Coaches help team leaders step into a new role—entrepreneurial leadership. One defining attribute of successful entrepreneurs is their obsession with achieving their goals. They do what it takes, no matter the obstacles. In 30-Day Challenges, team leaders have this same obsession with the team’s 30-Day Goal. They also behave in ways—and create an environment—that inspire the team to collaborate, innovate, and implement.
The weekly team meetings are an important method to keep team members focused on the 30-Day Goal and the 30-Day Work Plan, and also to reinforce the culture of intense collaboration, rapid innovation, and disciplined implementation.
Here’s an example of a typical agenda of weekly team meetings.
Welcome and check-in
Progress on the Goal
Update on the Work Plan
Next steps
Here are some of the things the team leader, with your support, can do to inspire intense collaboration, rapid innovation and disciplined implementation through the team meetings.
Collaboration is reinforced when people trust each other, and when they are committed to a shared goal. Here are ways to reinforce these in team meetings:
Collaboration in Action: you can ask two or three team members to work together to solve a problem, and to update the rest of the team at the next meeting.
Example: The policy development requires some research to see what other organisations have done, so as not to reinvent the wheel. The Team Leader can ask two team members to work together to do the research and present a summary at the next team meeting
Innovation in Action: Challenge team members at the team meeting to come up with new ideas to get around an obstacle that has come up.
Example: We are not hearing from many staff members who may have grievances and complaints about sexual harassment, because they do not trust that they will not be fired if they speak up. What are some “extraordinary” things the team can do to reassure them?
Implementation in Action: Encourage the team to move into action quickly, try things out and see if they work, versus arguing on whether some things will be effective or not, or deferring action “till we gather more information”.
Example: Some team members might prefer that they get 100% of staff to fill the Health Check survey, so “we know precisely where the problems are before we start taking action.” The Team Leader can remind them that it is OK to try things out, even if we are not 100% sure yet of how effective they will be. We can assess the impact and change course if need be, rather than wait till we have complete information.
Jot down thoughts on these questions – to the extent they are relevant to your experience at the session:
They did some work before you received the Challenge Note. This included:
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: