What is a High-Performing Team, and How Are They Created?
Trust dial

What is a High-Performing Team, and How Are They Created?

A client asked me a good question the other day: “what’s the real difference between a high-performing team and any other team.”

For me, a key factor is the quality of the work that team members do when they are working together. And the bulk of that work is done in meetings.

So what do high-performing teams do in their meetings that’s different than other folks? Here’s one thing: they formulate ideas, solutions and decisions that are better than any one member of the team could have developed by themselves. Put differently, they create a collective intelligence when they are working together. Working in this way also leads them to build much stronger commitments to their decisions, which unlocks rapid and effective execution.

How do they do this?  At one level it’s very simple: they have better quality discussions. Discussing is, after all, pretty much the only thing that managers do when they meet: they don’t write code or build things. They talk, they listen, and they think. That’s all. But some teams do this better than others, and the best teams know how to hold powerful conversations systematically and reliably.

Some of the tests of a good discussion include:

  • Can they make decisions based on solid data, logic and analysis, but not allow these to negate the value of gut instinct, emotions, and experience?
  • Can team members disagree with each other and challenge each other’s thinking while also strengthening their trust and relationships?
  • Can they surface and process the ‘elephant in the room’ when some sensitive or undiscussable issue might be holding the team back?

Most people intuitively know that the foundation of such discussions is a high level of trust amongst team members, and this has been convincingly argued by Patrick Lencioni in his best-selling book ‘The Five Dysfunctions of a Team.’ But one thing is missing and that is the explanation of how trust works, and how teams can create and maintain trust in a systematic and reliable way.

Trust unfortunately is not like the brightness on your laptop screen: you can’t simply turn it up by pressing a button. In reality, trust is an outcome. Specifically, an outcome of having challenging, meaningful, high-stakes conversations and having those conversations while feeling safe and respectful, day in and day out.

This can be reliably achieved by maintaining what is known as a ‘psychologically safe environment.’ Google has done extensive research on what drives the performance of their best internal teams and this factor is the most important of all in predicting which teams will outperform.

The process I use is designed to give people the ability to systematically and reliably create a psychologically safe environment. My experience is that this opens up a deeper (and therefore riskier) level of dialogue, and that as these riskier dialogues are successfully navigated, trust begins to skyrocket, and enhanced team performance follows.

I also try to equip teams with number of practical tools to help make their business discussions more productive. This helps them to identify the most important areas to work on and to set these up for an effective discussion. Combined with the improved dialogue skills, the result is that team discussions are dramatically enhanced both in terms of their productivity and in terms of how team members experience them – or what I call positivity.

When a team can reliably and systematically work together to create a collective intelligence that is greater than the intelligence of its individual members, and hold powerful discussions that are both highly productive and super positive - then you can say that it is a high-performing team.

Tom Marsden

How soft skills and culture drive the hard numbers and performance

4 年

Great article. Systematically encouraging these conversations is gold dust. Love to reconnect soon Rob - all the best - Tom

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Fraser Morrison

CEO | Founder | SBN Ambassador | EGN | Global Scot | Endurance Athlete

5 年

Nice article. Think that the three points are well put and very much worth reflecting on.

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Maureen Ennis

I partner with executives to build Big Impact Teams l High Performance Team and Exec Coach l Hybrid Workplace Expert l Change Management and Digital Transformation Consultant l Leadership Development Expert

6 年

Rob, thanks for the great post and ideas.? One of the things I try to work on with teams is making most of their together time...especially meetings.? There is so much one way info sharing that can be distributed and consumed prior to meetings...so that when we are all together we can truly work interdependently on problem solving and brainstorming together.

Dominic Mahony MBE OLY

Non Exec Chair. Founding Partner EY Lane4. Human Performance and Leadership specialist. Olympian.

6 年

Rob. A really excellent article. Thank you for articulating so much of what really makes a difference. The emphasis on psychological safety and skilful dialogue sounds so simple but is so precious. Thanks too Dom Sheldrick for sharing.

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Dom Sheldrick

Executive and Team Coach | Leadership and Organisational Development | Facilitator

6 年

Hello Rob, I really like this article, it speaks clearly to the challenge faced by so many leaders in getting the best from those they lead.. Well done!

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