Monday, September 3, 2012

Who is the Ultimate Team Member?


Who is the Ultimate Team Member?
...Hint:  It’s found in your collective strengths.

The fabric of our lives is constructed person by person. As our relationships increase, we benefit geometrically: Our lives become richer, and we expand our strengths through others.
-Donald O.Clifton & Paula Nelson from the book Soaring with Your Strengths (1992).

Are you on the lookout for ways to bring out the strengths of your team or collaborative group? Well, here’s a strength based team building idea that a friend and colleague recently shared (thanks Laura).  

Here’s how...

1. Divide your team into small groups of 4. Each person within the small group is to answer:
  •        What are the individual strengths you bring to the group?
  •          What are the positive attributes you hold that support the success of the group?

     Have each person (or one group recorder) jot down the list of strengths and attributes.

If people are limiting themselves with their responses, clarify what the definition of a strength is. One of our favorite definitions comes from strengths guru Marcus Buckingham, he defines strengths as, “those activities that make you feel strong – an activity that strengthens you".

It is not necessarily the things other people think you are good at, although you can ask your team mates to help unearth what strengthens you in your work. Ask your team mates...When do you notice me lighting up at work? What’s going on? What strengths reside there? And see if it resonates with you.  

2.    Pass out a large sheet of paper with markers to each small group. This will be the drawing ground for the “ultimate team member”.  Read the individual strengths and from that list draw an imaginary person that possesses each attribute. This person should also receive a name, have a picture drawn of them, and have their different strengths labeled along with a story which highlights all the things this person can do and the characteristics they hold.

3.  Debrief and report out: Have each small group describe their person and read their story. Ask questions as you look at the collective visual display of strengths:
 
What connections are you making?
Based on these “ultimate members”, what’s available within our team?
What does this mean for our team weaknesses?
What are we capable of?
How might this add to our working together? How will we use this information?

This is a collective look that reminds us of the benefit of not always working solo!


Village Raising Question:
What strengths are identified in your teams? How might you draw out more of them?

 
 
Your Turn:
Do this exercise with a team or group you are involved with and post a picture of your collective “ultimate team members” to the RTV facebook page and help share the strengths momentum. 

2 comments:

  1. I like it! I hope I can do this soon...

    ReplyDelete
  2. Awesome!
    Do come back and share the experience with us (and feel welcome to post a photo on RTV's facebook page).

    ReplyDelete