Team Building and Effective Communication
You have the potential to rid your nonprofit of the distractions and challenges that
come from people who don’t work well together. It doesn’t take a huge amount of
resources and it offers great rewards in the form of fewer headaches and motivated
staff members.
There are many organizations that have discovered that they can keep their teams
happy and healthy all year long by implementing an ongoing team building program.
The following concepts will help you design an approach that works for you.
- Formulate a team building plan. Decide beforehand at what time and how frequently
the meetings will take place, what will transpire, what activities you have planned,
who will facilitate and who will schedule and remind people to attend.
- Welcome everyone. Nothing ruins the sense of team cohesiveness as quickly as leaving
someone out because they are deemed “difficult.” This team building process is universally
inclusive because everyone gets to participate. I highly encourage agencies to consistently
include top management along with other staff.
- Regular attendance is greatly valued. Nobody weasels out of the team building meetings.
Think of the message it sends the rest of the staff when one person is not present.
Over time you will find that you will not have to worry about attendance because
people look forward to the meetings.
- Schedule sensibly. Set yourself up for success by scheduling meetings during calmer
times when people can actually think and participate. I recommend holding one-hour
meetings weekly on a regular, ongoing schedule that everyone is aware of.
- Establish a calm, civil, caring and professional atmosphere. All comments and opinions
are welcome, everyone gets a chance to talk, no rebuttals, no personal attacks, leave
personal agendas at the door and everyone agrees to listen to one another. It helps
to have a neutral and expert facilitator set the ground rules and facilitate the
meetings.
- These meetings are exclusively about team building. We aren’t here for strategic
planning, airing grievances, fixing problems or talking about any number of other
things that derail the team building process. Remember why you started these meetings
in the first place: to build stronger teams.
- Continue holding the meetings over time and you will get good at it. Commit to meeting
consistently and it will become a regular part of your operations.
Following these ideas will greatly increase the morale and cohesiveness at your agency.
A little investment in time and energy up front pays off big in the end because
the pitfalls associated with people not working together gradually vanish. Imagine
your workplace free of the noise that gets in the way of collaboration. All it takes
is your commitment to making it happen.

Team Building and Effective Communication Articles to Help Create Happier Workplaces
Why continue doing the same old things when some basic shifts will get you much better
results. I enjoy writing professional development articles that help people live
happier lives at work.
Practical Team Building Tips for Nonprofits
Copyright © 2011 The Relationship Guy, LLC