A sports organization cannot win a championship without the individuals functioning together as a closely knit unit. The New York Yankees have demonstrated repeatedly that attracting top talent with the largest payroll in Major League Baseball doesn’t guarantee them a World Championship Series. A symphony’s success depends entirely on the ability of the various instrumentalists executing together in a manner of near perfection. In the military, soldiers live by a strict adherence to rules and teamwork. In businesses in Kelowna and across Canada, individuals, departments, and divisions must work together in order to achieve the company’s core objectives and succeed in an ever-increasing competitive environment.
A winning team has certain characteristics that allow the individual members to function more efficiently and productively. Developing and implementing an effective team strategy is of the utmost significance for any organization. This is the job of capable leaders, managers, and supervisors. The days of dictatorial or autocratic management are gone and thank goodness for that. Instead, leaders, managers, and supervisors today, must possess the coaching skills required to bring their cohorts together in a spirit of cooperation and achievement. Failing to do so can have disastrous consequences. Think of what happens in the above-mentioned examples when teamwork fails: sports teams lose championships and afterwards comment that they just didn’t play as a team that day; a symphony ends up sounding like a high school band; in military conflict, soldiers die; in business, companies lose market share and lay off employees as they contract, or worse still, cease to exist!There are several ways in which leaders, managers, and supervisors in Kelowna and across Canada can help staff members become a strong team at different levels throughout any organization:
- Establish clearly defined performance outcomes: Ensure all team members clearly understand their roles, the targeted outcomes, what actions are needed to achieve them, and the time frames associated with the outcomes. The outcomes must tie into the company’s Vision, Mission, and Goals, and must tie into a system of rewards.
- Explain the rules of the game: Promote individual and team responsibility and accountability, for achieving specific outcomes and to solve problems as a team. Discuss all norms and standards for performance. Encourage personal accountability. Discourage blame, excuses and denial.
- Encourage innovation and communication: Promote staff suggestions for new ways to improve services and deliver on the company’s core promises. Listen to their ideas and acknowledge their points of view. Encourage team members to discuss issues and to find solutions together.
- Organize meetings: Establish regular, productive meetings with specific outcomes to be achieved and set defined time limits for all meetings. Avoid using meetings purely for the purpose of dumping data on the participants. ‘Data dumps’ can be achieved through email without wasting everyone’s precious time.
- Manage the system, not the people: The system, which is organized around the company’s common goal, its purpose, its strategic objective, engages people in this common cause. Recognize that you can’t manage people but only the system – the process through which people produce results!
When building a team, you have to first look at these essential components. There must be a certain level of trust and empathy among all team members. The trust factor determines the success or failure of any team and the level of teamwork. In order to build a successful team, leaders, managers, or supervisors must be able to develop cohesion within it by instilling trust through creating a transparent working environment. Thinking out of the box to create an innovative work environment that nurtures and develops teamwork is a big challenge to tackle. But in the process, it can shape many careers and enhance the company’s culture. Team building is a long-term affair. And a good team builder should be a good team member first!
For more information on building your exit strategy or business coaching in general, contact Clint Best at Kaizen Business Development, in Kelowna, BC, Canada 250.860.0466 or visit http://www.kaizenbusinessdevelopment.com/





