Enjoy this interesting article from our guest contributor, Chris Hardwick
In 1965, a psychologist named Bruce Tuckman developed a well known model that captures the various stages of team development. Tuckman’s five stages of team development include forming, storming, norming, performing, and adjourning. Each one of these five stages of team development represents a step towards developing your team, aligning it towards your vision and completing the team objective.
How do you get the right people on your team?
Who do you want on your journey to achieving your goals?
Here are some points to ponder when deciding who should have an exclusive seat on that journey of team development.
Hire for Attitude & Train for Skills
You may probably have heard of the phrase “hire for attitude and train for skills.” From my years of experience as a Business Owner, CEO, Project Manager and Entrepreneur the most successful companies thrive leveraging the key ‘core people’ proposition.
There are 5 key reasons why you ought to hire candidates based on their attitude as opposed to their skills.
Here are some examples of why hiring an employee who possesses lesser experience, but has the right attitude can:
“Hire for Attitude and Train for Skills”
The results are undeniable!
Tuckman's - Team Building / Team Development
Once you have your team together, forming collaborative motivation and passion for a project is essential for your vision to thrive and produce a high performance team. Tuckman’s Stages of Group Development / Team Development run through the five steps that teams go through to work together efficiently.
Forming - Tuckman’s initial forming stage of team development is the process of building the structure and culture of the team that will ultimately carry your vision. The team leader is so important at this stage as they will set the tone for how the team operates.
Storming - Once a team starts working together, it is important to acknowledge that they will ultimately face challenges that the team will have to work through in order to be successful. By working together, honestly, openly, managing conflicts and creating healthy project boundaries will keep any team moving forward to success.
Norming - When a team becomes settled, aligned with processes, leadership, vision and the rest of the team's roles and responsibilities, they can work together more effectively creating higher levels of trust that can help get projects underway.
Performing - The performing phase is the happiest stage for any team. The team is working together efficiently, getting into the groove of workflow, structured processes, and healthy collaboration helping the team perform to its full potential.
Adjourning - This stage of group development recognizes team accomplishment and team disbandment once a project is complete.
Whether you have a team already, you’re adding to your team, or you’re building a brand new team, there is no better time than now, to access your ‘core people’ values and make sure your team is in alignment.
Every team member is an extension of your accountability partners, who are going to help you achieve your goals and your vision, keeping them at the forefront of everything you do.
Team Leadership is essential to your bottom line, coaching and peer level leadership support can help to keep your team responsible, accountable and consistently showing up to communicate your mission and goals with clarity.