facebook and LeanIn.org founder
– Marc Pritchard, Chief Brand Officer, Proctor & Gamble

The Discrimination Claim: I’ve found that many leaders in our sessions or executive coaching don’t understand that if they conduct informal mentoring meetings for men, they’re engaging in discrimination if they ignore those sessions for women. In addition, if there’s been a previous claim of discrimination, backing away from women could result in retaliation claims.

What Should You Do?
EDUCATE LEADERS:  Make sure that they understand that treating men and women differently because of their own fear is discrimination and potentially, retaliation.

CHANGE TRAINING AND EXECUTIVE COACHING SESSIONS:
When you conduct workshops or executive coaching on sexual harassment and discrimination, make sure that you include how appropriate mentoring should work with both men and women.

MAKE MENTORING A PART OF PERFORMANCE EVALUATIONS FOR MANAGERS:  Many leaders have advanced because of technical skills, not their ability to mentor and coach their staff. Include evaluations concerning these skills. Make even-handed mentoring matter.

What Do You Think?
Have you noticed an uptick in male leader’s reluctance to mentor women in the last year? Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

Did You Know
All our management and leadership workshops and coaching include modules on mentoring and coaching, including how to be fair to both men and women.
Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

Learn more about our training offerings and check out our team members at:  www.workplacesthatwork.com

 

Be sure to read Lynne’s book on sexual harassment. 

Workplaces That Work | (303) 216-1020 | lynne@workplacesthatwork.com
3985 Wonderland Hill | Suite 106 | Boulder, CO 80304

Why Make Sure Your People Are Happy at Work?

 May 13, 2019

Why Make Sure Your People Are Happy at Work?

Worthy Work:  I attended the memorial service for a good friend’s father recently and was moved by the recitation of his significant life. He was a force in the drive for African independence, an author of numerous books, a respected professor and tireless advocate for civil rights. Clearly, he lived a worthwhile life and worked with purpose and engagement.

Most Workers Are Disengaged:  Sadly, most of us are not so lucky. Gallup studies consistently show that only 30% of workers report being engaged with their work, while one in five are actively disengaged, practicing backstabbing and sabotage.

Why Happiness Matters:  Studies consistently show that happier workers are more productive, interact more effectively with customers and stay with one employer longer.

What Should You Do?
Research shows that three things lead to greater happiness at work.

1) Vision: If people see a vision for the future and know how they fit into the vision of the organization, they are happier. Make sure that your staff knows both your strategy, as well as where they fit.

2) Sense of Purpose: Most people want to feel as if their work matters and that their contribution helped achieve some significant goal. As a leader, take the time to acknowledge the way in which individual people helped achieve something important.

3) Great Relationships: The old rubric is true: people join organizations and leave bosses. Do whatever it takes to create good relationships with your staff and make sure that you don’t ignore simmering conflicts among your people. You can send them to conflict or emotional intelligence training if they need that help, mediate disputes, offer them books or downloads on people skills, but emphasize that playing well with others is in their job description. One way or another they need to gain good relationship skills and if they can’t, you need to move them out of the organization.

What Do You Think? 

Are happier workers more productive? Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

Did You Know

We cover the relationship between happiness at work and productivity in all of our management and leadership classes.
Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

Learn more about our training offerings and check out our team members at:
www.workplacesthatwork.com

 

Be sure to read Lynne’s book “The Power of a Good Fight”
and learn to embrace conflict to drive productivity, creativity and innovation.

Workplaces That Work | (303) 216-1020 | lynne@workplacesthatwork.com
3985 Wonderland Hill | Suite 106 | Boulder, CO 80304

How Should Leaders View the Stewards’ Tough Call at the Kentucky Derby?

 May 6, 2019

How Should Leaders View the Stewards’ Tough Call at the Kentucky Derby? 

The generally backfield sports’ world of horse racing grabbed the headlines on Saturday when the racing stewards disqualified Maximum Security. The “baby” horse (as his jockey Luis Saez described him), crossed the finish line first but after reviewing the tapes for twenty minutes, the stewards ruled that he jumped a puddle on the rain-soaked track. Maximum Security blocked his rival, War of Will, and the technical winner finished one and three-quarters of a length in front of the long-shot, Country House, (65-1 odds), who the stewards bravely called the winner.

Not a popular decision since the Derby — running since 1875 — has only disqualified one horse in 1968 for a banned substance in the horse’s blood.  Here’s what I wondered. Did gender play a role in the decision making?

 WHO IS BARBARA BORDEN?

The chief steward, Barbara Borden, was a no-nonsense racing veteran who worked her way up after laboring as a groom, exercise rider and pony person. She then served for seven years completing charts for the Form and then worked at the licensing department as a sample technician and assistant horse identifier. In Borden’s current position, she beat out 20 applicants, to become one of the rare women to serve as a steward.

ARE WOMEN MORE LIKELY TO BE WHISTLEBLOWERS?

Some experts certainly think so.  Consider, for example, the Enron, Kerr-McGee and Citigroup whistleblowers, all of whom were women. The argument is that women see the downside of risk, while men see the upside. In addition, some experts suggest, women have the “motherhood gene” and are prone to protect the powerless. (Not that I would necessarily agree with this gender stereotype!) And, let’s face it, while we’ve made progress in promoting women to top positions in corporate America, women are still outsiders, and research shows that outliers are the ones more likely to raise red flags.

What Should You Do?

Respect whistleblowers:  Rabble-rousers, of course, come in all genders, shapes and sizes but whatever their form, as a leader, you need to respect them. Don’t pass judgment on their complaints but pass their concerns onto the appropriate expert: HR, legal or security.
Remain neutral:  If there’s an investigation, your job is to remain neutral. Cooperate — if you’re asked to be interviewed – and make sure that your staff is available to participate. You should also police any gossip.
Understand errors:  Whistleblowers have a right to make mistakes about their allegations, although they don’t have a right to lie or make up misdeeds.
Educate yourself:  Learn about whistleblowing laws. There are many state and federal statutes that protect whistleblowers and provide fines, private rights of actions and even criminal sanctions in some instances, if whistleblowers are not protected. Read my Monday Memo regarding whistleblowers.

What Do You Think? 

Why do you think we’re still dealing with this topic? Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

Did You Know

OWe can include your role in managing whistleblowing in all our management and leadership workshops and coaching.

Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

Learn more about our training offerings and check out our team members at:
www.workplacesthatwork.com

 

Be sure to read Lynne’s book “We Need to Talk — Tough Conversations with Your Employee”

and learn how to tackle any topic with sensitivity and smarts.

Workplaces That Work | (303) 216-1020 | lynne@workplacesthatwork.com
3985 Wonderland Hill | Suite 106 | Boulder, CO 80304

Does Training Stir Up Old Issues or Prevent New Ones?

 April 29, 2019

Does Training Stir Up Old Issues or Prevent New Ones? 

 

I frequently advise new clients that they want to receive complaints about workplace issues. They’re resistant to this idea. “Lynne, I have enough complaints!” they will frequently assert. “I don’t need new ones.”


Why Complaints Are a Good Thing.  
We teach that you need to have a “complaint friendly” environment. Trust me, you don’t want to have the first notice of some messy issue to be the subpoena that lands on your desk. Instead, you want to know what’s going on with your people, practice what Tom Peters called “management by walking around”, and make sure that you’ve advised your staff that they can come to you with any concerns. This is especially true, of course, with hot button issues such as harassment and discrimination.

 Why Training is Essential After an Investigation.   Frequently, if you’ve been through a messy investigation, you just want everyone to take a deep breath and move on. The last thing you want to do is “stir up old issues.” The problem with this tack is that the old issues are probably still out there, particularly if you haven’t taken any steps to do what I call “Team Rebuilding” after an investigation. Read my Monday Memo “Do You Know How and Why to do Team Building After an Investigation“. During investigations rumors abound, staff takes sides and you’re likely to stir up simmering disputes of which you have no knowledge. The smart move is to surface all this noise and address the issues head on.

Does Training Create New Issues?   In my experience, no. What training does is provide people with an appropriate outlet for their complaints. These latent issues may arise during the session itself or after the program is over. This can lead managers to lament that the training created the new issues. Again, these problems were there before and it’s much better that you know about concerns so you can address them with internal resources, rather than pushing people to run to outside agencies or attorneys.

What Should You Do?

  • Training After Complaints:  In most cases, you do need to conduct new training after a complaint. Even if you believe that you’ve offered these sessions before, reviews never hurt.
  • Address Rumors:  Either during or after the session, you need to make sure that you surface any pending rumors and provide a sanitized version of the facts. Confidentiality and defamation should also be explained to squash gossip.
  • Be Prepared for New Complaints:  In the session, make sure that attendees know your complaint procedure and that they have multiple sources they can access for complaints. You may have a slight blip after the training, but these will decrease after a time and the complaint trends will move downward.

What Do You Think? 

What’s your experience conducting or assessing workplace investigations? Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

 

Did You Know

All our sessions on discrimination and harassment address proper complaint avenues and procedures, as well as squashing rumors and preventing gossip.

Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

Learn more about our training offerings and check out our team members at:
www.workplacesthatwork.com

 

Be sure to read Lynne’s books on Affirmative Action and Sexual Harassment

Workplaces That Work | (303) 216-1020 | lynne@workplacesthatwork.com
3985 Wonderland Hill | Suite 106 | Boulder, CO 80304

Do You Know What the Mueller Report Has to do With You? What Are Investigations Supposed to Accomplish?

 April 22, 2019

Do You Know What the Mueller Report Has to do With You? What Are Investigations Supposed to Accomplish? 

 

Not to put too lawyerly a point on the issue, but in most situations, investigations are only supposed to find the facts.

When I’m tasked with conducting workplace investigations, for example, I’m usually asked to try to find out what happened: who, what, where and when, as opposed to recommending any action. In a few situations, I’ve been asked what I would recommend that the client do to rectify what’s happened. But most of the time, I’m simply sent into a situation to dig into the client’s conundrum.

“I’m usually asked to try to find out what happened:
who, what, where and when, as opposed to recommending any action.”

WHAT WAS MUELLER ASKED TO DO?  While reasonable minds could differ about the scope of his assignment, most would agree that his purpose was to find out what happened with the alleged Russian interference with our 2016 presidential election. While we all may disagree with his methods or results, Mueller has provided over 400 pages that detail his findings and attempt to resolve that mystery.

WHAT’S NOT MY JOB?  Investigations should be thorough, neutral, fair, and respectful to everyone involved. A good investigator does not start out to prove a specific finding, but to solve a puzzle, to the best of their ability. Of course, investigators are human and may make mistakes, but we should do everything possible to avoid the appearance of bias.

I was involved in one workplace investigation, for example, where the alleged wrongdoer objected to my conducting a second interview with them. I frequently need to do so because I have conflicting statements from other witnesses and want to be fair to the person against whom claims have been filed and want to give them a chance to respond to new allegations. Generally, they appreciate the opportunity. In this situation, however, the alleged wrongdoer was incensed, attacking me as biased and stating that: “You’re doing everything you can to get me fired!” I responded that was not my job and that I simply was trying to ferret out the facts to give everyone an opportunity to explain their version of what occurred.

What Should You Do?

  • HIRE A TRAINED, EXPERIENCED AND NEUTRAL INVESTIGATOR: Of course, in some situations, it may make sense to charge someone within your organization with this job. But if the situation is at all dicey, or involves someone high up in the organization, the best course of action is to bring in someone from the outside. The appearance of a conflict creates too great a risk that the investigation will appear to be tainted.
  • STAY NEUTRAL: The employers’ job in workplace investigations is to remain neutral. Don’t prejudge the situation or express any opinion as to what the facts might be. Make sure that those you lead do the same and that they don’t gossip or discuss the situation. Many times, this can be challenging because these situations are frequently juicy and people want to talk, talk, talk. Make sure that they don’t, and impose consequences if they do.
  • OBTAIN AN ORAL REPORT FIRST: I almost always offer an oral report to the client before we put anything in writing. Not because I would change the result based on what anyone says, but because they may point out something that I’ve forgotten to consider or suggest additional witnesses.
  • For more information about about conducting thorough, neutral, fair, and respectful investigations read the following Monday Memos:
  •  

    Do You Know How and Why to do Team Building After an Investigation?

    Important News About Confidentiality in Workplace Investigations

    Bryan Williams’ Investigation and How To Do Investigations Right

What Do You Think? 

What’s your experience conducting or assessing workplace investigations? Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

 

Did You Know

In addition to conducting workplace investigations, we train investigators and consult on pending investigations.

Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

Learn more about our training offerings and check out our team members at:

www.workplacesthatwork.com

Be sure to read Lynne’s book “We Need to Talk – Tough Conversations with Your Employee”  that covers everything from performance reviews to terminations. 

Workplaces That Work | (303) 216-1020 | lynne@workplacesthatwork.com
3985 Wonderland Hill | Suite 106 | Boulder, CO 80304

Do You Know How Leaders Should Lead Through Biden, the #MeToo Movement and all the Rest of the Noise?

 April 15, 2019

Do You Know How Leaders Should Lead Through Biden, the #MeToo Movement and all the Rest of the Noise?

It’s been a year, hasn’t it? Most of the leaders we work with find their heads swimming these days trying to lead through the current upset over what’s in the news, #MeToo-type allegations, and daily concerns popping up from their own staff.

If there is one thing I have realized, however, from working with this subject for many years, it’s that leaders need to LEAD on issues of respect and civility, not just delegate the issue to someone in HR. One of the reasons we are still trying to manage these kinds of allegations is because we have lacked commitment from the top to move people to do the right thing.

Of course, there is much ado about whether things have gone too far, especially with the media abuzz over recent allegations against Biden. Is sniffing someone’s hair harassment? Touching someone on the shoulder? Do you and your staff know how to answer these questions?

Yet when we work with all kinds of groups – from factory workers to executives – everyone agrees that they want to be respected and that civility makes work more pleasant. There may be some grousing about laws and policies governing respect and civility taking all the fun out of the workplace, but when we point out that there are still countless things to make jokes about – just not those concerning race, gender, sexual orientation and so on – few continue to argue.

What Should You Do?

  • Leaders Should Lead: On this, as on most issues, nothing works right unless there is effective leadership from the top. Prioritize civil behavior and make sure everyone knows that is what you expect. Let your staff know that you will support and fund necessary policies, training, discipline, and the like.
  • Review the Basics: Repetition, repetition, repetition seems to be required for your staff to really understand and practice what’s important on this topic.
  • Model What You Expect: Everything else will be pointless unless your own behavior is impeccable.
  • Make Sure That People Understand Power Imbalances: Your staff may be able to speak up to a colleague about certain behavior, yet stand numb in shock if they receive the same behavior from someone in the C-Suite.

What Do You Think? 

Why do you think we’re still dealing with this topic? Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

 

Did You Know

Our sessions on civility and respect start with consulting top leadership to make certain they are behind what we are suggesting. Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

Learn more about our training offerings and check out our team members at:
www.workplacesthatwork.com

Be sure to read Lynne’s books on sexual harassment and affirmative action.

Workplaces That Work | (303) 216-1020 | lynne@workplacesthatwork.com
3985 Wonderland Hill | Suite 106 | Boulder, CO 80304

Do You Know Why Micromanagement is Bad for You as Well as Your Staff?

 April 8, 2019

Do You Know Why Micromanagement is Bad for You as Well as Your Staff?

 

I have written about micromanagement before and how crazy-making it can be for employees in my Monday Memo entitled: How to Manage a Micromanager: What NOT to Do

The truth is, however, that it is also bad for you as a leader because:

  • If you are micromanaging you will not have time for your most important jobs. You have too much to do as a leader to do everyone else’s job in addition to yours.
  • If you are micromanaging, you do not have the right people in the right jobs. Fix this problem, instead of procrastinating on managing performance or terminating hopeless performers. Read how in

Micromanagement or Leadership? What Do You Choose?

  • If you are micromanaging, you are vulnerable to burnout. Taking on too much work eventually takes a toll. Focus instead on making sure that you have the right people in the right jobs. This work will be a much better use of your time.

What Should You Do?

Assess whether you are spending your time as a leader in the right ways by asking yourself:

  • Do I accept feedback from employees?
  • Am I allotting resources for employees?
  • Am I spending enough time assessing employee strengths and weaknesses?
  • Am I clearly defining expectations?
  • Am I regularly evaluating employee performance?
  • Do I make sure to give my staff clearly defined and measurable outcomes?
  • Have I matched each task to the right employee?
  • Have I communicated clear expectations about my priorities?
  • Do I set reasonable expectations?
  • Have I encouraged and defined teamwork?
  • Do I provide the right kind of training and support for each job?

These are all ways that good leaders lead. If you are doing these tasks, you should not have time for micromanagement.

What Do You Think? 
How do you avoid micromanagement while still ensuring quality work? Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

 

Did You Know

We cover these leadership skills and more in all our leadership workshops. Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

Learn more about our training offerings and check out our team members at: www.workplacesthatwork.com

Be sure to read Lynne’s book “We Need to Talk — Tough Conversations with Your Employee”  and learn to tackle any topic with sensitivity and smarts.

Workplaces That Work | (303) 216-1020 | lynne@workplacesthatwork.com
3985 Wonderland Hill | Suite 106 | Boulder, CO 80304

What’s the Best Way to Open a Retreat or Team Building? Use My “Highs” & “Lows” Exercise

 April 1, 2019

What’s the Best Way to Open a Retreat or Team Building? Use My “Highs” & “Lows” Exercise

 

Most of us, when we are planning a retreat or team building that we know will be challenging, struggle to come up with an opening exercise that’s not too corny, too serious, or too scary for the participants. Frequently, your group may arrive with low expectations and perhaps even annoyance that they are required to participate in what they view as a pointless exercise.

In my experience, the best way to overcome these initial objections and encourage the group to start to talk is to use my “highs” and “lows” exercise. It’s a way to encourage a group to be vulnerable yet not send them screaming out of the room.

What Should You Do?

First:  Prepare and place a large chart on the wall with a timeline and important dates for your organization. Make it long and fairly narrow. Possible dates include when your group was founded, any significant mergers and

acquisitions, when the organization went public, when new leaders came on board, or the start of growth spurts. What date did you start at ABC group?

Next:  Have each person detail the following:

  • Recall a significant high point from your time at ABC group?
  • Recall a low point.
  • Place your high and low on the group’s time line.
  • Tell your stories to the group.
  • What trends do you see in your group?

Give clear instructions:  Make sure that you tell the group that they need to be laser focused in their delivery. Sometimes I even appoint a timekeeper so that we stay on track. Additional ground rules are that no one is allowed to critique or tease the speaker during or after their presentation. Also, encourage the speakers to be courageous about what they share, but emphasize that they are not required to share anything that makes them feel too vulnerable.

As a facilitator:  Your job is to acknowledge each speaker, keep everyone within the time set for this exercise and let the group know before and after that you realize that this exercise might be challenging but that you believe it will be worth the risk. This endeavor will help open the retreat or team building with stories that keep everyone engaged and encourage a deeper and more honest level of sharing throughout the day.

I have conducted this opener with cynical attorneys, engineers who don’t like speaking in public, and chatty nurses and they have all raved about the results. Frequently, they learn things about their colleagues that they had no other way of knowing and they create more connected and collaborative relationships going forward.

To learn about one particularly interesting team building method the Harvard Business School has determined is highly effective check out my Monday Memo — Cooking and Eating: Team Building That Really Works! 

What Do You Think? 
Do you have an exercise that is useful in these situations? Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

 

Did You Know

We consistently receive great feedback from our participants in our management and leadership retreats and team building.

Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

Learn more about our training offerings and check out our team members at:

www.workplacesthatwork.com

 

Be sure to read Lynne’s book “The Power of a Good Fight”  and learn to embrace conflict to drive productivity, creativity and innovation.

Workplaces That Work | (303) 216-1020 | lynne@workplacesthatwork.com
3985 Wonderland Hill | Suite 106 | Boulder, CO 80304