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22 Feb 2008 03:51:47 | Stephanie Tuia
A college football team has it. A corporation has it. Even a
growing family has it. These three organizations share a common
desire to build their prospective teams. For example, a college
football team continually needs to bring in new players to
replace the graduating players. A corporation builds its team to
help it grow and meet the needs of clients. A young married
couple who are having children are building their own family
team. Each of these results has a different outcome. In the end,
the goal is to work together, help each other, and collectively
reach a higher level of performance. Whatever team you are
currently involved with, it is surprising at how much
organization is needed to build a great team. Furthermore, the
following teams have their own equally important approach as to
how they successfully build their prospective teams.
First of all, let’s focus on a college football team. Unlike
professional sports, coaches have roughly a four-year time
period to retain their players. After that period, an athlete’s
eligibility is complete due to graduation. In order to fill the
void left by graduated players, coaches rely heavily on
recruiting new players to continue building the football team.
Coaches look for the best athletes who have the capability to
surpass those athletes before them, so that they can continue a
winning team. Coaches face a challenging role to rebuild their
program, depending on their previous team’s success. At the end
of the football season, coaches must take the initiative to
re-build their team each year to fill vacancies so their team
can move forward again.
During college, I interned for a public relations firm, and on
my first day, my supervisor welcomed me with an e-mail that
read, Welcome to the team! At first, I felt that only organized
athletics reserved the right to use the word team. On a mature
level, I’ve realized companies stay healthy when they implement
a team-like atmosphere in the workplace. Being on a team brings
out motivation and competition in employees, and also helps them
to unite, identify their roles on the team, and produce stronger
results. I’ve attended many career sessions and with every
employer I’ve met, they have emphasized their desire to hire
college graduates to join their team. Like a college sports
team, an employer needs to recruit prospective candidates to
fulfill roles in their company.
Many companies utilize employees as team members because it is a
fitting approach when they are competing in an industry. For
example, popular competing organizations such as Pepsi and
Coca-Cola use the team approach in the workplace. The work
environment at Pepsi might have some teams who are directly
competing against some rival teams at Coca-Cola. This
competition and approach is healthy because it energizes
employees to become active team members and promoters for their
brand. As mentioned before, being on a team helps members to
identify their individual roles in the company and along with
motivating them in a competing industry.
You can apply team building skills in any organization. For
example, universities that are accepting incoming freshmen will
want candidates who will help maintain or even raise the
academic standards for greater respect and reputation of their
school. Those freshmen are building the university team to
improve performance and image. Finally, a chairman will seek out
candidates to fulfill his board to bring in fresh ideas and
insight to his committee. The chairman is simply building his
team for support. In any circumstance, building teams will build
a foundation for any organization that wants to progress and
move forward. With a purpose and vision to improve your
organization, building your own team and improving team
interaction will help you achieve outstanding results.
About Author :
Stephanie Tuia is a Client Account Specialist with 10x Marketing – More
Visitors. More Buyers. More Revenue. For
more information on building teams,
visit CMOE.
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