100-Day Challenges at a Glance

A 100-Day Challenge is a rapid, structured project designed to make significant progress on a complex strategic issue. It is not “business as usual.” It is a journey for frontline teams and leaders from different organisations to collaborate across silos, experiment with new ideas, and deliver tangible results in just 100 days. So why are they different from traditional projects that last 100 days? And why do we believe that they enable unusually high levels of performance in teams and organisations? 

The Following Two Videos Will Help Answer the Questions

The Secret Sauce: "Constructive Urgency"

We all know how teams pull together during a crisis: red tape vanishes, collaboration skyrockets, and everyone focuses on survival. The 100-Day Challenge is designed to replicate that high-performance energy without the actual disaster.

The “Crisis” Mode

100-Day Challenge

Urgency

Fast: 100 days from start to completion of the project

Focus

“All hands on deck” focused on one goal.

Team

The right people are assembled, regardless of hierarchy.

Action

Teams ignore bureaucracy and innovate to survive.

The Goal

The goal feels “unreasonable” or impossible.

The Process: The Relay Race

Think of the 100-Day Challenge as a relay race. Unlike a standard race, the people passing the baton don’t leave the track —they stay on the sidelines to cheer, support, and clear obstacles.

Preparing the Track and the Warm-Up (Weeks Minus 5 to 0)

  • The Baton Holder: The Challenge Strategist (Supported by the 100-Day Challenge Coach)

  • The Task: Select the focus area, recruit the team, and get them to the starting line.

 

The Handoff (Day 0: Start-Up Workshop)

  • The Action: The Challenge Strategist hands the baton to the Coach at the start of the Workshop, who, in turn, hands it off to the Team Leader at the end of the Workshop.

  • The Shift: The team takes ownership. They set their own “unreasonable” goal and build their plan.

The Sprint (Days 1 to 100)

  • The Baton Holder: The Team Leader (Supported by the Coach)

  • The Task: The team runs the race. They experiment, pivot, and execute. The Strategist and Coach run alongside one another, removing barriers.

The Finish Line (Day 100)

  • The Action: The Team Leader hands the baton back to the Challenge Strategist.

  • The Future: The focus shifts to sustaining the gains and scaling the success.

Baton Handover Workshops

The handover of the baton takes place at key milestone events – the Workshops.  Here is more detail about it.

Pre Start-Up Workshop

Focus: Challenge Strategist consults with leadership stakeholders to decide on the focus of the Challenge

Team: Challenge Strategist consults with leadership stakeholders to select and recruit 100-Day Team members.

Coach: Challenge Strategist recruits Team Coach to support her and to guide the 100-Day Team

Start-Up Workshop

Goal: The Team sets its 100-Day Goal

Plan: The Team develops its initial 100-Day Plan 

Process: The Team elects a Team Leader, and it develops a Team Operating Agreement. 

Refresh Workshop

Goal Revisited: The Team assesses progress, and it confirms or adjusts the 100-Day Goal as needed.

Plan Adjusted: The Team adjusts its 100-Day Plan for the remainder of the race.

Team Dynamics: The Team assesses its own dynamics, and it adjusts the Team Operating Agreement as needed.

Scale-up Workshop 

Celebrate: The Team celebrates achievements and shares lessons learned

Sustain: The Team recommends ways to sustain the impact

Amplify: The Team and leaders map out options to build on the 100-Day Challenge

Post Scale-Up

Path Forward:  Challenge Strategist & Team Coach help leadership stakeholders decide on the path forward  

Governance: Leadership stakeholders, guided by the Challenge Strategist, recruit Challenge Strategists and Team Coaches to guide and support future 100-Day Challenges and other related projects. 

The Key Players

Leadership Stakeholders

Leadership Stakeholders are senior representatives in the organisation and the local eco-systems engaged in the issue at hand. They commission the project. They define the “what” (the focus area) and clear the path for the team. 

Challenge Strategist

A Challenge Strategist provides the inspiration and energy to bring 100-Day Challenges to life and put 100-Day teams on the right track for their Sprint. They practice “confident humility”—leading by empowering others.

Team Coach

The “Guide.” They support the Strategist in the setup phase and coach the Team Leader during the sprint. They facilitate the workshops and keep the process on track.

Often, two Coaches are assigned to support a 100-Day Challenge. Typically, one focuses on supporting leadership stakeholders, such as the Challenge Strategist, and the other focuses on supporting the Team, including the Team Leader. The two can support and fill in for each other as needed.

Team Leader

Elected by the team on Day 0. They keep the team focused on the goal and manage the energy and work plan.

100-Day Challenge Team

A cross-functional group of “doers” who operate outside normal hierarchies. They have full agency to experiment and find a way to the goal.

They use weekly team meetings to remain focused on the Goal, review progress against the 100-Day Plan, and support other Team members who are falling behind on the assigned actions.  

Why Do It? The Three Impacts

Beyond just hitting a target, the 100-Day Challenge delivers three layers of value:

Performance Increases

Dramatic performance increases are inspired by an unreasonably ambitious 100-Day Goal.

Insight about System Patterns

Insight about system patterns that enable or limit performance. These insights result in shifts in the systems, which leaders embed and amplify in post-100-day actions.

Transformative Experience

The experience transforms the people. They gain confidence, leaders learn to trust, and the organisation or system builds a muscle for agile collaboration.

Beyond the 100-Day: What's Next?

The 100-Day Challenge is just the start. Once the team crosses the finish line, the organisation chooses one of three paths to sustain the momentum:

The Reset Path

The same team runs another 100 days on the same issue to consolidate gains or hit a higher target.

The Build Path

A new team is formed to tackle a different, related issue that emerged during the first sprint.

The Scale Path

The solution works! Now, new teams in different locations (e.g., other municipalities or courts) run their own challenges to replicate the success.

Proven Results

Our own 100-Day Challenge Guru – Nadim (the young version) talking about doing 100-Day Challenges in different countries. (100-Day Challenge used to be called Rapid Results Initiatives)

Chief Prosecutor for the Polokwane Cluster, Octavia,  shares some insight into the impact of the End GBVF 100-Day Challenges in the courts and how the experience has influenced the way of working to improve the reporting and management of GBVF cases in courts.

The Managing Director of Newmont Australia (Mining Sector), Mia, uses 100-Day Challenges, which was called Rapid Results in the past, to enable the operations to utilise and harness the front-line teams’ capacities to implement and innovate.

Ready to Start?

You are joining a global community of coaches and leaders who are not just managing projects — they are changing systems.

Thought starter reflection questions

Jot down thoughts on these questions – to the extent they are relevant to your experience at the session:
  • When did the mood in the event shift from “why are we here?” to “this could be interesting – I am excited to be part of this.” What triggered this shift? 
  • When did you have to go “off script” on the agenda or to change the agenda? What triggered this? What did you adjust? How did it go?
  • What was most surprising to you at the event?
  • What new insights did you gain about the issue at hand, and about the way leaders in the system interacted with each other?
  • Where did the conversation get stuck? What got it unstuck?
  • How would you characterise the level of trust among participants in the meeting? To what extent did this shift as the meeting progressed? To what do you attribute this shift, if indeed it happened?

Thought starter...

Reflection Questions 

Jot down thoughts on these questions – to the extent they are relevant to your experience at the session:

  • When did the mood in the event shift from “why are we here?” to “this could be interesting – I am excited to be part of this.” What triggered this shift? 
  • When did you have to go “off script” on the agenda or to change the agenda? What triggered this? What did you adjust? How did it go?
  • What was most surprising to you at the event?
  • What new insights did you gain about the issue at hand, and about the way leaders in the system interacted with each other?
  • Where did the conversation get stuck? What got it unstuck?
These are 100-Day Challenge Mentors. 

They did some work before you received the Challenge Note. This included:

  • Writing the Challenge Note, and making sure that the leaders of all the organisations represented on the team are comfortable with it – and committed to supporting the work of the team
  • Helping the leaders of these organisation recruit you and your colleagues to the team
  • Gathering some baseline data and other information that will help you and your teammates set your 100-Day goal and develop your plan.
  • Making sure all the preparations are made for a successful Lift-Off workshop, when you and your teammates will meet and get your 100-Day Challenge started. This includes venue, facilitation support, food, swags, comms, travel arrangements and whatever else is needed.

 

Mentors will participate in all or part of the Lift-Off Workshop, mostly at the start to provide context and answer questions, and at the end to give you and your teammates feedback about the goal and plan you develop.

During the 100 days following the Lift-Off Workshop, here’s what the Mentors will do:  

  • They will check in every two weeks with the team leaders to see how the team is doing and what support they and the team need.
  • They will keep other organisational leaders informed and engaged during the 100 days, and pull them in to help as needed.
  • They will participate in the last part of the Refuelling Workshop, halfway through the 100 days, to see what additional support the team needs, and to begin to plan with the team for sustainability and scale-up.
  • They will work with the team at the Sustainability Workshop to finalise recommendations on sustaining the results and building on the work of the team.