Fostering High Performance Teams with Microsoft Teams
Customer Conversations about High Performance Teams
One of the wonderful things about my job is I get to talk to a variety of customers. These discussions often have common themes. A few years ago, the main topic was about the transition to the cloud. In the last couple of years, it was how to thrive with primarily remote work. Lately, these discussions have shifted to how to best use our collaboration tools. This week, a customer told me "We want to be your best customers. How do we do it?". Of course, there is no universal playbook for every customer, but I have found some core principles resonate, so I will share them below. Here is the one slide that I use in this part of the customer discussions:
Sharing Microsoft's Current Learnings
We do have a lot of content and learning at Microsoft for a wide range of customers but there are two key resources people trying to foster high performance teams should look at:
There is a lot more on Microsoft Learn and built into our guidance inside Viva Insights but these are the two that I would encourage people to monitor regularly. Beyond that I've distilled the guidance to what I think business and IT leaders and change agents can use to address the most frequent questions succinctly:
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What to Use When – Content, Channels, Meetings - In That Order (Mostly)
This is an area with lots of opinions - and I encourage you to read them all - including ones replying to this post :-). Here is my take from reading our research, talking to hundreds of customers, learning from our custom success teams and partners, etc. There will always be a lot of collaboration technologies - from Microsoft and across the industry - and the innovation and potential overlap will continue. We have seen the easier it is to adopt these technologies (Notes, Exchange, SharePoint, Slack, Teams, etc.) the more likely it is to have "tragedy of the commons" with overload. AI is helping modern collaboration products with organization and recommendations, but still, it is much better to have an intentional approach. All this hit a breaking point during the pandemic, where there was an overuse of online meetings and growth in the number of participants because of the need for social connections and fear of missing out. While our advice isn't specific to Microsoft 365, I do think because we've integrated these collaboration tools with a consistent experience, security, search, notifications, platform, it is easier to do this with Teams. So here is what we do, I hear works best, and I recommend to customers:
Write a Simple "How We Work" Plan Together
As I was talking through this ordering of tools with our team and customers during the last several months, I realized it wasn’t enough. People could write lots of documents, create too many lists, have too many channels, have too many meetings, etc. We saw that internally and externally. As I mentioned earlier, the simpler cloud collaboration tools get in the industry, the more information is created – and the more overloaded people feel. After working on this space for a while, I realized all the adoption guidance on specific tools and features wasn’t enough. Each workgroup needed a simple plan that is well socialized on how they were going to work together. For a small company, this could be a single plan. For most medium-large sized organizations, you may need a plan at every couple of levels of scope. But it is important to write it down – what are the content, channels, and meetings that the team will use.
In our team, we update "how we work" in about 1-2 pages as part of our fiscal year plan that goes through a brainstorming, socialization, and closure process for a few weeks at all levels of the organization. We publish the plan and on our SharePoint team site including the key content (semester plan, status updates, Azure Dev Ops, OKRs, etc.) and meetings (experience, architecture, business reviews, etc.). We discuss and decide our norms. When is something appropriate to put on a list for our weekly meeting vs. deal with immediately as an ad-hoc thread? When should we have an emergency review vs. put as a topic in our monthly business review? Should we have a “No Meetings Friday”? How many people should go to what meeting? These are all judgement issues and putting some structure around “how we work” is far better than having it be all organic. Write it down. Keep it short. Get a few rounds of feedback before publishing.
Promote Change Agents and Storytelling
At first, I hesitated to publish this because it felt a bit obvious, but enough customers told me this simple framework for getting started was helpful enough that I decided to post it - and learn from the feedback. This is of course a change and change is hard. And change needs a change agent. And change can’t just be because some new technology is cool (and apologies for the times we fall into this trap). I would encourage you to be a change agent in your organization. Work with your team, in your language to write a short plan for how you work and what benefits you expect to get out of it – both for the output of the team and the sustainability for each member of the group. What are the key documents, lists, channels, and meetings you really need? How will you measure and celebrate success? Don’t be overly ambitious – try a few things, build momentum, and incorporate feedback until you can get on a yearly cycle of revisiting it as we do. Work to drive this across multiple organizations in your company sharing best practices, celebrating success, and creating a "collaboration center of excellence" that has the motivation to seek out innovative approaches and capabilities and share broadly the benefits. I know a lot of our biggest progress as a team came when we listened and learned from alternative approaches - not just inside but outside Microsoft as well.
Learning Together at Microsoft Ignite and Beyond
I hope you find this helpful in improving the productivity and satisfaction across your organization and for every member of your team. I look forward to reading the comments on this as well as getting your feedback on our next wave of updates. We'll share more at our Microsoft Ignite Conference in October including the latest news across Microsoft 365 including Microsoft Teams, SharePoint, and Viva that we have designed based on working with customers around the world to make it easier than ever to foster high performance teams. Let's keep learning together.
Chief Marketing Officer | Product MVP Expert | Cyber Security Enthusiast | @ GITEX DUBAI in October
1 年Jeff, thanks for sharing!
Chief Scientist & Co-Founder, SWOOP Analytics | Organizational Radiologist | Social and Collaboration Analytics Specialist | Social Business Evangelist|
1 年I would like to see how high performance teams overlap/connect with other high performance teams. Also the role Yammer and Viva Engage play in their performance. Our current in progress SWOOP Yammer benchmarking study looks at high performing leaders who sustain reciprocated relationships on Yammer and Teams channels while sharing content in SharePoint….we are definitely seeing some leading team practices (mainly with consultancies) forming across these tool sets.
ICT Engineer / Business Analyst Swisscom
1 年A timely post for me Jeff. We were having this conversation with our champions group today. Something we need to revisit and push home about the what to use when and how we work plan. This gives me a good starting point for how we will communicate it this time around so it sticks.