Five Ways To Get Optimal Outcomes From Your Team

Crack The Behavior Code - A podcast by Christine Comaford

What makes a team optimal?Alignment, communication, collaboration, energy management, leverage, trust, and what else?Google did some comprehensive multi-year research on this topic. I’ll refer to it below and map it to my work during the past 30 years in the areas of safety, belonging, and mattering.I’ve found it all comes back to safety, belonging and mattering, no matter what structure you want to wrap around the idea of optimal teaming. Let’s look at what Google learned in its extensive research on the topic.Over the course of two years (ending in November 2015), Google conducted more than 200 interviews where it assessed more than 250 attributes of what makes an optimal team. The findings from the 180 teams studied were surprising.While they had hoped to find a recipe for an optimal team (for instance, take one Ivy League MBA, one extrovert, one expert engineer), Google actually found that who was on the team mattered far less than how team members interacted, structured their work, experienced their contributions. The answer was in behavior and emotional resilience. The results echoed some of what Carnegie Mellon researchers found back in 2010 with their collective intelligence work.They learned that five key dynamics resulted in optimal teams:Psychological safety: Can we take risks on this team without feeling insecure or embarrassed?Dependability: Can we count on each other to do high-quality work on time?Structure & clarity: Are goals, roles, and execution plans on our team clear?Meaning of work: Are we working on something that is personally important for each of us?Impact of work: Do we fundamentally believe that the work we’re doing matters?Google found that psychological safety was by far the most important dynamic. Without this people don’t feel comfortable speaking up, asking questions, checking in. There’s too much risk of being labeled as “out of it” or “clueless.” All humans want to belong to a group, and we’ll take tremendous risks (such as not speaking out even if we feel it’s very important) if we feel we may become an outcast, lose status in our tribe, or be ostracized somehow.Googlers now use a tool they call teams. It’s a 10-minute check-in on the five dynamics. A modified check-in is below, one that our clients find works very well. During the past year, more than 3,000 Googlers across 300 teams have used teams and focused on the five factors above. They often will kick off team meetings with each team member sharing a risk they took in the past week. The net is that they’ve seen psychological safety ratings increase by 6% and structure/clarity increase by 10%. But the best part is the increased connection in the team due to increased communication.Rate Your Team Per Google’s Five DynamicsConsider the five factors from Google:Psychological SafetyDependabilityStructure & ClarityMeaning of WorkImpact of WorkOn a scale of 1-5 where 5 is excellent, rate your experience of each factor in your team. Now total up your score. Here’s our rating format. If your total score is:Up to 10: High Risk. There’s a lot of work to do. Use the table below to map to safety, belonging, mattering. Get a neuroscience-based coach, and get to work healing your culture.11-18: Risky. Your team is not performing nearly as well as it could. Let’s get everyone more connected and collaborative. Time for team training and coaching.19-25: Solid. Congrats! You’re on a high-performing team. Time to raise the bar!Below is a shortcut to help you figure out where to focus, how to get better, and a way to talk about this concept with your teammates in a structured way.Let’s now map frameworks:Easy, yes? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.