Table of contents
When it comes to organizational health, building a cohesive leadership team is the first and most important thing to tackle.
1. Personal and professional highlights
Before diving into the thick of it, start the day going around the table sharing a personal and professional highlight from the past quarter or month. I often do a quick centering exercise for everyone to arrive mentally in the room.
2. Intention and outcomes
Set your intention and desired outcome and share it with the other team members - you will see, most likely everyone is looking to resolve a similar situation and is eager to get alignment.
3. Ground rules
Establishing some basic rules for the day will help get people into the right mindset. Here, some things to remember:
4. The 5 Dysfunctions of a team - model
If you are not familiar with Patrick Lencioni and his books The Advantage and The 5 Dysfunctions of a Team, I highly recommend having your team read them to get a common understanding of his methodology. Many issues can be avoided by using the principles he teaches. Take 15 minutes to go over the model below to gain a general overview of the 5 Dysfunctions and how they build on each other.
The 5 Dysfunctions of a team PDF summary
This means CEOs need to:
5. Trust exercise
Starting with the first and most important dysfunction - absence of trust - go around the table and let each person share their answers to the following questions:
6. Personal history
Working together unfortunately does not mean knowing each other on a deeper level. Building trust is a matter of being open and vulnerable with each other, understanding each other’s past both personally and professionally. Take 5 minutes to answer the following questions and let everyone share them with the team.
7. Myers Briggs review
No matter if executives have worked together for a decade or only a few months - knowing each other’s differences, preferences, personality, and leadership styles is not a given. Before the full-day workshop, let your team take the Myers Briggs personality test. During the session, allow 10 minutes to summarize their results, and share their profile highlights in a nutshell.
8. Personal plan
The last exercise to build more trust between each other, is to get everyone to share their goals and future plans. Knowing what people are working towards, can be a great indicator for understanding their motivations and point of view in a conflicted situation. It develops empathy for each other. Go around the table and have everyone share their answers to the following questions. If you want to go deeper on this, do the Wheel of Life exercise.
Lunch - 45 min
9. Conflict profiling
10. Conflict discussion
Each team member gives their input, perspective AND suggested solution on the issue (which serves the greater good of the team and company). Take your time with this exercise and embrace conflict. Get it all out on the table - don’t hold back.
“Teams that lack trust often have destructive arguments because they are laced with politics, pride, and competition, rather than humble pursuit of truth. When people who don’t trust one another engage in passionate debate, they are trying to win the argument.” - Patrick Lencioni.
11. Commitment clarity
After everyone shares their perspective, frustrations and wants, summarize the commitment you make as a team, even if not everyone agrees on the decision.
Note to the CEO: “Good leaders drive commitment among the team by first extracting every possible idea, opinion, and perspective from the team. Then, comfortable that nothing has been left off the table, they must have the courage and wisdom to step up and make a decision.”
Break (30 min)
“ Accountability is the willingness of team members to remind one another when they are not living up to the performance standards of the group.” - Patrick Lencioni. Hold each other to a higher standard - by first agreeing what exactly that standard looks like.
12. Feedback (behavior accountability)
Answer the following questions about each member of the team other than yourself. Starting with the team leader in the hot seat, let everyone share their answers (in two rounds).
Round 1: What is that person's single most important behavioral quality or characteristic that contributes to the strength of the team? (Their strength)
Round 2: What is that person's single most important behavioral quality or characteristic that detracts from the strength of the team? (Their weakness or problematic behavior)
While listening to everyone’s feedback, let people take notes on what they are surprised about and 1-3 behavioral changes they are willing to commit to. Make a list and review regularly during team meetings.
13. Responsibility Scorecards (performance accountability)
It’s surprising to see how many executives lack clarity on their responsibilities and how to measure their individual performance. This can be very dangerous since CEOs tend to appreciate the work of those who have a more tangible impact on company performance - leaving the others frustrated. Make sure each leader (and employees across the entire organization) has a one-page responsibility scorecard with the following components:
Note: Update Scorecards on a quarterly basis (or more frequently, depending on the growth rate of your company).
14. Results section
The result section really depends on what issue you tackled earlier. In this specific case, the client wanted to get clarity and buy-in on their org chart. A team might want to focus on achieving strategic clarity and alignment, people or culture issues, non-executive board efficacy, internal communication, processes, leadership development… anything important, really.
15. Who, What, When summary
Who will do what until when? What are your action steps from all the exercises? I recommend a recurring meeting to follow up and stay on track. Finding 2h monthly / bi-weekly to stay aligned, resolve important issues and strengthen team #1 can be an absolute game changer for many companies - especially as you scale.
16. Cascading communication
What will you tell your team about outcomes, changes, and action steps before the end of the week?
As I mentioned in the beginning, there is not one right way of facilitating this workshop. Depending on your needs, spend as much time as you see fit on each of the 5 Dysfunctions, expand on certain topics or skip some of the exercises - even though you might be surprised how impactful they are. If you have any questions or comments, feel free to reach out at katy@katytrost.com.
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