Teamwork Wins
The year was 1976. I was minding my own business and about to wind up a year of high school teaching and coaching. Two friends in San Antonio called and pressed me to join them in a run across America. I said no three times, but they eventually wore me down. I decided it sounded fun, I had an opening and it was a unique chance to join a team of friends for 30 days having fun and impact.
So, I jumped on a plane and three days later we ran a lap around the Alamo and headed northeast to Washington, DC … on foot (put that one in your Google map and click the walk route). For 30 days we pounded the pavement toward the nation’s capital with the goal to arrive on July 4, 1976 for the bicentennial celebration.
And even though I felt like Forrest Gump,?we made it.
On the 1600-mile trip, I learned a little bit about running and a lot about teamwork. I have been watching and advising teams for three decades, and much of what I say about teams started with what I experienced back in 1976.?
The difficulty lies not in pulling people together but in taking the most advantage of your team. Alex Pentland wrote a great article a decade ago with some practical research-based tips on how to flourish on a team.??
As for me, I’ve got seven basic principles to remember on the road to teamwork.
So what is the real value of teamwork?
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Thirty centuries ago, Solomon, the king of Israel and one of the writers of the Old Testament, wrote about the value of teamwork:
“There was a man all alone; he had neither son nor brother. There was no end to his toil… Two are better than one, because they have a good return for their work. If one falls down, his friend can help him up. But pity the man who falls and has no one to help him up. Also, if two lie down together they will keep warm. But how can one keep warm alone? Though one may be overpowered, two can defend themselves. A cord of three strands is not quickly broken.”? (Ecclesiastes 4:8-12)
The setting was rugged and the assignments were simple compared to the high-tech world we live in today. But a team is a team and the value is evident.
Conclusion?
We were a bunch of twenty-somethings who weren’t runners tackling a physical and mental challenge. A few of us might have started the run by ourselves but none of us would have finished it by ourselves. Oh, and we did finish.
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Strategic Advisor on Leadership Development and Building Collaborative Relationships that drive growth | Keynote Speaker | Author of upcoming book “Collaborative Disruption"
8 个月Very well remembered and restated. Your 7 points should be in every leader's private annual check list file to help set priorities and focus on team maintenance and development for the coming year. Blessings and thanks for sharing.