Most organizational change efforts fail not because the strategy is wrong, but because people weren’t ready to let go of what came before, or didn’t have a clear framework to move through the transition. The Lewin change management model, developed by psychologist Kurt Lewin in the 1940s, remains one of the most practical tools for solving exactly this problem. Its three-stage approach, unfreeze, change, refreeze, gives leaders a clear structure for moving teams from resistance to adoption.
At Robyn Benincasa, we’ve seen this play out firsthand. Whether it’s guiding a team through a 460-mile adventure race or helping a Fortune 500 company break down silos after a merger, the pattern is the same: lasting change requires deliberate preparation, execution with support, and reinforcement that locks in new behaviors. That’s precisely what Lewin’s model provides, a simple operating system for leading people through uncertainty without losing momentum or trust.
This article breaks down each stage of Lewin’s model, walks through its strengths and limitations, and gives you practical steps to apply it within your organization. If you’re responsible for leading a team through any kind of transition, this framework belongs in your toolkit.
Why Lewin’s model still matters
Kurt Lewin built this model on a foundational insight: organizations are systems held in balance by competing forces, and change only happens when you deliberately shift that balance. He called this concept "force field analysis," and it sits at the core of why the Lewin change management model continues to hold up in modern organizations. Most change efforts still stumble for the same reasons they did in 1947. Leaders skip preparation, rush implementation, or fail to stabilize the new state before declaring victory.
If your change initiative feels like it’s stalling, the problem is rarely the strategy. It’s that you skipped one of Lewin’s stages.
The psychology behind the model
Lewin trained as a social psychologist, and that background shaped how he thought about organizational behavior. He understood that people don’t resist change because they’re irrational; they resist it because change threatens their sense of stability, identity, and group belonging. His three-stage model addresses this directly by treating change as a human process, not just a procedural one. Before you can move a team forward, you have to acknowledge and address what they’re leaving behind.
This psychological foundation is what separates Lewin’s approach from process-only frameworks. Emotions, habits, and group norms are not obstacles to manage around; they are the actual material you’re working with. When you treat the human side of change as a core variable rather than a side issue, your implementation has a much stronger chance of sticking and producing results that last longer than the next reorganization.
Why simple frameworks outperform complex ones
Modern change management has produced dozens of elaborate models with multi-step processes and lengthy certification programs. Many of these are genuinely useful, but complexity often becomes an excuse for inaction. Teams spend so much time learning the framework that they delay the actual work. Lewin’s three stages are simple enough to explain in a single conversation, which means your leadership team can align quickly and stay aligned throughout the process.
Your people also need to understand and articulate the process they’re being led through. Adoption rates for change initiatives drop sharply when employees feel confused about what phase they’re in or what comes next. Simplicity builds psychological safety. When your team knows exactly where they are in the transition, anxiety drops and engagement rises. That’s not a soft benefit; it’s a measurable driver of whether your change effort produces the outcome you’re after or quietly dissolves into the next quarterly priority.
The three stages: unfreeze, change, refreeze
Each stage of the Lewin change management model builds on the one before it. Skip a stage, and the entire effort becomes unstable. Understanding what each phase demands from you as a leader is the foundation for getting this right.
Stage 1: Unfreeze
The unfreeze stage is where most leaders underinvest their time, and where most change initiatives quietly break down before they even start. Your job here is to disrupt the current equilibrium by surfacing why the status quo is no longer viable. You need to create enough urgency and psychological safety that people are willing to let go of familiar routines.
Key actions in this stage include:
Communicating the "why" behind the change clearly and repeatedly
Identifying resistors early and addressing their concerns directly
Stage 2: Change
Once your team has accepted that the old way isn’t working, you enter the change stage, where new behaviors, processes, and thinking patterns are introduced. This phase is often the most turbulent because people are operating in uncertainty. Your role shifts from "why we must change" to actively guiding people through how to work differently.
The change stage isn’t about announcing new procedures. It’s about supporting people as they practice unfamiliar behaviors until those behaviors feel natural.
Celebrating early wins to reinforce that the new direction is working
Stage 3: Refreeze
Refreeze is the stage most organizations skip entirely, which is why so many change efforts regress within 12 months. Once your team has adopted new behaviors, you need to anchor them into daily operations through updated processes, performance metrics, and recognition systems. Without this stage, the change remains fragile and vulnerable to the next disruption.
Key actions in this stage include:
Updating formal policies and job descriptions to reflect the new state
Linking performance reviews to the behaviors the change requires
How to apply Lewin’s model at work
Applying the Lewin change management model in a real organizational setting requires more than understanding the three stages in theory. You need a concrete starting point and a practical sequence that maps to your team’s current reality. The most effective place to begin is by answering one question before you do anything else: what is holding your current state in place?
Start with a force field analysis
Lewin’s force field analysis gives you a diagnostic tool to identify the driving forces pushing toward change and the restraining forces pushing back against it. To use it, write down the specific pressures supporting the change (competitive pressure, leadership mandate, customer demand) on one side, and the resistances (habit, fear of job loss, lack of skills) on the other. Your goal in the unfreeze stage is to strengthen the driving forces or reduce the restraining ones, ideally both.
Most leaders go straight to planning the change without first understanding the specific forces working against it, which is why resistance catches them off guard.
Once you complete this analysis, you have a prioritized list of concerns to address before you launch anything publicly. Communication plans, training investments, and leadership visibility should all map directly to what the force field analysis surfaces.
Build your timeline around the three stages
Your implementation timeline should allocate meaningful attention to each stage, not front-load execution while treating unfreeze and refreeze as afterthoughts. A practical structure looks like this:
Unfreeze (weeks 1-4): Hold leadership alignment sessions, communicate the case for change, and gather input from frontline teams.
Change (weeks 5-16): Roll out training, pilot new processes in one team or department, then expand based on feedback.
Refreeze (weeks 17-24): Update policies, revise performance metrics, and build recognition systems that reward the new behaviors.
Adjust the duration based on your organization’s size and the complexity of the change, but keep all three stages present in whatever timeline you build.
Pros, cons, and common mistakes
No framework is perfect, and the Lewin change management model is no exception. Understanding what it does well and where it breaks down helps you use it more effectively rather than treating it as a rigid prescription. Before you commit to this approach, weigh its strengths against its limitations with your specific organization in mind.
What the model does well
The clearest advantage of Lewin’s model is its accessibility. Any leader, regardless of their background in organizational theory, can explain it to a team in under five minutes. That clarity reduces confusion and gives everyone a shared vocabulary for the transition. The model also forces you to treat the human element as a central priority, not a secondary concern, which is where most change initiatives actually win or lose.
A framework that your entire leadership team can articulate and act on consistently is worth more than a sophisticated model that only three people understand.
Where it falls short
The main limitation is that Lewin’s model assumes change is linear. In practice, organizations often cycle back through earlier stages when new obstacles surface or when external conditions shift. The model also provides limited guidance on how to manage complex, multi-stream change happening simultaneously across different teams or business units. If your organization is navigating several major transitions at once, you’ll likely need to layer additional tools on top of this framework to address that complexity.
Mistakes that derail implementation
Even leaders who understand the model well make avoidable errors in execution. Watch for these specific patterns:
Skipping the unfreeze stage because the rationale for change feels obvious to leadership but hasn’t been communicated to the rest of the organization
Declaring victory too early before new behaviors have been reinforced through updated systems and metrics
Treating refreeze as optional, which leaves the change vulnerable to reverting the moment pressure increases or attention shifts to the next priority
Lewin vs ADKAR and Kotter
The Lewin change management model doesn’t exist in isolation. Two other frameworks, ADKAR and Kotter’s 8-Step Model, are frequently cited alongside it, and knowing how they differ helps you choose the right tool for your situation. All three address organizational change, but they operate at different levels of focus and complexity, which means the best choice depends on what your team actually needs.
How ADKAR approaches change differently
ADKAR, developed by Prosci, focuses on individual-level change rather than organizational systems. The acronym stands for Awareness, Desire, Knowledge, Ability, and Reinforcement, and it maps the psychological journey each person goes through during a transition. Where Lewin gives you a systemic, top-down structure for moving an organization through change, ADKAR gives you a diagnostic tool for understanding why a specific individual is struggling to adopt new behaviors. The two models complement each other well: use Lewin to structure the overall initiative and ADKAR to support individuals who are falling behind.
If your change effort is stalling at the individual level, ADKAR gives you a sharper diagnostic lens than Lewin alone can provide.
How Kotter’s model compares
John Kotter’s 8-Step Model expands change into a more granular sequence of actions, from creating urgency and building a guiding coalition to anchoring new approaches in the culture. Where Lewin gives you three broad phases, Kotter gives you eight distinct steps with specific leadership behaviors attached to each one. This makes Kotter’s model better suited for large, complex transformations where you need detailed guidance at each stage. The tradeoff is that added complexity can slow execution in smaller or faster-moving organizations where Lewin’s simplicity is actually the advantage.
Framework
Focus
Best for
Lewin
Organizational systems
Mid-size change initiatives
ADKAR
Individual adoption
Supporting resistant employees
Kotter
Large-scale transformation
Enterprise-wide change
What to do next
The Lewin change management model gives you a proven structure for moving your team through transition without losing the people in the process. The three stages, unfreeze, change, and refreeze, aren’t just a conceptual exercise. They’re a practical sequence that addresses why most change initiatives collapse: leaders skip the human preparation, rush the transition, and abandon the reinforcement before new behaviors have a chance to hold.
Your next step is straightforward. Run a force field analysis on your current change initiative and identify which stage you’re actually in right now. Most teams are further behind than their leaders realize, usually stuck in an incomplete unfreeze phase while trying to execute the change stage. Close that gap first, and the rest of the model will follow.
Most teams don’t fail because they lack talent. They fail because talented people don’t know how to work together. I’ve seen this pattern repeat itself across every arena I’ve competed in, from expedition adventure racing through the jungles of Borneo to fighting structure fires in San Diego. The benefits of collaboration at work aren’t abstract talking points. They’re the difference between a group of skilled individuals and a team that actually wins.
After two decades of leading teams through some of the most extreme environments on the planet, I’ve learned that collaboration isn’t a soft skill, it’s an operating system. When organizations get it right, they unlock performance gains that no amount of individual effort can match. When they get it wrong, they burn through resources, morale, and opportunity. The research backs this up, and so does every finish line I’ve ever crossed.
This article breaks down six specific, measurable ways collaboration drives team results, from stronger innovation and faster problem-solving to higher retention and revenue growth. Whether you’re leading a department through a merger or trying to break down silos between teams, these are the advantages that make collaboration worth prioritizing right now.
1. Shared commitment and accountability
Collaborative teams don’t just divide tasks; they share ownership of outcomes. When every person on the team understands how their work connects to the group’s goal, accountability becomes mutual rather than top-down. You stop waiting for someone else to catch a problem and start acting like the result belongs to you personally.
What it looks like in day-to-day work
In practice, shared commitment shows up in small moments: a teammate flagging a risk before it becomes a crisis, someone staying late because another person needs help, or a team member owning a mistake instead of deflecting it. These aren’t accidents. They’re the result of a team that has explicitly agreed on what winning looks like and who is responsible for each piece of it.
Why it improves team results
When accountability is shared, handoffs get cleaner and gaps close faster. Research from Gallup shows that teams with high engagement, which correlates directly with shared ownership, see 23% higher profitability compared to disengaged teams. The math is straightforward: people who feel responsible for an outcome work harder to protect it.
When everyone on your team feels like they own the mission, you stop managing people and start leading a movement.
How leaders can reinforce it without micromanaging
Your job is to set the destination and define the non-negotiables, then get out of the way. Run weekly team check-ins focused on blockers rather than status updates. Make commitments public within the team by having each person state what they’ll deliver and by when. This structure creates peer-level accountability that outlasts any top-down directive you could issue.
How to measure it
Track on-time delivery rates by team rather than by individual to reinforce collective ownership. Pair that with a short monthly pulse survey asking whether team members feel personally responsible for shared goals. If both numbers trend upward, your collaboration is building real accountability, not just documented activity.
2. Faster problem solving and execution
When a team collaborates well, problems get solved faster because the cognitive load spreads across the group. Instead of one person bottlenecking a decision, multiple perspectives converge quickly to surface the issue and move toward a solution.
What it looks like in day-to-day work
In collaborative teams, you’ll see problems flagged early and solutions assigned in real time. A cross-functional standup might catch a product gap on Monday and have a committed owner by Wednesday. Speed comes from shared context, and consistent collaboration builds that context by default.
Why it improves team results
One of the clearest benefits of collaboration at work is how it compresses decision cycles. MIT research shows that teams with strong communication patterns are nearly five times more productive than teams with average communication. That’s a structural advantage, not a marginal one.
The fastest teams aren’t faster because they’re smarter. They’re faster because information moves before the situation forces it.
How teams remove bottlenecks and handoff friction
Bottlenecks form when information sits with one person instead of flowing across the group. To fix this:
Map every handoff point and assign a named owner for each transition.
Document decisions in a shared space so the next person doesn’t need to chase context before they can act.
How to measure it
Track average time-to-resolution on cross-functional issues and review it each quarter. A consistent downward trend signals that your team’s collaboration is actually compressing execution time, not just adding coordination overhead.
3. Better decisions through diverse perspectives
Teams that collaborate across roles and functions make better decisions because no single viewpoint has the full picture. When you pull people with different functional backgrounds into a decision, you surface blind spots before they become costly mistakes.
What it looks like in day-to-day work
Strong collaborative teams include multiple disciplines when scoping any major decision, not just the people who will execute it. A product lead invites a customer service rep into the room because that rep knows what customers actually complain about. A sales director includes operations before making a pricing commitment. Diverse input becomes a standard part of the process, not an afterthought.
Why it improves team results
One of the clearest benefits of collaboration at work is how it reduces decision-making errors. Studies show that teams bringing broader perspectives to major decisions consistently outperform narrowly constituted groups. When your team pulls in more viewpoints before committing to a path, you reduce groupthink and catch problems that a homogeneous group would miss entirely.
Diverse input doesn’t slow decisions down. It prevents the costly reversals that come from making fast, narrow ones.
How to run decisions so everyone contributes and commits
Structure your decision meetings so every voice enters before any vote. Use a simple format: each person states one risk and one opportunity before discussion opens. This creates equal contribution weight regardless of seniority.
How to measure it
Track the rate of decision reversals per quarter and note whether the reversed decisions involved narrow input groups. A drop in reversals signals that your collaborative process is producing better outcomes.
4. More innovation and creativity
Innovation doesn’t emerge from individuals working in isolation. It comes from the collision of different experiences and knowledge, and that collision only happens when your team collaborates openly and consistently. One of the clearest benefits of collaboration at work is a direct, measurable lift in creative output when people share ideas across functions.
What it looks like in day-to-day work
In collaborative teams, idea generation happens inside normal workflow, not just during formal brainstorm sessions. People share half-formed concepts in real time, build on each other’s thinking, and challenge assumptions without waiting for a scheduled review. A sales rep might surface a product opportunity that engineering had already dismissed, simply because they carry customer context that never made it across the organizational wall.
Why it improves team results
When diverse perspectives mix regularly, your team produces solutions that no single person would have reached alone. Research from Microsoft shows that teams with stronger cross-functional collaboration generate significantly more innovative output. Collaboration is the mechanism that puts cognitive diversity to work rather than letting it sit unused inside separate departments.
The best ideas on your team are rarely sitting in one person’s head. They’re waiting to be built by the group.
How teams create psychological safety and honest debate
Psychological safety means people speak up without fear of ridicule or penalty. Build it by modeling intellectual humility at the top: share your own uncertainties, welcome pushback on your ideas, and publicly reward honest disagreement over polite agreement.
Direct all criticism at ideas, never at people.
Rotate who presents proposals so no single voice dominates creative direction.
How to measure it
Track the volume of cross-functional ideas submitted per quarter and note how many move into active testing. A rising cross-department idea rate signals that your collaboration is genuinely expanding creative capacity, not just filling calendars.
5. Higher engagement and stronger culture
People who collaborate well don’t just perform better; they stay longer and care more. One of the most direct benefits of collaboration at work is the cultural shift that happens when people feel genuinely connected to each other and to the mission. That connection turns a group of employees into a team that actually wants to show up.
What it looks like in day-to-day work
In collaborative cultures, recognition flows horizontally, not just from manager to direct report. Teammates credit each other in meetings, share wins as a group, and raise problems openly instead of hiding them. Engagement lives in those daily exchanges, not in annual surveys.
Why it improves team results
Strong team cultures cut turnover and increase discretionary effort, the work people do beyond their formal job description. According to Gallup research, highly engaged teams show 41% lower absenteeism and deliver meaningfully higher customer ratings. Those numbers compound over time into a structural competitive advantage.
Culture isn’t built in offsites. It’s built in the small moments when your team chooses to help each other instead of protecting individual territory.
How managers build trust across in-person and hybrid teams
Consistency builds trust, especially across distributed teams. Set a standing touchpoint with each team member, keep your commitments visibly, and rotate facilitation across remote and in-person contributors so no single location dominates the conversation.
How to measure it
Run a quarterly engagement pulse with three questions: Do you feel connected to your team? Do you trust your teammates? Would you recommend your team as a great place to work? Trending scores across quarters tell you whether your culture is building or eroding.
6. More learning, adaptability, and resilience
Teams that collaborate consistently build institutional knowledge that outlasts any single employee. When people share what they know across functions, learning becomes embedded in how the team operates rather than locked inside individual heads that walk out the door.
What it looks like in day-to-day work
In collaborative teams, retrospectives and debriefs happen regularly, not just after a crisis. People document what worked, share lessons across departments, and build on each other’s failures as openly as they celebrate wins. That habit creates a team that gets smarter with every project cycle.
Why it improves team results
One of the clearest benefits of collaboration at work is resilience under sustained pressure. When your team shares knowledge openly, no single point of failure can stop execution. Organizations that foster continuous collaborative learning adapt to market disruptions significantly faster than those that rely on individual expertise sitting in silos.
Teams that learn together don’t just recover from setbacks faster. They use them as fuel.
How teams share knowledge and adapt during change
Build short knowledge-sharing sessions into your regular team rhythm and store all takeaways in a shared, searchable space. Pair that with cross-training between roles so your team builds flexibility before they actually need it.
Schedule a 15-minute monthly "what I learned" exchange across functions.
Rotate problem-solving leads so different people build skills outside their primary role.
How to measure it
Track cross-functional knowledge transfer events per quarter alongside time-to-competency for team members stepping into new or expanded roles. Improvement in both signals that your team is learning and adapting as a unit, not just surviving change one crisis at a time.
Bring it back to the work
The benefits of collaboration at work don’t live in theory. They show up in your team’s actual numbers: faster decisions, fewer reversals, lower turnover, and stronger results under pressure. Every benefit covered in this article builds on the one before it. Shared accountability accelerates problem-solving. Better decisions fuel innovation. Stronger culture sustains learning. These aren’t separate initiatives; they’re one connected operating system that either works or doesn’t.
Your next step is straightforward. Pick one benefit from this list and identify the single most visible place it breaks down on your team right now. Start there. Measure it. Fix one handoff, run one better decision meeting, or hold one honest debrief. Small, deliberate moves compound into the kind of team culture that wins consistently and doesn’t collapse when conditions get hard. If you want to build that culture from the ground up, explore what’s possible with Robyn Benincasa.
Most virtual team building activities for work fall into one of two categories: so awkward that everyone dreads them, or so pointless that nobody remembers them by Friday. Either way, they do the opposite of what they’re supposed to do, they make your team less excited about working together. That’s a problem worth fixing, because remote and hybrid teams don’t bond by accident. It takes intention.
I’ve spent decades studying what makes teams perform at their peak, first as a world champion adventure racer dragging through jungles and deserts with teammates I had to trust with my life, then as a San Diego firefighter, and now as a speaker and consultant helping organizations build the kind of collaboration that actually moves the needle. One thing I know for certain: connection is the engine of every high-performing team. And when your people are spread across cities, time zones, or home offices, you have to create those connection points on purpose.
The good news? Virtual team building doesn’t have to be cheesy, forced, or a waste of everyone’s calendar. The activities below are ones that real teams genuinely enjoy, and more importantly, ones that strengthen the trust, communication, and shared identity your people need to win together. I’ve organized this list with variety in mind, so whether you have five minutes before a meeting or an hour to spare, you’ll find something that fits.
Here are 16 virtual team building activities that your team won’t roll their eyes at.
1. Facilitate a virtual teamwork workshop with Robyn Benincasa
If you want your team to walk away with something they’ll actually use, a structured virtual teamwork workshop is the highest-leverage option on this list. This is not a passive activity or a placeholder on the agenda. It is a purpose-built experience designed to shift how your people think about collaboration and give them a shared language for doing it better.
What it is
A virtual teamwork workshop with Robyn Benincasa delivers keynote-style content combined with interactive elements that challenge teams to examine how they work together. Drawing from world champion adventure racing and years on a fire crew, Robyn translates extreme-pressure teamwork principles into concrete tools your team can apply the next day.
The most effective virtual team building activities for work are the ones that connect people to a shared operating system, not just a shared laugh.
How to run it
You work directly with Robyn’s team to customize the session around your organization’s specific challenges, whether that’s breaking down silos, navigating a merger, or rebuilding trust after a rough stretch. The session runs live on your preferred video platform and includes audience participation, structured reflection, and takeaways your managers can reinforce well after the call ends.
Best for
This workshop fits mid-to-large organizations where teams are geographically distributed and leadership wants more than a fun distraction. It works especially well when your team is facing a high-stakes transition like a reorganization, a new strategy launch, or a stretch goal that requires everyone to pull in the same direction.
Tools and prep
Your team needs a stable video conferencing setup and a single point of contact to coordinate logistics with Robyn’s team. Robyn’s team handles the program design and facilitation materials, including downloadable implementation guides that extend the learning beyond the session itself.
Time and cost
Sessions typically run 60 to 90 minutes for a keynote format, with longer half-day options available for deeper workshops. Pricing is custom based on audience size and program scope. You can reach out through robynbenincasa.com to discuss what fits your team’s needs and budget.
2. This or that
"This or that" is one of the fastest, lowest-prep virtual team building activities for work you can run, and it consistently gets people actually talking instead of staring at their screens waiting for the real meeting to start.
What it is
The premise is simple: you present two options (coffee or tea, early bird or night owl, mountains or beach), and everyone picks one. There are no wrong answers and no pressure, which is exactly why it works. People reveal small, genuine things about themselves that spark real conversations without anyone feeling put on the spot.
How to run it
Open your video call and drop a question in the chat or display two options on a shared screen. Everyone votes by holding up fingers, typing in the chat, or using a quick poll. Work through five to ten questions in rapid succession. You can invite people to explain their choices or just keep the pace fast and light, depending on what your group needs.
The best icebreakers don’t feel like icebreakers. They feel like actual conversation.
Best for
This activity fits new teams or newly merged groups that don’t know each other well yet. It also works as an opening move for longer sessions when you want to shift the energy before getting into heavier content.
Tools and prep
All you need is a prepared list of questions and your standard video conferencing platform. Free polling tools can add a visual layer, but they are completely optional.
Time and cost
Five to ten minutes is the typical range, making this a natural meeting opener. It costs nothing to run beyond a few minutes of prep.
3. Rose, thorn, bud check-in
The rose, thorn, bud check-in is one of those virtual team building activities for work that does double duty: it builds genuine connection and gives leaders real-time insight into how their people are actually doing beneath the surface of project updates and status reports.
What it is
Each person shares three things in one or two sentences: a rose (something going well), a thorn (a current challenge or frustration), and a bud (something they are looking forward to). The structure is simple enough that anyone can participate without feeling put on the spot, but personal enough to create real moments of connection between teammates who might otherwise only interact around tasks.
How to run it
Start the call and move through the group one person at a time, giving each participant 60 to 90 seconds to share their three items. You can go in order of how people appear on screen or let people volunteer. The facilitator should go first to model the tone and show the team that sharing something honest and human is welcome here.
When people feel seen by their teammates, they work harder for them.
Best for
This check-in works well for established teams that meet regularly and want a structured way to stay connected beyond deliverables. It is particularly effective for teams navigating high-pressure stretches where stress tends to go unspoken until it becomes a bigger problem.
Tools and prep
No special tools required. Just your standard video call platform and a quick heads-up at the start of the meeting so people have a moment to think before it is their turn.
Time and cost
Plan for 10 to 15 minutes for a team of eight to twelve people. It costs nothing to run.
4. Two truths and a lie
Two truths and a lie is one of the most recognized virtual team building activities for work, and it has stayed popular for a good reason: it actually works. People learn surprising things about their teammates, and the guessing element adds enough low-stakes competition to keep the energy up.
What it is
Each person shares three statements about themselves, two of which are true and one that is false. The rest of the team tries to identify the lie. The beauty of this format is that the truths people choose to share are usually more interesting than the lie itself, which is where real connection happens.
The things people reveal in a game like this often become conversation starters that carry well past the meeting.
How to run it
Give everyone two to three minutes to write their three statements before the game starts. Then move through the group one person at a time, letting teammates vote on which statement they think is the lie. After the vote, the person reveals the answer and briefly explains the true stories to give everyone a fuller picture.
Best for
This activity works well for new teams or cross-functional groups that don’t have much personal history. It also adds value in situations where you want to rebuild familiarity after a long stretch of purely task-focused interaction.
Tools and prep
All you need is your standard video platform and a quick heads-up so people have time to think before the session starts. No additional tools are required.
Time and cost
Plan for 15 to 20 minutes for a group of eight to twelve people. It costs nothing to run.
5. Lightning scavenger hunt
A lightning scavenger hunt is one of the most energetic virtual team building activities for work you can run with almost zero preparation time required from anyone on your team.
What it is
The facilitator calls out a common household or office item, and everyone has 30 to 60 seconds to sprint away from their desk, find it, and return to the camera holding it up. The first person back wins the round. The speed and low stakes break down formality fast and get people genuinely laughing together in a way that slower formats rarely manage.
How to run it
Start by preparing eight to ten items in advance that most people would reasonably have nearby, things like a red pen, something with a logo on it, or a physical book. Call out one item at a time and count down visibly on screen while people scramble. You can run it as a pure speed competition or award points across multiple rounds to build momentum through the session.
When people move their bodies and laugh together under mild time pressure, they warm up to each other faster than any structured question could achieve.
Best for
This activity works best for fully remote teams that spend most of their working hours in front of screens and need a quick physical jolt to reset the energy. It also fits well as an opening activity for larger all-hands calls where you want to loosen people up before getting into heavier content.
Tools and prep
All you need is your standard video conferencing platform and a prepared item list ready before the call starts. No additional tools required.
Time and cost
Plan for 10 to 15 minutes for a full round. It costs nothing to run.
6. Connection bingo
Connection bingo takes a format most people already know and repurposes it as one of the more genuinely engaging virtual team building activities for work because the content is entirely about your people, not random numbers.
What it is
Each participant gets a bingo card filled with personal characteristics, experiences, or preferences instead of numbers. Squares might read "has lived in more than two states," "speaks a second language," or "has a pet at home." Players find teammates who match each square, turning a passive activity into a real conversation starter.
How to run it
The best connection activities create reasons to talk, not reasons to sit and wait.
Share the bingo cards at the start of the call via chat or a shared document. Give everyone five to eight minutes to work through the card by asking their teammates questions in the chat or in quick breakout conversations. The first person to complete a row announces it, and you can award a small prize or public recognition to keep the energy moving.
Best for
This activity works well for larger teams or all-hands meetings where people don’t interact much outside their direct group. It is particularly useful for newly formed teams or post-merger groups that need a low-pressure way to discover common ground quickly.
Tools and prep
You need a pre-made bingo card created in a simple document and your standard video conferencing platform. Prepare the cards at least a day in advance so you can distribute them at the start of the call without losing momentum.
Time and cost
Plan for 10 to 15 minutes for a full round. It costs nothing to run.
7. Show-and-tell grab bag
Show-and-tell grab bag is one of those virtual team building activities for work that feels immediately personal because it is. Instead of performing for each other, people get to share something that genuinely matters to them, and that difference lands every time.
What it is
Each person grabs a random object from wherever they are sitting and takes 90 seconds to explain what it is, why they have it, and what it reveals about them. The "grab bag" element removes overthinking entirely, so people just reach for the nearest available thing and make it work.
How to run it
The best version of this activity happens when the facilitator goes first and picks something unexpected, which gives everyone else permission to be honest.
Open your call and give the group 30 seconds to grab an object without leaving their seat. Then move through each person one at a time, keeping the pace steady so the energy stays up. Invite brief follow-up questions from the group after each person shares to extend the conversation naturally.
Best for
This activity works well for teams that already know each other at a surface level but haven’t moved into genuine familiarity. It also suits smaller groups of 6 to 12 people where everyone has enough airtime to share something meaningful.
Tools and prep
All you need is your standard video conferencing platform and a quick heads-up to your team before the call starts so nobody feels caught off guard when it is their turn.
Time and cost
Plan for 15 to 20 minutes for a group of 8 to 12 people. It costs nothing to run.
8. Back-to-back drawing
Back-to-back drawing is one of the most deceptively useful virtual team building activities for work because it forces people to rely entirely on verbal communication to succeed together, and the results are almost always funny enough to create genuine connection on the spot.
What it is
One person describes an image or simple diagram without naming it directly, while their partner draws what they hear on paper. Neither person can see what the other is doing until the reveal at the end. The gap between what was described and what was drawn tells you everything about how clearly your team actually communicates day to day.
How to run it
Pair people up and send one partner a simple image via private chat before each round starts. The describer has two minutes to explain it using only words and direction, with no naming the object directly. At the end, both partners hold up their drawings to the camera for the full group to see. The comparison usually generates genuine laughter and opens a real conversation about communication gaps.
When your team laughs at the same thing together, they build trust faster than most structured exercises can manufacture.
Best for
This activity works especially well for cross-functional teams where miscommunication between departments is an ongoing issue, and for any group that wants to examine how they give and receive instructions under mild time pressure.
Tools and prep
Each participant needs paper and a pen plus your standard video conferencing platform. Prepare a set of simple line-drawing images in advance and distribute them via private message at the start of each round.
Time and cost
Plan for 15 to 20 minutes for two to three rounds. It costs nothing to run.
9. Caption this photo
Caption this photo is one of the most low-effort, high-return virtual team building activities for work in this list, because it taps into something people are already doing naturally online: making each other laugh with a well-timed joke.
What it is
You drop a funny, unexpected, or absurd image into your group chat and ask everyone to write their best caption for it. The humor does the heavy lifting here. When people compete to be the funniest person in the room, they drop their professional guard faster than almost any structured activity can manage.
How to run it
Pull up a shared chat or whiteboard at the start of your call and post the image where everyone can see it. Give the group two to three minutes to type their captions into the chat, then read them out loud and let the group vote on a favorite. Running two or three rounds keeps the momentum going and gives quieter team members multiple chances to shine.
The teams that laugh together on a Tuesday are the ones that push through hard problems together on a Thursday.
Best for
This activity works well for larger teams or all-hands calls where structured conversation is hard to manage and you need something that scales easily across 20 or more people.
Tools and prep
Your standard video conferencing platform is all you need for the infrastructure. Prepare three to five images in advance. Workplace-appropriate images with unusual compositions or unexpected situations work best.
Time and cost
Plan for 10 to 15 minutes for two to three rounds. It costs nothing to run.
10. The GIF reaction round
The GIF reaction round is one of the most accessible virtual team building activities for work because it runs on a format your team already uses constantly: the animated image response that communicates tone and humor faster than any written sentence.
What it is
You post a scenario, question, or prompt in a shared chat, and everyone responds with a GIF that best captures their reaction. Prompts can be work-adjacent ("how do you feel about the Monday morning stand-up?") or purely fun. Either way, the GIF someone chooses reveals personality and humor in a way that straightforward answers rarely do.
How to run it
Drop a prompt into your group chat or display it on screen, then give everyone 60 seconds to find and post their response. Move through three to five prompts to build enough momentum that even quieter teammates start participating naturally.
When you give people a creative constraint like "respond only with a GIF," you remove the pressure to say something clever and replace it with genuine expression.
Best for
This activity works well for remote teams that include a mix of communication styles, particularly when some members go quiet in traditional verbal icebreakers. It also fits naturally into larger all-hands calls where managing live conversation across 20 or more people gets complicated fast.
Tools and prep
Your standard video conferencing platform paired with a group chat that supports GIF search, like Slack or Microsoft Teams, covers everything you need. Prepare five prompts in advance so you move through rounds without dead air.
Time and cost
Plan for 10 to 15 minutes for a full session. It costs nothing to run.
11. Emoji mood board
The emoji mood board is one of those deceptively simple virtual team building activities for work that scales well across team sizes and communication styles. It gives people a visual, low-pressure way to express how they are showing up before the real work of a meeting begins.
What it is
Each participant builds a small collection of emojis that together describe their current mood, energy level, or headspace. Unlike a direct question ("how are you feeling?"), this format removes the pressure to articulate something perfectly and replaces it with a quick creative choice that still reveals something genuine.
When people can signal how they are actually doing without having to find the right words, they tend to be more honest.
How to run it
Open your call and drop a prompt into the group chat, something like "use three to five emojis to describe your current state." Give everyone 60 seconds to respond in the chat, then invite two or three people to briefly explain their choices. Keeping the share-out voluntary keeps it light and prevents anyone from feeling put on the spot.
Best for
This format works well for teams that meet regularly and want a quick way to gauge collective energy before diving into work. It is also effective for distributed teams across time zones where people may be joining a call at very different points in their day.
Tools and prep
Your standard video conferencing platform with a built-in group chat handles everything. No additional tools or prep materials are required beyond having the prompt ready.
Time and cost
Plan for five to ten minutes at the start of a meeting. It costs nothing to run.
12. Totally random mini presentations
Totally random mini presentations are one of the most surprisingly enjoyable virtual team building activities for work because they flip the usual dynamic: instead of someone presenting on their area of expertise, people have to become instant experts on something completely absurd, and the results are almost always memorable.
What it is
Each person gets a random topic they know nothing about, like the history of competitive dog grooming or the physics of a perfect pancake flip, and has to deliver a two to three minute presentation on it with zero preparation. The randomness is the point. It strips away professional performance anxiety and replaces it with shared absurdity that levels the playing field across job titles and tenure.
How to run it
Assign topics five to ten minutes before the session via a private message so nobody can over-prepare. Each presenter gets their time on screen while the rest of the group listens and votes on their favorite moment using chat reactions. Keep the feedback fast and positive so the energy stays high throughout all the rounds.
When people have to perform under low-stakes absurd pressure together, they reveal personality traits that months of normal meetings never surface.
Best for
This activity works well for teams that already have some baseline comfort with each other and are ready to move past surface-level icebreakers into something that requires a bit more vulnerability and humor.
Tools and prep
Your standard video conferencing platform handles everything. Prepare a list of 15 to 20 random topics in advance so you can assign them quickly without dead air during the session.
Time and cost
Plan for 20 to 25 minutes for a group of six to eight people. It costs nothing to run.
13. Virtual coffee roulette
Virtual coffee roulette is one of the most underused virtual team building activities for work because it operates entirely outside the standard meeting format. Instead of gathering everyone in one call, it pairs individual teammates randomly for short one-on-one conversations they would never have otherwise.
What it is
Each participant gets randomly matched with one other team member for a 15 to 20 minute video call, typically during a lunch break or mid-morning slot. The "roulette" element is intentional: the random pairing is the whole point, because it breaks the natural clustering that happens on most remote teams where people only ever speak to whoever is assigned to the same project.
When two people who have never really talked get paired and given unstructured time together, they almost always find common ground faster than any group activity manages to force.
How to run it
You can manage pairings manually through a shared spreadsheet or use a tool like Donut inside Slack to automate the matching and send calendar invites on a set cadence. Set a minimal but clear expectation (no work topics required) and let the conversation develop naturally from there.
Best for
This format works well for larger remote teams where people can go weeks without a natural reason to interact outside their immediate working group.
Tools and prep
Your standard video conferencing platform handles the actual calls. A pairing automation tool inside your existing messaging platform removes the scheduling friction and makes it easy to run on a recurring basis.
Time and cost
Plan for 15 to 20 minutes per pair. Running it on a regular cadence costs nothing beyond the initial setup time.
14. Cross-team virtual lunch tables
Cross-team virtual lunch tables take a familiar social format and give it a structural upgrade that most remote organizations haven’t tried yet: instead of pairing two people randomly, you bring together small groups from different departments during a shared meal window and let the conversation go wherever it naturally leads.
What it is
A cross-team virtual lunch table groups four to six people from different departments into a shared video call during a standard lunch break. Nobody sets an agenda or runs the session like a meeting. The format works because shared meal time carries a built-in social permission that most video calls lack, so people talk more openly and listen more generously.
How to run it
You organize groups of four to six people across department lines and send calendar invites with a short note making it clear: no work agenda required. Each group joins a video call at their shared lunch time and talks. Running this on a monthly cadence keeps cross-department connection happening without requiring active management after the initial setup.
When people from different departments see each other as actual humans rather than job titles, they collaborate more readily when work eventually requires it.
Best for
This format works best for mid-to-large organizations where people in different departments rarely interact unless a shared project forces it.
Tools and prep
Your standard video conferencing platform handles the calls. A simple spreadsheet manages group assignments and rotation so the same people don’t end up at the same table twice.
Time and cost
Plan for 30 minutes per session. It costs nothing to run.
15. Coworking focus jam session
A coworking focus jam session is one of the quietest virtual team building activities for work on this list, and that quietness is exactly what makes it valuable. Sometimes connection happens not through games or conversation but through the simple act of being present with your teammates while you each do your own work.
What it is
Each participant joins a shared video call and works independently in silence alongside everyone else. Nobody presents, nobody performs, and nobody runs an agenda. You get the ambient presence of your teammates, which mirrors what working in a shared office actually feels like and which remote workers consistently say they miss most.
How to run it
Open a standing video call at a set time and give the group a clear structure before the silence begins:
State the focus block length (typically 25 to 50 minutes)
Allow a brief check-in at the start so everyone shares what they are working on
Close with a short debrief so the session ends with human contact rather than everyone just dropping off
Shared silence builds a different kind of closeness than conversation does, and remote teams rarely give themselves access to it.
Best for
This format works well for fully remote teams dealing with isolation or anyone whose workday consists entirely of solo work with no natural points of contact during the day.
Tools and prep
Your standard video conferencing platform handles everything. Set a recurring calendar invite so the session becomes a reliable team rhythm rather than a one-time experiment.
Time and cost
Plan for 25 to 50 minutes per session. It costs nothing to run.
16. Virtual escape room
A virtual escape room is one of the most structurally rich virtual team building activities for work because it requires your team to do exactly what real collaboration demands: communicate clearly, divide tasks, synthesize information, and push toward a shared goal under time pressure, all at once.
What it is
A virtual escape room puts your team inside a hosted online puzzle environment where everyone works together to solve a sequence of clues before a countdown timer runs out. The time pressure is real enough to generate urgency but low-stakes enough that no one dreads it.
How to run it
Your team joins a shared video call alongside the hosted platform, where a facilitator walks everyone through the opening scenario. From there, your group works together through a structured sequence:
Divide the clues so multiple people are investigating at once
Share findings in real time and connect the threads together
Crack the final puzzle before the clock runs out
Best for
This activity works best for teams that already function reasonably well together and are ready to test that collaboration under mild stress. It is particularly effective for leadership teams or project groups preparing to take on a demanding shared goal.
Teams that solve problems together under time pressure build the same trust muscles that high-stakes collaboration at work demands.
Tools and prep
You need your standard video conferencing platform and a booked session through a virtual escape room provider. Book at least one week in advance to secure your preferred time slot.
Time and cost
Plan for 60 to 75 minutes. Costs typically range from $20 to $40 per person depending on the provider and session length.
Put one on the calendar
The hardest part of any of these virtual team building activities for work is not finding the right one. It is actually scheduling it and protecting that time once it is on the calendar. Your team does not need a perfect plan. They need consistent, intentional moments of connection built into the rhythm of how you work together.
Pick one activity from this list that fits where your team is right now. Run it once, watch what happens, and build from there. Small, repeated investments in connection compound over time in ways that a single annual retreat never can. If you want to go deeper and give your team a shared framework for how to actually collaborate under pressure, explore what a virtual teamwork workshop with Robyn Benincasa can do for your organization.
Most teams don’t fail because they lack talent. They fail because talented people never learn how to work together. What is collaboration in the workplace, really? It’s more than a buzzword on a company values poster, it’s the operating system that determines whether a group of skilled individuals can produce results greater than the sum of their parts.
As a world champion adventure racer and San Diego firefighter, I’ve seen collaboration at its most extreme. When you’re carrying a teammate through a jungle at 2 a.m. or making split-second decisions on a fire scene, there’s no room for ego or ambiguity, you either function as one unit or you don’t function at all. That same principle applies inside every organization, whether you’re navigating a merger, launching a product, or trying to break down the silos between departments that quietly kill momentum.
Through my keynote programs and work with companies like Allstate, Northrop Grumman, and Boston Scientific, I’ve watched the same patterns repeat: teams that build genuine collaboration outperform, out-innovate, and outlast those that don’t. This article breaks down what workplace collaboration actually looks like in practice, why it matters more than individual performance, and how you can start building it into your team’s DNA, with real examples and strategies you can put to work immediately.
What collaboration in the workplace really means
When most people hear "collaboration," they picture a brainstorming session or a shared project channel. What is collaboration in the workplace, though, goes far deeper than shared tools or scheduled meetings. At its core, workplace collaboration is a deliberate process where people with different skills, perspectives, and responsibilities work toward a shared outcome, each contributing something the others can’t, and collectively producing something none of them could alone. The word traces back to the Latin "collaborare," which literally means to labor together, and that sense of shared effort is exactly what separates real collaboration from its weaker substitutes.
It’s not the same as cooperation or coordination
People often use collaboration, cooperation, and coordination as if they mean the same thing. They don’t, and understanding the difference changes how you structure your team’s approach. Coordination is logistical: you sequence tasks and make sure nobody duplicates work. Cooperation means people are willing to help when asked, but they still operate from their own lanes. Collaboration requires something fundamentally different: a shared stake in the outcome, a willingness to challenge each other’s thinking, and a commitment to producing something that belongs to no single person.
Real collaboration means you’re no longer working alongside people. You’re working as one unit, where every person’s success depends on everyone else’s.
Think about how this plays out on an adventure racing team. Coordination means knowing who carries which gear. Cooperation means helping a teammate who cramps up. Collaboration means you’ve built a culture where every person constantly reads the others, adjusts their pace, and makes decisions based on what’s best for the group, not themselves. That last part, the culture, is what most organizations skip. They install coordination systems and call it collaboration.
The core elements that define real collaboration
Genuine workplace collaboration rests on a few non-negotiable foundations. Psychological safety sits at the top of that list. Google’s Project Aristotle research identified psychological safety as the single strongest predictor of high-performing teams. When people feel safe to speak up, disagree, and take risks without fear of embarrassment, collaboration becomes possible in a way it simply can’t be when people are busy protecting themselves.
Clarity of purpose is the second foundation. When your team shares a vivid, compelling goal, individual ambitions start to align with collective ones. People make different decisions when they understand why the outcome matters and how their specific contribution connects to the larger mission. Without that clarity, what you get is a set of parallel tasks that happen to share a deadline.
Finally, trust built through consistent behavior holds everything together. Not trust as an abstract feeling you hope people have for each other, but trust as something earned through repeated small actions: following through on commitments, surfacing problems early, and choosing the team’s interest over personal comfort when it counts. These three elements, safety, purpose, and behavioral trust, form the actual architecture of real collaboration. Everything else is a tactic you build on top of them.
What good collaboration looks like day to day
Understanding what is collaboration in the workplace is one thing; recognizing it in action is another. Good collaboration doesn’t announce itself with a launch meeting or a team-building retreat. It shows up in the small, consistent behaviors your team practices every single day: the person who flags a problem before it becomes a crisis, the leader who asks for input before making a call, the colleague who credits others openly and without hesitation. Those moments compound over time into a culture.
Meetings where decisions actually get made
Good collaborative teams run meetings differently from most. Agendas are specific, roles are clear, and people come prepared to contribute, not just to listen. When disagreement surfaces in the room, it stays in the room and gets resolved, rather than splitting into side conversations that quietly undermine whatever the group just decided. People challenge ideas rather than each other, and everyone leaves with clarity about who owns what next step and when it needs to happen.
The fastest sign of a collaboration problem isn’t a bad meeting. It’s the conversation that happens in the hallway right after.
Shared accountability without scorekeeping
In a genuinely collaborative team, accountability doesn’t live with one person at the top of a hierarchy. When a project slips, the instinct isn’t to assign blame but to ask what the team needs to recover. Your teammates understand enough about each other’s work to step in when capacity gets tight, and they do it without being asked and without tracking favors. That kind of mutual accountability only happens when people feel a genuine stake in the shared outcome.
The behaviors that signal real day-to-day collaboration include:
Giving others the context they need to make good decisions, not just status updates
Surfacing risks early, even when it feels uncomfortable to do so
Following through consistently so others can rely on your word
Asking "what do you need?" before "why isn’t this done?"
These aren’t personality traits your team either has or doesn’t. They’re habits you can build deliberately, but only if the people at the top of your organization model them first and reward them consistently.
Why collaboration matters in modern organizations
Work has changed faster in the last decade than in the previous fifty years. Problems are more complex, teams are more distributed, and the window for making good decisions keeps shrinking. In that environment, understanding what is collaboration in the workplace isn’t a nice-to-have for HR initiatives. It’s a core operating requirement for any organization that wants to stay competitive, move with speed, and hold together under pressure.
The pace of change demands more than individual expertise
No single person holds enough knowledge to solve the problems modern organizations face. Product launches require engineering, marketing, legal, and finance to move in sequence and often simultaneously. Mergers demand that two previously separate cultures find a way to operate as one under significant pressure and tight timelines. When people work in isolation, they optimize for their own function and miss the larger picture. When teams collaborate genuinely, they surface information faster, catch errors earlier, and make decisions that account for the full scope of a challenge rather than one slice of it. That difference in decision quality compounds over time into a meaningful competitive gap.
The organizations that navigate complexity best aren’t the ones with the smartest people. They’re the ones that built systems for smart people to think together.
Distributed teams raise the stakes for intentional collaboration
Remote and hybrid work has made collaboration harder to maintain and more critical to build deliberately. Microsoft’s 2022 Work Trend Index found that professional networks had become more siloed since the shift to remote work, with collaboration concentrating in small clusters rather than flowing across teams and functions. That siloing creates blind spots, slows information sharing, and leaves significant capability sitting unused across departments that rarely interact.
Building collaboration into a distributed team takes deliberate structure, not goodwill. You have to design it into how you run communication norms, how you structure meetings for real decisions, and how you recognize people for contributing to outcomes beyond their own metrics. Organizations that get this right develop a resilience that carries them through market shifts, leadership changes, and competitive pressure that would stall a group of disconnected high performers every single time.
Benefits of collaboration for employees and results
Understanding what is collaboration in the workplace is one thing, but the case for building it gets easier when you look at what it produces. Collaboration doesn’t just make work feel better, it fundamentally changes what your team is capable of achieving. The benefits show up in individual performance, team retention, and the quality of outputs your organization can deliver consistently under pressure.
Collaboration makes employees better at their jobs
When people work in genuine collaboration, they learn faster than any training program can deliver. Exposure to how a colleague in a different function thinks through a problem forces your own thinking to expand. A sales rep who co-owns a project with an operations lead develops a sharper understanding of constraints that changes how they sell. That cross-functional learning compounds over time, building a workforce that holds more institutional knowledge and adapts more quickly when conditions change.
Collaboration also reduces the burnout that comes from carrying problems in isolation. When your team shares accountability for outcomes, no single person absorbs the full weight of a difficult period. People feel supported, and that support translates directly into higher engagement. Gallup’s State of the Global Workplace report consistently links employee engagement to team-level relationships, not just individual job satisfaction. Your people stay longer and work harder when they feel genuinely connected to a team with a shared purpose.
Teams that collaborate consistently deliver stronger results
The performance gap between collaborative teams and siloed ones is measurable and significant. Collaborative teams spot errors earlier, because more perspectives are checking the same work from different angles. They also move faster on complex decisions, because the people who hold critical information are already in the same conversation rather than waiting to be looped in after a choice is made.
When your team builds real collaboration, you’re not just improving morale. You’re compressing the time between problem and solution.
Beyond speed, the quality of outputs improves when diverse knowledge gets applied to a shared problem. Innovation doesn’t come from one brilliant person working alone. It comes from teams that combine different expertise, challenge each other’s assumptions, and build solutions that none of them would have reached independently.
Examples of workplace collaboration across functions
Knowing what is collaboration in the workplace means little without seeing how it actually operates across real business functions. The most powerful examples don’t happen inside a single team. They happen at the seams between functions, where different priorities, timelines, and vocabularies have to merge into a single coherent output. Those seams are where most organizations lose the most ground.
Cross-functional product development
Product launches are where collaboration either holds or breaks down under pressure. Engineering knows what’s technically possible, marketing knows what the customer wants, and operations knows what’s actually deliverable at scale. When those three groups work in isolation and hand work over the fence, you get products that hit market late, miss the brief, or fall apart in execution. When they collaborate from the start, sharing constraints and assumptions early, the launch moves faster and lands closer to what customers actually need.
The handoff is where most product failures begin. Collaboration removes the handoff entirely.
The behaviors that make cross-functional product development work include:
Setting a shared definition of success before work starts
Including operations and legal in early design conversations, not just at approval
Running joint reviews where each function flags risks, not just updates status
Sales and operations alignment
Sales and operations teams often approach the same customers from completely different angles. Sales focuses on revenue and speed; operations focuses on margin and reliability. That tension, left unmanaged, turns into conflict that costs you deals and damages client relationships. When those teams collaborate deliberately, they build pricing and delivery commitments that are both competitive and executable.
A pharmaceutical company I worked with had sales reps making promises the supply chain couldn’t keep. The fix wasn’t a new process; it was structured weekly conversations where both teams reviewed the pipeline together and built commitments they both owned. Within two quarters, they reduced contract disputes significantly and shortened the sales cycle because operations could confirm timelines in real time.
Your organization likely has a version of this gap somewhere. Finding the two functions that talk past each other most often and building a simple shared rhythm between them is one of the fastest ways to create measurable collaboration gains without a large-scale organizational change.
How to improve collaboration on any team
Knowing what is collaboration in the workplace gives you a clear target; building it requires a specific set of moves you can start making immediately. Most leaders underestimate how much structural design influences team behavior. You don’t improve collaboration by asking people to be more collaborative. You improve it by changing the conditions, rhythms, and incentives that shape how your team operates every day.
Start with shared goals, not shared tasks
The fastest way to shift team behavior is to replace individual deliverables with shared outcomes at the top of your planning process. When each person’s success metric is tied to a result that nobody can achieve alone, collaboration becomes the path of least resistance rather than an extra ask on top of an already full workload. Give your team one or two outcomes they all own together, define what success looks like in concrete terms, and watch how quickly alignment follows.
The moment your team sees a shared scoreboard, they start playing for each other instead of next to each other.
Build communication rhythms that reduce silos
Silos form when information moves slowly or stops moving altogether. A simple weekly cross-functional check-in, even a 20-minute standing meeting between two teams that rarely talk, creates a channel for issues to surface before they escalate and decisions to be made while they’re still easy. Structure the rhythm around what each team needs to know from the other to do their work well this week, not around status updates that could have been an email.
Three communication habits that consistently reduce silos:
Share context behind decisions, not just the decisions themselves
Name the person accountable for each next step before the meeting ends
Rotate who facilitates so ownership feels distributed
Recognize collaboration, not just output
Your organization rewards what it measures, and most performance systems measure individual output exclusively. When you start visibly recognizing people for the ways they helped others succeed, shared credit, knowledge transfer, showing up for a struggling colleague, you signal that collaboration is a real priority and not a value statement on a wall. Build at least one collaboration behavior into how you evaluate performance and give feedback, and your team will start building it into how they work.
Putting collaboration into practice
Understanding what is collaboration in the workplace is the starting point, but the real work happens when you take these principles back to your team and start applying them with intention. Real collaboration isn’t a program you launch once. It’s a standard you hold consistently, through the pressure of a tight deadline, a difficult quarter, or a major organizational shift. The teams that sustain it aren’t the ones with the best intentions; they’re the ones that built the habits, rhythms, and accountability structures that make working together the default rather than the exception.
Your team has the capacity to do something genuinely remarkable when they stop working alongside each other and start working as one unit. The shift from parallel performance to shared commitment is where the real competitive advantage lives. If you’re ready to build that kind of team, explore the programs and keynotes at Robyn Benincasa and find the right starting point for your organization.
Most organizational changes don’t fail because the strategy was wrong. They fail because nobody communicated the strategy in a way that made people want to follow it. A solid change management communication plan is the difference between a workforce that rallies behind a new direction and one that quietly resists until the initiative dies.
After two decades of leading teams through some of the most extreme environments on the planet, from expedition adventure races across Borneo to structure fires in San Diego, I’ve learned that communication is the connective tissue of every high-performing team. When the stakes are high and the path forward is uncertain, people don’t need more memos. They need clarity, consistency, and a reason to trust the process. The same principle applies whether you’re navigating a Class V rapid or steering your organization through a merger.
This guide breaks down 10 actionable steps to build a communication plan that actually moves people through change, not just informs them of it. Whether you’re restructuring departments, rolling out new technology, or integrating teams post-acquisition, these steps will help you lead the conversation instead of chasing reactions. Each one is grounded in the same teamwork principles I teach Fortune 500 leaders: get specific, get honest, and never assume alignment where you haven’t earned it.
Why change communication plans fail
Most change management communication plans start with good intentions but fall apart in execution. The problem isn’t that leaders forget to communicate. The problem is that they communicate once, assume it landed, and move on. Meanwhile, the people most affected by the change are left filling the gaps with rumors, worst-case assumptions, and hallway conversations that you never had a chance to correct. That silence becomes the real plan your organization follows, and it almost never aligns with yours.
They treat communication as a one-time broadcast
The single biggest mistake leaders make is sending one all-hands email or holding one town hall and calling the communication done. Change takes time to absorb, and a single message, no matter how well-crafted, doesn’t account for the different speeds at which people process disruption. Some people need to hear a message three times before they act on it. Others need to ask questions first. A one-and-done approach serves none of them, and it signals to your workforce that this change isn’t worth sustained leadership attention.
Here are the most common one-time broadcast mistakes leaders make:
Sending a change announcement with no follow-up schedule
Hosting a single town hall with no Q&A or structured feedback loop
Publishing a policy update on the intranet and assuming everyone read and understood it
Treating senior leadership alignment as a substitute for team-level communication
A one-time message tells people that change is happening. A repeated, layered message tells people that you’re committed to leading them through it.
They confuse information with understanding
Sending out a detailed memo loaded with data, timelines, and org charts doesn’t mean people understand the change. Information is a starting point, not a destination. What people actually need is context: why this change matters, how it affects their specific role, and what you expect from them on day one, week one, and month one. Without that context, even accurate information breeds confusion and hesitation.
Understanding requires dialogue, not just delivery. Leaders who mistake a well-designed slide deck for a communication strategy consistently underestimate how much people need to process change through conversation, not in isolation. The teams I’ve raced with in the world’s most demanding expedition races didn’t absorb race strategy from a briefing packet. They talked through it, challenged it, and internalized it together before the starting gun fired. Your organization works the same way, and your plan needs to make space for it.
They design for the org chart, not the person
Most communication plans are built around reporting structures: executive announcements go to senior leadership, manager talking points go to middle management, and a summary goes to front-line teams. This top-down cascade ignores how people actually experience change, which is personal, immediate, and directly tied to their own day-to-day responsibilities. When your plan only flows in one direction, it misses the people who most need to be reached with specificity and honesty.
A plan that works for people, not just structures, has to account for:
Different roles and how the change affects each one in distinct ways
Different trust levels in leadership across departments and locations
Different communication preferences, from visual learners to those who need written detail to absorb information
Different emotional starting points, from vocal skeptics to early adopters who can become internal advocates
These four gaps are where most change initiatives lose momentum long before any structural rollout fails. Recognizing them in your own organization is the first real step toward building a plan that holds up under pressure.
Steps 1–2: Define the change and audiences
Before you write a single message, you need to know exactly what you’re communicating and who needs to hear it. Skipping this foundation is why so many change management communication plans collapse before they gain traction. These first two steps force you to slow down and get specific, so that everything you build later has a clear purpose behind it.
Step 1: Define the change with precision
You cannot communicate something you haven’t fully defined. Vague change definitions produce vague messages, and vague messages produce fear. Before any communication goes out, your leadership team needs to agree on four things in writing: what is changing, what is not changing, why the change is happening now, and what success looks like at the end.
Write those four answers in plain language, as if you’re explaining the situation to someone on your front line, not to your board. If you can’t summarize the change in two or three sentences without using internal acronyms or strategy jargon, your definition isn’t clear enough yet. Push until it is.
The clarity you build in step one becomes the backbone of every message you send throughout the entire initiative.
Here is a simple definition template you can fill out before drafting any communication:
Element
Your Answer
What is changing?
What is NOT changing?
Why is this happening now?
What does success look like?
What is the timeline?
Step 2: Map your audiences
Different groups experience the same change differently, and your plan has to reflect that. A merger looks like a cost-saving exercise to your finance team and a threat to job security to your operations staff. Both perceptions are real, and both require a tailored response.
Start by listing every group that the change will touch: senior leaders, middle managers, front-line employees, customers, and external partners if relevant. For each group, identify three things: their primary concern, their role in the change, and their preferred communication channel. This audience map becomes the filter through which you run every message before it goes out.
Your audience groups will likely include:
Senior leaders who need strategic context and alignment on talking points
Middle managers who need scripts and answers to hard questions
Front-line employees who need role-specific clarity and a direct feedback channel
External stakeholders who need a controlled, professional summary of impact
Steps 3–4: Set goals and key messages
Once you know what’s changing and who’s affected, your next job is to decide what your communication needs to accomplish and what core messages will carry that load. These two steps are where your change management communication plan moves from a structural exercise into a strategic one. Without clear goals, you have no way to measure whether your communication is working. Without key messages, your plan fragments into inconsistent talking points the moment it reaches middle management.
Step 3: Set measurable communication goals
Your communication goals need to go beyond "keep everyone informed." Vague goals produce vague results, and vague results make it impossible to course-correct when the plan hits resistance. Set goals that are specific enough to measure. For example, instead of "increase employee awareness," write "80% of front-line staff can accurately describe the change and their role in it by week four."
If you can’t measure whether your communication is working, you can’t defend your plan to leadership or adjust it before the damage compounds.
Tie each goal to a specific audience, a measurable outcome, and a deadline. Here are three goal types that cover the most critical communication needs during a change initiative:
Goal Type
Example
Awareness
90% of employees open and read the initial change announcement within 48 hours
Understanding
Managers can answer the top 10 employee questions without escalating by week two
Behavior
Front-line staff complete required transition training by the end of month one
Step 4: Build your key messages
Key messages are the three to five core statements that every communicator in your organization should be able to repeat accurately, regardless of their level or department. Think of them as the load-bearing walls of your communication structure. Every email, town hall, and manager talking point should reinforce these statements, not contradict or dilute them.
Write your key messages around what each audience actually needs to know: what is changing, why it benefits them specifically, and what action they need to take. Avoid abstract corporate language and use the same plain-language standard you applied in Step 1. Here is a simple key message template you can adapt directly into your plan:
The change: [One sentence, plain language]
Why it matters to you: [One sentence, specific to the audience]
What happens next: [One sentence, with a clear date or action]
What stays the same: [One sentence, for stability and trust]
Where to ask questions: [One sentence, with a direct channel]
Steps 5–6: Choose channels and message senders
You now have a clear definition of the change, an audience map, measurable goals, and key messages. The next part of your change management communication plan determines how those messages actually reach people and who delivers them. These two decisions shape whether your plan feels credible and accessible or scattered and impersonal. Getting them right is the difference between communication that moves people and communication that gets ignored.
Step 5: Match channels to audiences
Not every channel works for every audience, and using the wrong one for the wrong group signals a lack of thought, even when your content is strong. A front-line team that spends its day away from a desk is not going to absorb change updates through an intranet post. A senior leadership team that needs strategic alignment is not going to get it from a text message push notification.
Choosing the right channel is not a logistics decision. It is a trust decision, because it shows your audience that you understand how they actually work.
For each audience group you mapped in Step 2, assign a primary channel and a secondary channel. The primary channel delivers the core message. The secondary channel reinforces it or provides a space for questions. Use the table below as a starting framework:
Audience
Primary Channel
Secondary Channel
Senior leaders
Live briefing or video call
One-page written summary
Middle managers
Manager-only briefing with talking points
Email FAQ document
Front-line employees
Team huddle led by direct manager
Printed summary or text alert
Remote workers
Video message from leadership
Async Q&A thread or chat channel
External stakeholders
Formal email from executive
Follow-up call if needed
Step 6: Choose your message senders carefully
Who delivers a message matters as much as what the message says. Research from Gallup consistently shows that employees trust their direct manager and the CEO more than they trust mid-level corporate communication. That means a message about job security delivered by a department head carries more weight than the same message in a company-wide email from HR.
Assign a specific sender to each key message based on who carries the most credibility with that audience. Your CEO should own messages about vision and strategic direction. Your direct managers should own role-specific impact conversations because they have the relationships. Using a single spokesperson for every message across every audience flattens your communication and reduces its impact at every level of the organization.
Steps 7–8: Build two-way communication loops
The first six steps of your change management communication plan focus on sending the right messages to the right people through the right channels. These next two steps shift the direction of communication entirely. One-way communication informs people; two-way communication builds the trust that actually moves them through a change. Without structured feedback loops, you lose visibility into where resistance is building and where confusion is spreading before either becomes a serious problem.
Step 7: Create structured feedback channels
Your workforce will have questions, concerns, and reactions to every change you communicate, and they will express them somewhere. Your job is to make sure they express them to you, not to each other in ways you can’t address. Set up at least two dedicated feedback channels before your first communication goes out: one anonymous and one direct. Anonymous channels like pulse surveys lower the barrier for honest feedback. Direct channels like manager office hours or a shared email inbox capture the specific questions you can turn into FAQ documents for the broader organization.
If you don’t create a place for concerns to go, they will find their own outlet, and it won’t be one you can respond to.
Here is a basic feedback channel structure you can build into your plan immediately:
Feedback Type
Channel
Cadence
Anonymous employee sentiment
Pulse survey (3 to 5 questions)
Weekly for first 60 days
Role-specific questions
Manager open office hours
Bi-weekly
Cross-department concerns
Dedicated change inbox monitored by HR
Ongoing
Leadership-level input
Executive team debrief
After each major milestone
Step 8: Train managers to hold difficult conversations
Structured channels only work if the people running them are prepared to handle what comes through them. Middle managers are the most important communicators in your change initiative, and most of them have never been trained to hold a conversation about job uncertainty, role elimination, or process disruption without defaulting to corporate talking points. Before your plan launches, give every manager a prepared conversation guide that includes the top ten questions they are likely to face and direct, honest answers to each one.
Equip managers with three things: a short FAQ document, a clear escalation path for questions they can’t answer, and explicit permission to say "I don’t know yet, and here’s when I’ll find out." That last piece matters more than most leaders realize. Honest uncertainty builds more trust than scripted confidence, especially when people already sense that the full picture hasn’t been shared.
Steps 9–10: Measure, adapt, and reinforce
Most change management communication plans treat measurement as an afterthought, something to do at the end of the initiative when it is too late to fix anything. These last two steps flip that assumption. Measuring communication effectiveness in real time gives you the data you need to correct course before confusion hardens into resistance, and reinforcing your key messages after the initial rollout is what separates leaders who actually land a change from those who announce one.
Step 9: Measure what your communication is actually doing
You cannot manage what you do not track, so build specific measurement checkpoints into your plan from day one. Focus on three signal types: reach (did people receive the message), comprehension (did they understand it), and behavior (did they act on it). Reach is the easiest to track through email open rates, meeting attendance logs, and intranet page views. Comprehension and behavior require direct input from your audience, which is why the feedback channels you built in Step 7 are essential here.
Measuring reach without measuring comprehension tells you that your message traveled, not that it landed.
Use the framework below to build your measurement cadence into the plan before launch:
Signal
How to Measure
Frequency
Reach
Email open rates, meeting attendance
After each communication
Comprehension
Manager pulse check, 3-question survey
Weekly for 60 days
Behavior
Training completion rates, process adoption
At each milestone
Sentiment
Anonymous survey, manager feedback
Bi-weekly
Step 10: Adapt and reinforce based on what you learn
Data without action is just documentation. Once your measurement system surfaces gaps in understanding or pockets of resistance, you need a clear process for adjusting your messages and re-engaging the groups that are falling behind. Designate one person on your leadership team as the communication owner who reviews all incoming data weekly and has the authority to update messaging, add a channel, or trigger a targeted manager conversation before a small gap becomes a full breakdown.
Reinforcement is not repetition. Repeating the same message through the same channel produces diminishing returns. Instead, layer your reinforcement by changing the format: follow an executive email with a manager team huddle, then a short video message, then a written FAQ update. Each format reaches a different segment of your workforce and gives your key messages a longer shelf life without sounding like a broken record.
Templates you can copy into your plan
The most common reason a change management communication plan stalls at the drafting stage is that leaders don’t have a starting point. The templates below are designed to remove that friction. Copy them directly into your planning documents, adjust the bracketed fields for your specific situation, and use them as the structural baseline for every communication touchpoint in your initiative.
Change announcement email template
Your first official communication sets the tone for everything that follows. Keep this email short, direct, and written from the perspective of what matters to the reader, not what looks good for leadership. Use the template below as your starting framework:
Subject: [Company name] is making a change, and here is what it means for you
Hi [team name or all-staff],
Effective [date], [brief plain-language description of what is changing]. This decision [one sentence explaining the business reason, without jargon].
Here is what this means for your role: [One to two sentences specific to this audience group. Be direct.]
Here is what is not changing: [List two or three things that stay the same, such as reporting structure, location, or core responsibilities.]
Your next step: [One specific action with a deadline, such as attending a team huddle on X date or completing a short survey by X date.]
If you have questions before then, contact [name] at [email or channel].
[Your name and title]
The goal of your first message is not to say everything. It is to tell people enough that they trust you will keep them informed.
Manager talking points card
Middle managers are your most important communicators, and they need a card they can reference before walking into a team conversation. Keep this to one page and make sure every manager receives it before any team-level communication goes out.
Topic
Talking Point
Why this is happening
[One sentence, plain language]
What changes for this team
[Specific to their department]
What stays the same
[Two to three items]
Timeline
[Key dates, in order]
Top concern you will hear
[Anticipated question + honest answer]
Where to escalate
[Name, role, and contact]
Where to send questions you can’t answer
[Dedicated inbox or HR contact]
Fill in each row before your first manager briefing, not after. This card becomes the single source of truth your managers reference when the conversation goes in an unexpected direction.
Put your plan into motion
A change management communication plan only works when it moves from a document into deliberate daily action. The ten steps in this guide give you a complete framework, but the leaders who actually land change are the ones who start before they feel fully ready. Pick a launch date, assign a named owner to each step, and hold that schedule accountable the same way you would any other operational commitment. Review your progress against your measurement checkpoints every week, not just at major milestones.
Your organization is counting on you to lead the conversation, not just manage the announcement. The teams that navigate change with the least disruption are built on consistent, honest communication from leaders who treat trust as a measurable performance outcome, not a soft concept. If you want to go deeper on building that kind of team culture, explore Robyn Benincasa’s keynote and leadership programs and bring these principles directly to your people.
Every organization hits a point where the way things work now won’t get them where they need to go next. A merger closes, a new system rolls out, leadership shifts, and suddenly thousands of people need to operate differently. Change management in organizations is the structured approach that makes those transitions stick, rather than stall. Without it, even the most well-funded initiatives collapse under resistance, confusion, and fatigue.
As a world champion adventure racer and career firefighter, I’ve led teams through environments where adapting to sudden, high-stakes change isn’t optional, it’s survival. That experience taught me something corporate playbooks often miss: change doesn’t fail because of bad strategy. It fails because teams aren’t built to move through uncertainty together. At Robyn Benincasa, we help organizations develop the collaborative operating system that makes real transformation possible.
This article breaks down what change management actually means, why it matters, and the proven frameworks leaders use to guide their organizations through transitions. Whether you’re navigating a restructure, a cultural overhaul, or a major technology shift, you’ll walk away with a clear understanding of the core models and strategies that separate organizations that adapt from those that get stuck in the attempt.
What change management means at work
Change management in organizations is a structured, disciplined process for moving people, teams, and systems from a current state to a desired future state. That definition sounds straightforward, but the work behind it is not. When a company launches a new platform, reorganizes its divisions, or shifts its strategic direction, the plan on paper and the reality in the building are two very different things. Change management bridges that gap by addressing not just the technical or operational side of a transition, but the human side, which is the side that most initiatives underestimate.
The core components
Most frameworks break change management into three fundamental layers: defining the change clearly, equipping people to navigate it, and reinforcing the new behaviors once the transition lands. None of these steps work in isolation. A team that understands what is changing but receives no support or training will struggle. A team that gets training but never hears a clear explanation of why the change matters will resist or disengage.
The organizations that manage change well don’t just announce it. They build a shared understanding of where the team is going and why getting there together matters.
The scope of change management also varies significantly depending on the size and type of initiative. A software rollout in a single department requires a different level of effort than a full organizational restructure following a merger. What stays consistent across every scenario is the need for intentional planning that accounts for how people actually respond to uncertainty and disruption.
The difference between change management and project management
Many leaders treat these two disciplines as the same thing, and that confusion is expensive. Project management focuses on the tasks, timelines, and deliverables that make a change initiative technically complete. Change management focuses on adoption and sustained behavior shift, which is what determines whether the initiative actually delivers its intended results.
You can hit every milestone on a project plan and still watch the change fail because people didn’t buy in. A new CRM system goes live on schedule, but your sales team keeps using spreadsheets. A merger closes on time, but two cultures never integrate. Those are project management wins and change management failures. Keeping the two disciplines distinct and giving both their due attention is one of the most practical things a leadership team can do when preparing for a major transition.
Why it matters for people, performance, and risk
Most organizations focus on whether a change initiative will work technically. That focus misses the real variable. How people experience and respond to change determines whether your initiative actually delivers results or quietly dissolves into the daily noise. When employees don’t understand what’s changing or why it matters to them personally, trust erodes fast, and that erosion rarely stays contained to a single project or team.
The human cost of unmanaged change
When change lands without structure or clear communication, people fill the information gap with fear and assumption. Productivity drops, collaboration breaks down, and your most capable people start weighing their options. Research on organizational behavior consistently shows that employees who feel unsupported through transitions are far more likely to disengage, and disengagement spreads quickly across teams that work closely together. The human cost isn’t abstract. It shows up in turnover, missed targets, and a cultural climate that resists the next initiative before it even starts.
The organizations that survive high-stakes transitions aren’t the ones with the best plans. They’re the ones whose people trusted the process enough to keep moving forward together.
The performance and risk equation
Applying strong change management in organizations reduces more than internal friction. It directly lowers the financial and operational risk tied to failed adoption. When a major system rollout or restructure doesn’t land, you absorb the cost of the original investment and the additional cost of re-implementation, retraining, and lost momentum. Those compounding costs stack up fast and create pressure that leadership often underestimates until it’s already visible in the numbers. Your people, your performance metrics, and your organizational risk profile are all connected to how well you manage the human side of change.
Frameworks leaders use to guide change
Several structured models exist to help organizations plan and execute transitions with greater consistency. The most widely used frameworks each address both the human and operational dimensions of change, and knowing which one fits your situation gives your leadership team a clear starting structure rather than having to build one from scratch.
Kotter’s 8-Step Model
John Kotter’s model, developed at Harvard Business School, is one of the most cited frameworks in organizational change. It moves teams through eight sequential steps, starting with creating urgency and building a guiding coalition, through enabling action, generating short-term wins, and ultimately anchoring new behaviors into the culture. The model works well for large-scale transformations where visible leadership momentum matters.
If your team doesn’t feel the urgency, they won’t prioritize the change, no matter how well the rest of your plan is built.
The ADKAR Model
Prosci’s ADKAR model approaches change management in organizations from the individual level. The acronym stands for Awareness, Desire, Knowledge, Ability, and Reinforcement. Rather than managing change as a single organizational event, ADKAR tracks where each person sits in the adoption process. That granularity helps leaders identify exactly where a rollout is breaking down, whether people lack awareness, motivation, or the actual skills to operate differently.
Lewin’s Change Model
Kurt Lewin’s three-stage model, Unfreeze, Change, Refreeze, strips the process down to its core mechanics. Unfreezing involves preparing people to release current behaviors and assumptions. The change stage moves them through the transition itself. Refreezing locks the new behaviors in place so the organization doesn’t slide back to old patterns. Its simplicity makes it a useful foundation before layering in more detailed frameworks.
How to build a change plan that gets adopted
A framework gives you a starting point, but a change plan that actually gets adopted requires more than selecting the right model. You need to build a plan that accounts for your specific organization, your specific people, and the specific barriers that will surface during the transition. Change management in organizations works when leaders treat adoption as the primary goal, not implementation.
Anchor your plan in sponsorship and communication
Visible, active sponsorship from senior leadership is the single strongest predictor of successful change adoption. Your people watch what leaders do far more than they listen to what leaders announce. When executives stay engaged and communicate consistently throughout the transition, not just at launch, the change gains credibility that no internal campaign can manufacture on its own.
Employees don’t resist change because they can’t adapt. They resist it when no one gives them a compelling reason to trust the direction.
Consistent, layered communication means delivering your message across multiple channels, at multiple points in time, and at multiple levels of the organization. A single all-hands meeting won’t cover it. Your managers need talking points; your frontline teams need specifics about how their daily work shifts on day one.
Build feedback loops before resistance builds up
Early feedback mechanisms give your team a place to surface confusion, flag training gaps, and report where the plan is breaking down in real time. Don’t wait for a post-mortem to find out what went wrong. Build these into your rollout schedule from the start:
Pulse surveys at two-week intervals during the transition
Dedicated office hours with change leads or project sponsors
Direct manager check-ins with frontline teams during the first 30 days
Resistance, change fatigue, and other pitfalls
Even a well-designed change plan will run into friction. Resistance and fatigue are not signs that your initiative is broken; they are predictable responses to disruption that you need to anticipate and address directly. Understanding where these pitfalls come from gives you a much stronger position to manage them before they undermine your results.
Why resistance surfaces
Resistance rarely comes from laziness or stubbornness. Most employees push back on change because they don’t see what’s in it for them, or because they genuinely don’t understand how the new approach connects to goals they already care about. Change management in organizations breaks down fastest when leaders assume buy-in exists before they’ve actually built it.
Resistance is information. When you treat it that way, you find the gaps in your plan before they become failures.
The most common sources of resistance include:
Lack of clarity about what is changing and why
No visible support from direct managers
Previous change initiatives that failed and left people skeptical
Fear of losing competence or status in the new environment
Recognizing change fatigue
Change fatigue sets in when your people have absorbed too many transitions without enough time, support, or recovery between them. It looks like disengagement, slower adoption rates, and a general resistance to new initiatives regardless of how well they are planned. Your teams don’t become incapable; they become depleted.
Tracking fatigue early means watching for declining participation in feedback channels, lower energy in project check-ins, and a rise in informal complaints about another change. When those signals appear, slow down and reinforce what has already been accomplished, and give your people a clear view of what stability looks like ahead.
What to do next
Change management in organizations doesn’t have to feel like a gamble. You now have the core definition, the most-used frameworks, and a clear picture of what separates transitions that land from ones that fall apart. The next move is applying that understanding to the real situation your team is facing right now. Start by identifying which stage of resistance or adoption your people are actually in, then choose a framework that matches the scale and complexity of your initiative.
Your people will follow a direction they trust. Building that trust requires visible leadership, honest communication, and a plan designed around human behavior, not just project milestones. If your organization is facing a major transition and you want a team-tested approach that turns uncertainty into performance, connect with Robyn Benincasa to learn how her programs help leadership teams build the collaborative foundation that makes real change stick.
Most change initiatives inside organizations don’t fail because the strategy was wrong. They fail because people weren’t ready. The ADKAR model Prosci developed addresses exactly this gap, it shifts the focus from project plans and timelines to the individual human beings who actually have to do things differently. That distinction matters more than most leaders realize.
At Robyn Benincasa’s core, our work centers on helping teams perform under pressure, adapt to shifting conditions, and commit to outcomes bigger than any one person. Whether it’s navigating a merger, breaking down silos, or rallying a sales force around a new direction, the human side of change is where results are won or lost. The ADKAR framework gives leaders a structured way to think about that human side, and it pairs well with the teamwork-driven approach we bring to organizations every day.
This article breaks down all five building blocks of the ADKAR model, Awareness, Desire, Knowledge, Ability, and Reinforcement, and shows you how to put each one to work. You’ll walk away with a clear understanding of the framework and practical ways to apply it inside your own team or organization.
What the Prosci ADKAR model is
The ADKAR model is a goal-oriented change management framework built around five outcomes that every individual must reach for a change to stick. The acronym stands for Awareness, Desire, Knowledge, Ability, and Reinforcement. Unlike frameworks that focus on process steps or project timelines, ADKAR zeroes in on the person going through the change. Each letter represents a specific building block, and a person has to clear each one before the next becomes useful.
ADKAR works because it treats change as something that happens to a person, not to a project plan.
Where ADKAR came from
Prosci, the research and training organization behind the framework, developed ADKAR based on studies conducted with more than 700 organizations in the late 1990s. Founder Jeff Hiatt studied why some changes landed and others collapsed, and the pattern he found was consistent: success or failure almost always traced back to individual adoption. Hiatt published the model formally in 2006 in his book ADKAR: A Model for Change in Business, Government and our Community.
The adkar model prosci created didn’t come from theory alone. It came from watching real organizations attempt real change and tracking what the people inside those organizations actually needed to move forward. That grounding in observed behavior is a big reason the framework has held up for nearly three decades and remains one of the most widely used change management tools in the world today.
The goal behind the framework
The framework exists to give leaders and managers a precise diagnostic tool, not just another communication checklist. When a change initiative stalls, ADKAR helps you pinpoint exactly where the breakdown happened. If someone has Awareness but no Desire, they understand the change but don’t want it. If someone has Knowledge but no Ability, they know what to do but can’t execute it yet. Each gap has a different cause and a different fix.
This precision matters because most change efforts treat resistance as a single, uniform problem. They respond with more announcements, more training, or more pressure, without diagnosing what’s actually missing for the individuals involved. ADKAR forces you to slow down and ask a more useful question: where specifically is this person stuck? When you can answer that, you can target your support instead of spreading it thin. That shift from broadcasting change to supporting individuals through it is what separates organizations that complete transformations from the ones that keep restarting them.
How ADKAR fits into change management
Change management covers a wide range of practices, from stakeholder communication to project governance, but most frameworks operate at the organizational level. They focus on timelines, workstreams, and deliverables. ADKAR operates at a different level entirely. It focuses on the individual inside the organization, which is where change either takes hold or quietly dies.
ADKAR within the broader Prosci methodology
The adkar model Prosci built sits at the center of a larger methodology that also includes the PCT Model (People, Process, and Context) and a structured three-phase change process. You can use ADKAR as a standalone diagnostic tool, but inside Prosci’s full system, it serves as the measure of whether your change management efforts are working at the individual level. Think of the broader methodology as the map and ADKAR as the instrument that tells you whether each person is actually moving across the terrain.
ADKAR tells you not just that a change is stuck, but exactly where and with whom it’s stuck.
The difference between organizational and individual change
Most organizations track project milestones: system launch dates, policy rollout deadlines, training completion rates. Those metrics tell you what happened at the organizational level. They don’t tell you whether the people who showed up to training actually left with the confidence and capability to change their behavior. That gap between organizational progress and individual adoption is where most change efforts fall apart.
ADKAR bridges that gap by giving you a common language to assess readiness at the person level. When your HR team, frontline managers, and senior leaders all use the same five building blocks to evaluate where people are in the change journey, you stop having vague conversations about "resistance" and start having specific conversations about what support each person actually needs. That specificity accelerates adoption across the entire organization.
The five ADKAR building blocks explained
The adkar model Prosci built treats each of the five building blocks as a required checkpoint, not an optional step. A person who skips one doesn’t simply fall behind; they hit a wall that stops all further progress. Each building block stacks directly on the one before it, which means the sequence matters as much as the content itself. Understanding what each block actually means helps you deploy the right support at the right time.
Building Block
What it means
Awareness
Understanding why the change is happening
Desire
Choosing to support and participate in the change
Knowledge
Knowing how to change
Ability
Being able to implement the change consistently
Reinforcement
Sustaining the change over time
Awareness, Desire, and Knowledge
These first three blocks form the motivational and cognitive foundation of change. Awareness answers the question of why: why is this change necessary, and what does the organization risk by not making it? Desire goes a step further, because understanding the reason isn’t the same as wanting to act on it. A person can fully grasp the rationale and still choose not to engage. Knowledge then shifts the focus to how: what specific behaviors, skills, and processes does this person need to learn? This is where many leaders make their first mistake by delivering heavy training programs before people have moved through Awareness and Desire, leaving employees with knowledge they have no motivation to use.
You can inform people all day, but until they want the change and know how to execute it, nothing moves.
Ability and Reinforcement
Ability is where many change initiatives quietly break down. A person can attend every training session and still struggle to perform the new behavior under real working conditions. Ability requires practice, coaching, and enough time to convert knowledge into consistent execution. Reinforcement closes the loop by making the new behavior the default. It is often treated as a nice-to-have, but without recognition, accountability structures, and visible consequences, people drift back to familiar habits and the change investment evaporates within weeks of the initial rollout.
How to apply ADKAR step by step at work
Applying the adkar model Prosci developed isn’t complicated, but it does require discipline. The most common failure mode is treating it as a one-time checklist instead of an ongoing diagnostic that you return to throughout the entire change process. The five building blocks only work when you use them as a living tool, not a form you fill out on launch day and file away.
Start with a change readiness assessment
Before you roll out any change, assess where each person currently sits across all five building blocks. You don’t need a lengthy survey. A simple one-on-one conversation with each direct report, guided by the five ADKAR elements, gives you enough information to identify gaps before they become blockers. Ask whether people understand the reason behind the change, whether they believe in it, and whether they feel equipped to act on it. Map the results so you can see exactly which building blocks are missing across your team and where to focus your energy first.
Spend more time diagnosing before the change launches than you think you need to, because gaps found early cost far less to close than gaps found after rollout.
Use managers as the primary change channel
Managers are the single most powerful lever you have when applying ADKAR inside a real organization. Research from Prosci consistently shows that employees prefer to hear about changes that affect their work directly from their immediate supervisor, not from company-wide emails or town halls. Train your managers to recognize each ADKAR building block in conversations with their teams and to respond with targeted support rather than generic reassurance.
Reinforcement, the final block, is where manager accountability becomes non-negotiable. Schedule structured check-ins after a change goes live to confirm that new behaviors are sticking, recognize the people who have made the shift, and address backsliding quickly before it spreads across the team.
Common ADKAR mistakes and how to avoid them
Even well-intentioned leaders make predictable errors when applying the adkar model Prosci developed. Most of these mistakes share a common thread: they prioritize organizational convenience over individual readiness, which is the exact opposite of what the framework is designed to do. Recognizing these patterns before they take root saves you time, budget, and the goodwill of the people you need to bring along.
Jumping straight to training
The most widespread mistake is launching knowledge-building activities before people have moved through Awareness and Desire. Sending your team to a two-day training session while they still question why the change is happening guarantees low retention and high resentment. Knowledge only sticks when people already understand the reason behind the change and have chosen to engage with it.
If your training rooms are full but your adoption numbers are empty, check whether Awareness and Desire were ever truly established.
Fixing this mistake is straightforward. Before you schedule any training, confirm that every person affected can articulate why the change is necessary and what it means for their specific role. If they can’t, you have more foundational work to do first.
Ignoring reinforcement after launch
Many organizations declare victory at go-live, which is precisely when the real work begins. Without structured reinforcement, the new behaviors compete against years of ingrained habits and almost always lose within the first few weeks. The absence of recognition, follow-up conversations, and visible accountability signals to people that the change wasn’t actually serious.
Build reinforcement into your plan before you launch, not after you notice people slipping back. Assign your managers specific check-in milestones, recognize early adopters publicly, and address backsliding with direct coaching rather than blanket reminders. Reinforcement is not a bonus step; it is the building block that locks in everything the previous four steps built.
What to do next
The adkar model Prosci developed gives you a framework that cuts through the noise of organizational change and focuses on what actually determines success: whether each individual in your organization moves through all five building blocks completely. You now have a clear picture of what each block means, how they connect, and where most change efforts go wrong. The next step is to take that knowledge into a real conversation with your team, run a simple readiness assessment before your next initiative, and commit to reinforcing new behaviors well past the launch date.
Change at scale starts with one person at a time, and the leaders who understand that consistently outperform the ones who rely on announcements and slide decks. If you want to build the kind of team that doesn’t just survive change but actually accelerates through it, explore how Robyn Benincasa helps organizations perform under pressure and turn high-stakes transitions into competitive advantages.
Most team building activities for employees fall flat because they treat connection like a checkbox. A ropes course here, a trivia game there, and then everyone goes back to their desks and nothing changes. The problem isn’t the activity itself. It’s that there’s no intention behind it.
I’ve spent decades racing across jungles, deserts, and mountains with teams where collaboration wasn’t optional, it was survival. As a world champion adventure racer and San Diego firefighter, I’ve learned that real team cohesion gets built through shared challenge, not forced fun. That same principle drives every keynote and workshop I deliver to organizations through my business. Whether it’s my T.E.A.M.W.O.R.K. framework or my work with the Project Athena Foundation, the throughline is always the same: teams perform best when they’re built with purpose.
This article gives you 16 proven team building activities organized by type, icebreakers, problem-solving exercises, outdoor challenges, and more. Each one is designed to actually move the needle on collaboration, trust, and morale. No cringe, no wasted time. Just activities that create the kind of shared experiences your team will reference long after the event ends.
1. T.E.A.M.W.O.R.K. alignment sprint
This is the activity I built from my own framework, and it’s the one I recommend most when a team needs to reset around shared values fast. The T.E.A.M.W.O.R.K. acronym covers eight core elements: Trust, Enthusiasm, Absolute clarity of role, Mission over ego, Work together, Ownership, Resilience, and Kinship. Running this sprint forces your group to evaluate where they actually stand on each element, not where they wish they stood.
What it builds
The sprint builds shared accountability and honest self-assessment across the whole team. When each person scores the team privately on each element and then compares results, gaps in perception surface immediately. Those gaps are where real, productive conversations begin.
How to run it step by step
Give each participant a scoring sheet listing all eight T.E.A.M.W.O.R.K. elements. Ask everyone to rate the team on each from 1 to 10, privately. Tally the scores on a shared whiteboard or screen, then open a short discussion on any element with wide score variance: what does a 10 look like here, and what is one action we can take this week to get closer? Close by having the team commit to one specific improvement per element they scored below a 7.
Time, group size, materials
Time: 60 to 90 minutes
Group size: 5 to 30 people
Materials: Printed or digital scoring sheets, a whiteboard or shared screen, markers
Remote and hybrid version
Run the scoring through a shared Google Form so results appear in real time for everyone on screen. Use breakout rooms for small-group discussion on each element, then bring the full team back together to align on action commitments.
How to keep it inclusive
Offer anonymous scoring so quieter team members feel safe rating honestly. Read each element aloud before anyone scores it to make sure the full team is evaluating the same thing with the same definition.
Debrief that turns it into better work
Ask three closing questions: What surprised you? Where did the team score highest and what drove that? What one commitment will you personally own before the next team session? Capture every commitment in a shared document the whole team can reference and revisit.
The sprint only works if your team treats low scores as useful data, not as personal criticism.
2. Win as one cross-silo relay
Siloed departments drain team performance faster than almost any other organizational problem. This activity forces people from different functions to hand off work in sequence, like a relay race. Each person can only succeed if the previous link delivers clearly and completely, which makes interdependence impossible to ignore.
What it builds
The relay builds cross-functional trust and handoff clarity. It is one of the most targeted team building activities for employees who work in departments that rarely interact. People leave with a concrete experience of what it costs the whole chain when one stage goes quiet.
How to run it step by step
Split participants into mixed-department teams of four to six. Give each person a sequential task: one researches a challenge, the next synthesizes findings, the next proposes a solution, and the last presents. Each stage builds directly on the previous output, which makes every dropped handoff visible and worth unpacking.
Time, group size, materials
Time: 45 to 60 minutes
Group size: 8 to 40 people
Materials: Task briefs per stage, shared document or whiteboard, visible timer
Remote and hybrid version
Assign each stage to a dedicated shared document so handoffs are tracked in real time. Keep a countdown timer visible on screen to maintain focus and urgency throughout each stage.
How to keep it inclusive
Write task briefs at equal complexity so no role feels like the easy leg. Rotate which department leads which stage if you run this exercise more than once.
The relay only exposes where your handoffs break if you keep the time pressure real.
Debrief that turns it into better work
Ask the group where the handoff slowed down and what information was missing at that moment. Then connect those gaps directly to real workflows your team runs every week.
3. After-action review that actually sticks
Most teams debrief by accident, if at all. The after-action review (AAR) is a structured format borrowed from the military that replaces vague post-project chats with a focused four-question process. As one of the most underused team building activities for employees, it turns any completed project into a concrete learning event.
What it builds
The AAR builds reflective thinking and psychological safety. When the whole team answers the same four questions together, they practice honesty without blame. Over time, this habit creates a culture where feedback flows freely instead of pooling into resentment.
How to run it step by step
Gather the team immediately after a project, event, or sprint ends. Work through four questions in order: What did we plan to happen? What actually happened? Why was there a difference? What do we do differently next time? Capture every answer in a shared document that everyone can access before the next project kicks off.
The AAR only builds better habits if you run it while the details are still fresh, not two weeks later.
Time, group size, materials
Time: 30 to 45 minutes
Group size: 3 to 20 people
Materials: Shared doc or whiteboard, printed question prompts
Remote and hybrid version
Post the four questions in a shared document before the call so participants can add notes asynchronously. Reserve live time for discussion and prioritizing the top two changes your team commits to.
How to keep it inclusive
Rotate the facilitator role each session so no single voice dominates the review. Collect written responses before the call to give quieter participants equal input.
Debrief that turns it into better work
Close by assigning a named owner to each committed change and setting a check-in date. Without that step, the AAR becomes another meeting that produces notes nobody reads.
4. Two truths and a lie with a work twist
The classic icebreaker gets a real upgrade when you anchor each statement to actual work experience. Instead of personal trivia, participants share two real professional wins and one plausible-but-false accomplishment. This version reveals what your teammates have actually done, which builds respect and curiosity faster than any standard get-to-know-you game.
What it builds
This activity builds psychological safety and peer respect by surfacing accomplishments that rarely come up in daily conversations. People on your team have done remarkable things most colleagues never hear about. This exercise closes that gap fast.
How to run it step by step
Ask each participant to write down two real professional achievements and one believable fake. Take turns presenting all three while teammates vote on which one is the lie. After the reveal, give each person 60 seconds to add context to their true statements.
The work twist turns a casual game into one of the most memorable team building activities for employees because it generates genuine admiration between colleagues.
Time, group size, materials
Time: 20 to 30 minutes
Group size: 4 to 20 people
Materials: Index cards or a notes app, optional polling tool for larger groups
Remote and hybrid version
Use a polling tool or chat window for live voting so remote participants stay fully engaged. Display each person’s three statements on screen before the group votes.
How to keep it inclusive
Frame the prompt broadly so people at every career stage can participate without hesitation. A recent hire and a 20-year veteran both have real achievements worth sharing.
Debrief that turns it into better work
Close by asking the group what surprised them most and how they can apply those hidden strengths to current projects. Connect each revealed skill directly to a real team need.
5. One-word check-in with a why
The one-word check-in is one of the simplest team building activities for employees on this list, but it consistently produces some of the most honest conversations. You open any meeting by asking each person to share one word that describes how they’re showing up right now, then give them 20 seconds to explain the why behind it. That explanation is where the real value lives.
What it builds
This activity builds emotional awareness and psychological safety in a format that costs almost no time. When team members hear each other name stress, excitement, or distraction openly, they stop guessing about why someone seems disengaged and start responding with context instead of assumption.
How to run it step by step
Start every meeting by asking participants to pick one word that captures their current state. Go around the room or call list in order. After each word, give that person 20 seconds to explain what’s driving it. Keep the pace tight so the whole round takes under five minutes even with a larger group.
This only works if the facilitator goes first and models genuine honesty, not a performative "I’m great."
Time, group size, materials
Time: 5 to 10 minutes
Group size: 4 to 25 people
Materials: None required
Remote and hybrid version
Ask remote participants to type their word in the chat before anyone speaks, so nobody anchors off the first voice they hear. Then unmute each person in order for their brief explanation.
How to keep it inclusive
Frame the prompt so any emotional state is acceptable, not just positive ones. Naming frustration or overwhelm should feel as safe as naming focus or excitement.
Debrief that turns it into better work
Close by asking the group what patterns they noticed across the words shared. If several people named the same stressor, that is a signal worth addressing before the meeting moves to its agenda.
6. Back-to-back drawing for clarity training
Back-to-back drawing is one of the most revealing team building activities for employees who assume they communicate clearly. Two partners sit back-to-back. One holds a simple geometric image; the other has a blank page. The describer explains the image in words only while the drawer recreates it without asking questions. The gap between the two drawings tells you more about your team’s communication habits than any survey will.
What it builds
This activity builds communication precision and listening accuracy quickly. When partners compare drawings at the end and see the mismatch, the lesson sticks without any lecturing from a facilitator.
How to run it step by step
Pair participants back-to-back. Give the describer a simple geometric or abstract image and three minutes to describe it while the drawer works silently. Run a second round where questions are allowed. Compare all four drawings when both rounds finish.
Use shapes, arrows, and patterns rather than clipart
No questions allowed in round one
Questions allowed in round two to show the contrast
Time, group size, materials
Time: 20 to 30 minutes
Group size: 6 to 30 people
Materials: Printed images, blank paper, pens
Remote and hybrid version
Send the describer’s image via private message before the round starts. Your drawer recreates it on paper or a digital whiteboard while the describer talks live on the call.
How to keep it inclusive
Use abstract shapes rather than culturally specific images so no participant has an advantage based on background or prior knowledge.
Debrief that turns it into better work
Ask pairs where their language broke down and what one phrase would have closed the gap. Then connect that answer directly to a real project handoff your team runs every week.
The round where questions are allowed almost always produces a dramatically better result, which makes the case for building feedback loops into every handoff your team runs.
7. Silent birthday lineup for nonverbal teamwork
Silent birthday lineup is one of the most disarming team building activities for employees because it strips away the tool most teams rely on completely: verbal communication. The task looks deceptively simple. Line everyone up in birthday order, January through December, without speaking a single word.
What it builds
This activity builds nonverbal coordination and creative problem-solving under mild pressure. Your team has to develop a shared system using only gestures, expressions, and physical cues, which surfaces both natural leaders and natural listeners fast.
How to run it step by step
Tell the group their one goal: arrange themselves in birthday order from January to December without speaking. No mouthing words, no writing letters in the air. Once the lineup is set, each person reveals their birthday aloud so the group can measure how accurate their system was.
Time, group size, materials
Time: 10 to 15 minutes
Group size: 8 to 40 people
Materials: None required
Remote and hybrid version
Send participants to a virtual waiting room and have them rejoin one at a time in the order they believe is correct. Use the chat window only after the full lineup is set to reveal actual birthdays.
The remote version works well because it forces people to think through the coordination system before they act.
How to keep it inclusive
Allow participants who prefer not to stand to join from their seat using a numbered card. Pair anyone with a mobility consideration with a partner who can relay their position in the line.
Debrief that turns it into better work
Ask your team what coordination system emerged and who drove it. Then connect that observation directly to how your group handles direction gaps on real projects every week.
8. Team working agreement code of conduct
A team working agreement is one of the most practical team building activities for employees because it produces a real artifact your team uses every day. Instead of posting generic company values on a wall, you co-create specific behavioral commitments that govern how your group communicates, decides, and handles conflict.
What it builds
This activity builds shared ownership of team culture by making implicit expectations explicit. When your team writes the rules together, every person on the list has a stake in holding those standards.
How to run it step by step
Give each participant sticky notes and ask them to write one behavioral norm per note that would make this team function better. Cluster similar ideas on a whiteboard, vote on the top eight to ten, and refine the language together until every person can commit to each item without reservation.
A working agreement only holds if the team revisits it after every major project and updates it when reality shifts.
Time, group size, materials
Time: 60 to 75 minutes
Group size: 4 to 20 people
Materials: Sticky notes, whiteboard, markers, a shared document for the final agreement
Remote and hybrid version
Use a digital whiteboard tool like Google Jamboard for sticky note clustering. Share the finalized document in a channel your team checks daily so the agreement stays visible.
How to keep it inclusive
Gather written input before the live session so quieter voices shape the first draft rather than reacting to what louder participants already proposed.
Debrief that turns it into better work
Ask the team where the agreement already breaks down in real workflows and name one person who will flag violations when they happen. Without accountability, the document becomes decoration.
9. Barter puzzle for negotiation and tradeoffs
The barter puzzle mirrors real workplace dynamics more directly than most team building activities for employees on this list. Each small group gets a set of puzzle pieces, but the pieces they need to complete their puzzle are spread across competing teams. The only path to completion runs through negotiation, trading, and tradeoffs with groups who have different interests.
What it builds
This activity builds negotiation fluency and cross-team collaboration under light competitive pressure. Participants quickly discover whether their instinct is to hoard resources or share strategically, and that gap fuels the most productive part of the whole session.
How to run it step by step
Divide participants into groups of four to six. Give each group an incomplete set of puzzle pieces, with the rest distributed randomly across other teams. Tell each group to complete their puzzle using any combination of trading, gifting, or deal-making, then set a timer and let the negotiation run.
Time, group size, materials
Time: 30 to 45 minutes
Group size: 12 to 40 people
Materials: Multiple jigsaw puzzles with pieces redistributed across teams
Remote and hybrid version
Assign digital puzzle sets via private message and have teams negotiate through breakout rooms. The written communication trail becomes useful debrief material on its own.
Teams that share resources early almost always finish faster than teams that guard every piece.
How to keep it inclusive
Write clear trading rules before the activity starts so every negotiation style enters on equal footing. Give less assertive members a dedicated speaking role so every voice shapes the strategy.
Debrief that turns it into better work
Ask the group which trades cost them the most time and what that mirrors in real project work. Then connect each answer to a specific workflow where your team currently holds resources too tightly across functions.
10. Escape room with a structured debrief
Escape rooms rank among the most popular team building activities for employees right now, but most organizations miss the real value by skipping the debrief entirely. The room itself is just the setup. The conversation afterward is where the learning lives.
What it builds
Escape rooms build rapid decision-making and role clarity under time pressure. Your team has to distribute tasks, communicate fast, and trust each other’s judgment simultaneously, which surfaces your group’s real collaboration patterns in about an hour.
How to run it step by step
Book a private room for your group and assign a silent observer from your team whose only job is to watch how decisions get made. Run the room as normal. Immediately after, gather everyone for a structured 20-minute debrief while the experience is still fresh.
The observer role is what separates a fun outing from a genuine development session.
Several companies offer fully virtual escape room experiences designed for distributed teams. Run the same structured debrief in a video call immediately after the room closes.
How to keep it inclusive
Brief your group before entry so no participant feels ambushed by physical or cognitive demands they weren’t expecting. Ask the venue about accessibility accommodations in advance.
Debrief that turns it into better work
Ask your team who took charge, who stepped back, and whether those patterns mirror real project dynamics. Then name one specific behavior your group commits to changing before the next deadline hits.
11. Minefield trust walk
The minefield trust walk strips collaboration down to its most fundamental element: one person’s complete reliance on another. Scatter objects across an open floor, blindfold one partner, and task the other with guiding them safely through using only their voice. The result is a fast, visceral lesson in what trust actually costs and what it takes to earn it.
What it builds
This activity builds communication precision and interpersonal trust in a way that talking about those topics never could. Your team leaves with a shared physical memory of what it feels like to depend on a colleague completely, which makes it one of the more emotionally resonant team building activities for employees.
How to run it step by step
Clear a large open space and scatter 15 to 20 objects across the floor as mines. Pair participants and blindfold one partner per pair. The sighted partner guides their partner verbally from start to finish without touching them. Swap roles and run a second round.
Time, group size, materials
Time: 20 to 30 minutes
Group size: 6 to 30 people
Materials: Blindfolds, everyday objects as mines, open floor space
Remote and hybrid version
Ask remote participants to recreate the exercise at home using household objects while a partner guides them live on a video call. The physical version travels surprisingly well over a screen.
How to keep it inclusive
Replace the blindfold with closed eyes or a sleep mask for anyone with sensory sensitivities. Offer a seated navigation variant for participants with mobility considerations.
Debrief that turns it into better work
Your team will surface the most useful insight when you ask which instructions helped most and which created confusion. Connect those patterns directly to how your group delivers direction on real projects under pressure.
The partner who speaks in vague generalities almost always loses their teammate in the field, and in the office.
12. Scavenger hunt with a customer lens
Most scavenger hunts send employees chasing random clues with no connection to real work. This version flips the format by grounding every task in your actual customer experience, turning a fun activity into one of the most grounded team building activities for employees you can run outside the office.
What it builds
This activity builds customer empathy and cross-functional observation skills simultaneously. Teams who walk through your product, service, or location as if they were first-time customers almost always return with friction points your internal processes have been blind to for months.
How to run it step by step
Assign each team a list of customer-experience tasks rather than generic clues. Examples include: find the three most confusing steps in your onboarding process, locate where a new customer would first get stuck, and photograph one moment where your brand promise breaks down. Each team presents their findings in five minutes at the end.
Time, group size, materials
Time: 60 to 90 minutes
Group size: 8 to 30 people
Materials: Task list per team, smartphones, shared presentation slide
Remote and hybrid version
Send remote participants a digital customer journey map and ask them to audit it for gaps. Teams submit screenshots and annotations, then present their findings live on a shared screen.
The teams who look hardest at friction almost always find the improvements your customers have been waiting for.
How to keep it inclusive
Write tasks that require observation rather than physical speed so every participant contributes equally regardless of mobility or pace.
Debrief that turns it into better work
Ask each team which gap surprised them most and assign a named owner to follow up on the top two findings before your next sprint kicks off.
13. Marshmallow spaghetti tower build
The marshmallow spaghetti tower challenge is one of the most deceptively instructive team building activities for employees available with materials that cost less than ten dollars per team. Each group gets 20 sticks of dry spaghetti, one yard of tape, one yard of string, and one marshmallow, then has 18 minutes to build the tallest freestanding structure that can support the marshmallow on top.
What it builds
This challenge builds iterative thinking and adaptive leadership under a hard time constraint. Teams that plan without testing almost always lose to teams that prototype fast, fail early, and adjust before the clock runs out.
How to run it step by step
Divide participants into teams of three to five. Set a visible timer for 18 minutes and distribute identical material kits to each group. Tell every team the marshmallow must sit on top and the structure must stand on its own when time ends. Measure height when the timer hits zero.
Teams that place the marshmallow first during testing, rather than saving it for the final moment, consistently build stronger structures.
Time, group size, materials
Time: 30 to 40 minutes including debrief
Group size: 6 to 30 people
Materials: Spaghetti, tape, string, marshmallows per team
Remote and hybrid version
Ship identical material kits to remote participants in advance. Run the build live on video so every team sees each other’s structure rise in real time.
How to keep it inclusive
Assign specific roles before the build starts, such as designer, builder, and tester, so every participant has a defined contribution regardless of physical dexterity.
Debrief that turns it into better work
Ask your team which approach produced the best result and why the winning strategy worked. Then connect the prototype-and-test loop directly to how your group handles project planning under pressure.
14. Sell it challenge with everyday objects
The sell it challenge ranks among the most energizing team building activities for employees because it asks people to persuade under pressure with nothing prepared. Each participant picks a random everyday object from a bag and has 90 seconds to deliver a compelling sales pitch for it to the group.
What it builds
This activity builds persuasive communication and creative thinking in a format that feels low-stakes but generates high engagement. Your team practices structuring an argument fast, reading an audience, and committing to an idea even when the material is absurd.
The best pitches almost always come from people who fully commit to the premise rather than apologize for the object.
How to run it step by step
Fill a bag with random household objects: a stapler, a rubber band, a plastic spoon, a paper clip. Each person draws an object without looking and gets 60 seconds to prepare. Then they pitch it to the group for 90 seconds. After every pitch, the group votes on which pitch was most convincing and why.
Time, group size, materials
Time: 30 to 45 minutes
Group size: 5 to 20 people
Materials: Bag of random objects, optional scoring cards
Remote and hybrid version
Ask remote participants to grab any object within arm’s reach when called on. The unplanned grab adds genuine spontaneity that makes the remote version just as effective as the in-person format.
How to keep it inclusive
Keep the pitch length short so participants who are less comfortable speaking publicly stay engaged rather than dreading a long performance.
Debrief that turns it into better work
Ask your team which pitch technique landed best and how those same moves apply to your next client conversation or internal proposal.
15. Virtual trivia that drives connection
Virtual trivia sits at the lighter end of team building activities for employees, but it earns its place on this list because it creates genuine moments of laughter and surprise that formal exercises rarely produce. The key is designing categories that mix professional knowledge with personal interest so every person on your team has a real chance to contribute.
What it builds
Trivia builds team familiarity and shared enjoyment in a format that requires zero prep from participants. When someone on your team answers an obscure question correctly, it shifts how colleagues perceive their depth, and that perception shift carries into real work conversations.
How to run it step by step
Use a live hosting tool like Kahoot to build your question deck. Mix three category types: company knowledge, industry facts, and personal interest categories nominated by team members in advance. Run five to six rounds of five questions each, with a brief reaction pause after each answer reveals.
Time, group size, materials
Time: 45 to 60 minutes
Group size: 6 to 50 people
Materials: Trivia hosting platform, video call, pre-submitted category suggestions
Remote and hybrid version
This activity was built for remote teams, so the hybrid version simply requires in-office participants to join on individual devices rather than sharing a single screen.
Teams that submit personal interest categories in advance consistently report higher engagement than teams playing generic trivia packs.
How to keep it inclusive
Draw categories from team submissions rather than defaulting to pop culture so no single background dominates the scoreboard.
Debrief that turns it into better work
Ask your team which answers surprised them most and how those hidden interests could inform how you staff your next cross-functional project.
16. Volunteer day with a reflection circle
A volunteer day ranks among the most meaningful team building activities for employees because it shifts your team’s focus outward entirely. Working shoulder-to-shoulder on a shared community goal builds bonds that office walls rarely produce.
What it builds
Volunteer days build collective purpose and shared identity beyond job titles. When your team works toward something that matters outside the company, they return with a broader sense of who they are together.
How to run it step by step
Partner with a local organization at least four weeks in advance and assign roles before the day starts. End the session with a structured reflection circle where each person shares one thing the experience shifted in how they see the team.
The reflection circle is what separates a charity outing from a genuine team development session.
Coordinate a virtual volunteer event, such as a group letter-writing campaign or a remote fundraising effort, and run the reflection circle immediately after on a shared video call.
How to keep it inclusive
Choose activities that offer multiple participation options so every team member contributes regardless of physical ability. Confirm all logistics with your partner organization in advance so no one arrives unprepared.
Debrief that turns it into better work
Ask your team which moment required the most trust and how that same trust would change how they show up on your next high-stakes project together.
Next steps for your next team session
Every activity on this list works, but the ones that stick share one thing: intentional follow-through. Pick one activity from this list, run it with your team this month, and then hold the debrief with the same rigor you’d give a project review. The 30 minutes after the activity matters more than the activity itself.
Start small. Choose the activity that targets your team’s most visible gap right now, whether that’s trust, communication, or cross-functional alignment. Run it once, capture what surfaces, and build from there. The goal isn’t to check off team building activities for employees on a calendar. The goal is to create a team that performs differently because of what they learned together.
Every organizational change carries risk, whether it’s a merger, a technology rollout, or a full-scale cultural shift. The difference between teams that navigate change successfully and those that stall out often comes down to one thing: how well they assessed the risks before making a move. A structured change management risk assessment gives leaders the ability to spot potential failures early, plan around them, and keep momentum when it matters most.
I’ve spent decades leading adventure racing teams through situations where a single miscalculation could end an expedition, and later, as a San Diego firefighter, where the stakes were even higher. Those experiences taught me that risk isn’t the enemy; unexamined risk is. The same principle applies inside organizations. When leaders skip the assessment phase, they’re essentially asking their teams to race blind through unfamiliar terrain.
This guide walks you through the specific steps, questions, and tools you need to evaluate risk before, during, and after a change initiative. Whether you’re leading a department through restructuring or rolling out a new system across the enterprise, you’ll walk away with a practical framework you can put to work immediately.
What a change management risk assessment covers
A change management risk assessment is a structured process for identifying what could go wrong during a planned change, analyzing how likely and damaging each risk is, and deciding what to do about it before problems take root. It isn’t a one-time checklist you fill out before a kickoff meeting. It’s a living framework that guides decisions from initial planning through final execution, giving your team a shared, honest picture of where the vulnerabilities are and who is responsible for addressing them.
The core components
Every solid assessment works across four key areas: risk identification, risk analysis, risk prioritization, and mitigation planning. Each component builds directly on the last. You can’t prioritize what you haven’t identified, and you can’t mitigate what you haven’t analyzed. Most organizations that struggle with change either skip the identification phase entirely or stop after listing risks without scoring them, which leaves the team guessing about where to direct energy and resources.
The goal isn’t to eliminate all risk. It’s to make sure no risk catches you off guard.
The table below breaks down each component and what it accomplishes:
Component
What It Does
Risk Identification
Surfaces specific threats across people, process, technology, and culture
Risk Analysis
Measures the likelihood and potential impact of each identified risk
Risk Prioritization
Ranks risks so your team focuses on the highest-value mitigation work
Mitigation Planning
Defines specific actions, owners, and timelines for each priority risk
The categories of risk you need to examine
A thorough change management risk assessment looks across multiple dimensions, not just technical failure or budget overruns. The categories below reflect where most change initiatives actually break down in practice:
People risks: Resistance to change, skill gaps, key personnel loss, or insufficient training
Process risks: Workflow disruptions, unclear ownership, or poorly mapped transition steps
Technology risks: System incompatibilities, data integrity issues, or implementation delays
Communication risks: Misaligned messaging, stakeholder confusion, or visible leadership gaps
Compliance risks: Regulatory exposure, audit requirements, or unaddressed policy changes
Each category requires its own questions and its own accountable owners. Assigning a single risk owner across all five areas is a common mistake that produces dangerous blind spots. Your assessment should map each category to the people with the deepest operational knowledge in that area. Those are the individuals most likely to surface the real risks before those risks surface on their own, on the worst possible day.
Step 1. Define the change and scope
Before you can run a meaningful change management risk assessment, you need a clear, shared definition of what is actually changing. Vague scope is one of the most common sources of risk because it allows different stakeholders to make different assumptions about what the change includes, which creates gaps in planning and accountability. At this stage, your goal is to document the change in specific, concrete terms and confirm that everyone involved is working from the same definition.
Define the boundaries of the change
Start by writing a one-paragraph change description that answers four questions: what is changing, why it is changing, who it affects, and when it takes effect. This description becomes the anchor for every risk conversation that follows. Without it, your team will assess risks against different mental models of the change, and your mitigation plans will reflect that inconsistency.
A change that isn’t clearly defined cannot be reliably assessed for risk.
Use the template below to capture your change definition before moving to the identification step:
Field
Your Input
Change Name
Short title for the initiative
Change Description
One to two sentences describing what is changing
Business Reason
Why this change is happening now
Affected Teams or Systems
Who and what is directly impacted
Target Start Date
Planned rollout or go-live date
Expected Duration
How long the transition period will last
Confirm the scope with key stakeholders
Once you have a draft definition, share it with the decision-makers and frontline leaders who will be responsible for executing the change. Ask each person to confirm that the description matches their understanding. Where they disagree, you have already found your first risk: a misalignment in scope expectations that will compound every downstream decision if you leave it unresolved.
Step 2. Identify risks and stakeholders
With your scope locked down, you’re ready to surface the specific risks that could derail the change. This step is where your change management risk assessment gets its depth. Pull together a small working group that includes both decision-makers and frontline operators, because the people closest to the work almost always see risks that leadership misses from the top.
The fastest way to miss a critical risk is to run your identification session with only senior leaders in the room.
Surface risks across every category
Run a structured risk identification session with your group. Give each participant a copy of the five risk categories from the framework (people, process, technology, communication, and compliance) and ask them to list at least two specific risks per category. Specific means actionable: "employees won’t adopt the new system" is more useful than "resistance to change" because it points directly toward concrete mitigation steps like training, incentives, or a phased rollout.
Use the template below to capture what comes out of the session:
Risk Category
Specific Risk
Potential Impact
People
Key trainer leaves before go-live
Training gap delays adoption
Process
Handoff between teams undefined
Work falls through the gaps
Technology
New platform incompatible with legacy system
Data migration failure
Communication
Executive messaging delayed past launch
Rumors fill the vacuum
Compliance
New workflow not reviewed by legal
Regulatory exposure
Map stakeholders to specific risks
Once you have your risk list, assign a named owner to each item. Ownership without a name attached is not ownership. For each risk, also identify the affected stakeholder group so your mitigation plan targets the right people with the right actions at the right time.
Document this as a two-column extension of your risk log: risk owner in one column, affected group in the next. This pairing makes it easy to spot where one person carries too many risks alone, which is itself a risk worth flagging before you move to scoring.
Step 3. Score and prioritize risks
With your risk list built and owners assigned, your next job is to score each risk so you can direct time and resources toward the threats that matter most. Without a scoring step, your team treats a minor inconvenience the same as a potential project-killer, which spreads attention too thin and leaves the real problems underprepared.
Use a probability-impact matrix
Every risk in your change management risk assessment gets scored on two dimensions: how likely it is to occur and how severe the impact would be if it does. Score each dimension on a simple 1-to-3 scale: 1 for low, 2 for medium, 3 for high. Multiply the two scores together to get a single priority number between 1 and 9.
A score of 6 or higher signals a risk that needs a concrete mitigation plan before the change moves forward.
Use this template to score each item from your risk log:
Risk
Probability (1-3)
Impact (1-3)
Priority Score
Key trainer leaves before go-live
2
3
6
Legacy system incompatibility
1
3
3
Executive messaging delayed
3
2
6
Handoff between teams undefined
2
2
4
Workflow not reviewed by legal
1
3
3
Rank and cut your list
Once every risk has a priority score, sort your list from highest to lowest. Focus your mitigation planning on anything scoring 6 or above first. Risks scoring 4 or below still belong in your log, but they move to a monitoring tier where you track them without committing full mitigation resources immediately.
Trim your active mitigation list to a number your team can realistically manage. Ten deeply owned risks outperform thirty loosely tracked ones every time.
Step 4. Build mitigation and monitoring plan
Scoring and prioritizing risks only pays off when you translate that information into specific actions with owners and deadlines. This final step in your change management risk assessment closes the loop between identifying what could go wrong and making sure someone is actively working to prevent it. A mitigation plan without a monitoring cadence is just a document that ages on a shared drive.
Define a mitigation action for each priority risk
For every risk scoring 6 or higher, write one concrete mitigation action that reduces either its probability or its impact. Attach a named owner, a due date, and a success indicator so the action stays trackable. Vague entries like "address communication gaps" don’t give anyone a clear next step.
The best mitigation plans are specific enough that a new team member could pick them up and execute without a briefing.
Use this template to document each high-priority mitigation:
Risk
Mitigation Action
Owner
Due Date
Success Indicator
Key trainer leaves before go-live
Cross-train two backup trainers by week 4
L&D Lead
[Date]
Two certified backups confirmed
Executive messaging delayed
Schedule leadership comms 2 weeks before launch
Comms Manager
[Date]
Draft approved and scheduled
Legacy system incompatibility
Complete integration testing in staging environment
IT Lead
[Date]
Zero critical errors in test run
Set up a monitoring cadence
Weekly check-ins during active rollout periods and bi-weekly reviews during quieter phases keep your risk log current without creating meeting overload. Assign one person to update the risk log before each session so the conversation starts from current data, not last month’s assumptions. Flag any risk whose probability or impact score changes so your team can adjust mitigation actions in real time rather than reacting after the damage is done.
Conclusion
A well-executed change management risk assessment doesn’t guarantee a perfect rollout, but it closes the gap between what you planned and what actually happens. The four steps in this guide give you a repeatable system: define the scope, identify risks by category, score and prioritize them, then assign concrete mitigation actions with named owners and deadlines. Each step builds on the last, and skipping any one of them leaves you with an incomplete picture at exactly the moment you need clarity most.
Your team’s ability to move through change depends on how prepared they are before the pressure hits. The real work happens before the launch date, not after problems surface. Use the templates in this guide to run your next assessment, keep your risk log updated throughout the rollout, and revisit your scores as conditions shift.
Most people think about peak performance as an individual pursuit, the athlete who breaks a record, the executive who closes a massive deal, the surgeon who nails a complex procedure. But if you’ve ever asked what is peak performance, you’ve probably noticed that the answers tend to stop at personal optimization. That’s only half the picture. True peak performance almost always involves other people, teammates, colleagues, crews who push each other beyond what any single person could achieve alone.
That’s something Robyn Benincasa has seen firsthand across two high-stakes careers. As a world champion adventure racer and a veteran San Diego firefighter, she’s operated in environments where peak performance isn’t optional, it’s survival. Her work with corporate teams now applies those same principles to organizations that need to perform at their highest level under real pressure, whether they’re navigating a merger, launching a product, or trying to break down silos that slow everything down.
This article breaks down the psychology behind peak performance, explains how flow states actually work, and connects all of it to the part most definitions miss: team results. You’ll walk away with a clear framework for understanding what peak performance means and practical strategies to reach it, not just individually, but collectively.
Why peak performance matters in modern work
Work has gotten harder to predict. Market conditions shift faster, teams are more distributed than ever, and organizations expect more output with fewer resources. In that environment, understanding what is peak performance stops being an abstract idea and becomes a practical question with real consequences for your team, your culture, and your bottom line. The organizations that consistently outperform their competitors have figured out how to make peak performance a repeatable system, not a lucky streak.
The stakes are higher than they used to be
The modern workplace puts sustained pressure on people in ways that weren’t common a generation ago. Decision-making cycles are shorter, expectations from leadership and customers have escalated, and the tolerance for slow, fragmented execution has nearly disappeared. When individuals and teams aren’t operating near their ceiling, the gap between what’s possible and what’s actually delivered becomes visible and costly fast.
The organizations that consistently outperform their competitors aren’t staffed with more talented people. They’ve built conditions where their people can actually perform.
Research from McKinsey has found that highly engaged and energized employees are significantly more productive than disengaged peers, which means the performance gap between a well-functioning team and a struggling one compounds quickly. A small difference in daily output multiplies into a major competitive gap over the course of a year.
Individual effort alone doesn’t close the gap
Most performance problems at work aren’t individual problems. They’re system problems. When one person is hitting their stride but their colleagues are burned out, siloed, or unclear on the goal, the team’s overall output stays flat. You can fill a room with high performers and still watch projects stall if the group hasn’t built shared momentum and mutual accountability.
This is where the adventure racing parallel becomes practical. In a race across hundreds of miles of rough terrain, the team moves at the pace of its slowest member. That rule forces elite athletes to think collectively about performance, not just personally. The same dynamic plays out in any organization where real interdependence exists between roles, departments, or teams.
What this means for you as a leader
If you’re responsible for a team’s output, peak performance isn’t something you can delegate to individuals and hope it adds up. You shape the conditions, the expectations, the feedback loops, and the culture that either enable or suppress your people’s best work. That’s a significant lever, and most leaders underestimate how much it moves.
Leaders who invest in understanding performance at the team level see returns that individual coaching programs rarely produce on their own. The goal isn’t to push harder on people. It’s to design an environment where your team can consistently reach its ceiling together, and then raise that ceiling deliberately over time.
What peak performance is and what it is not
When people ask what is peak performance, they usually get one of two answers: a motivational statement about giving 100%, or a technical definition involving brain chemistry. Neither is very useful on its own. A working definition needs to be concrete enough to act on and broad enough to apply to groups, not just individuals.
A clear, working definition
Peak performance is the state in which a person or team consistently delivers their highest quality output, while managing the physical, mental, and emotional demands of the work. It’s not a single moment of brilliance. It’s a repeatable condition you build toward, one where the right habits, environment, and support structures make excellent execution the norm rather than the exception.
Peak performance isn’t about being extraordinary every once in a while. It’s about creating the conditions that make extraordinary output ordinary.
That definition matters because it shifts focus from outcomes you can’t fully control (winning, hitting a specific number) to the process you can influence every day. It also makes performance something a team can build together, not just something individuals stumble into when they happen to be "on."
What peak performance is not
Peak performance is not burnout in disguise. Working 80-hour weeks and running on stress hormones might produce short bursts of output, but that pattern degrades the cognitive and physical resources that sustained performance actually requires. Chasing exhaustion is not a strategy, it’s a withdrawal from your long-term capacity.
It’s also not the same as perfectionism. High performers make fast decisions, accept smart risks, and recover from mistakes without losing momentum. Perfectionists stall on decisions and treat errors as permanent setbacks. The difference in results between those two approaches is significant, especially inside teams where one person’s hesitation slows everyone else down.
The psychology behind peak performance and flow
When researchers study what is peak performance at the psychological level, one concept comes up consistently: flow. Psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, who spent decades studying optimal human experience, described flow as a mental state where a person is so absorbed in a challenging activity that everything else falls away. Time distorts. Self-consciousness disappears. Output quality rises sharply. It’s not mystical; it’s a measurable neurological shift that you can learn to access more reliably.
What flow actually is and how it works
Flow occurs when the difficulty of a task matches your skill level closely enough to keep you fully engaged without tipping into anxiety or boredom. Too easy, and your attention drifts. Too hard, and stress overrides focus. The sweet spot between those two states is where sustained high performance happens. Neuroscience research shows that during flow, the brain releases a combination of dopamine, norepinephrine, and endorphins, chemicals that sharpen focus, increase pattern recognition, and reduce the mental friction that slows performance.
Flow isn’t a personality trait some people have and others don’t. It’s a state your brain can enter when the right conditions exist.
Your prefrontal cortex, the part of your brain that handles self-monitoring and second-guessing, temporarily quiets during flow. That’s why people in flow make faster, cleaner decisions. They’re not filtered through layers of doubt. This is also why psychological safety on a team matters so much: when people feel judged or unsupported, the prefrontal cortex stays on high alert, and flow becomes nearly impossible.
How to trigger flow intentionally
You can’t force flow, but you can set up the conditions that make it more likely. Clear goals, immediate feedback, and a skill-challenge balance are the three core ingredients Csikszentmihalyi identified. In practice, this means knowing exactly what a good outcome looks like before you start, getting real-time signals on how you’re doing, and working at the edge of your current capability rather than staying safely inside it.
What peak performance looks like in teams
Understanding what is peak performance at the individual level is a useful starting point, but teams add a layer of complexity that most frameworks skip entirely. A team hitting its peak isn’t just several individuals performing well at the same time. It’s a group where trust, clear communication, and shared commitment create combined output that none of those individuals could generate alone. That distinction separates a talented roster from a genuinely high-performing team, and it’s the distinction that matters most in a corporate environment.
The markers of a team in peak form
When a team is operating at its highest level, you notice specific patterns. Decisions happen faster because people trust each other’s judgment and don’t need to over-explain or defend every move. Information flows without friction, bottlenecks clear quickly, and people step into gaps without waiting to be asked. In adventure racing, Robyn Benincasa calls this "Human Synergy," the point where the team produces more than the sum of its parts.
When a team reaches that state, the shift is visible in the results before anyone has to announce it.
Another clear marker is how the team handles pressure and setbacks. Peak-performing teams don’t fall apart when things go wrong. They adjust, redistribute load, and keep moving. That resilience isn’t accidental. It comes from having built strong relational trust before the pressure arrived, so when stress shows up, the foundation holds rather than cracks.
What breaks team performance
Unclear roles and competing priorities are the fastest way to disrupt a team’s momentum. When people don’t know who owns what, or when individual metrics conflict with team goals, collaboration collapses into self-protection. You end up with talented people optimizing for their own numbers while the team’s overall performance stalls.
Lack of psychological safety is the second major disruptor. If your team members filter what they say to protect themselves politically, your group loses access to its best thinking at exactly the moments it needs that thinking the most.
How to build peak performance habits that last
Understanding what is peak performance is only useful if you can translate it into consistent daily behavior. Single bursts of great work don’t define a high-performing individual or team. Sustainable peak performance comes from habits that compound over time, not from pushing harder during crunch periods and crashing afterward. The difference between teams that stay near their ceiling and teams that cycle between highs and collapses usually comes down to structure, not talent.
Build clarity before you build momentum
Vague goals produce vague results. Before you can build a performance habit, you need to define what excellent execution actually looks like for your role and your team. Set a specific standard for each core responsibility, then make that standard visible to everyone involved. When your team knows exactly what good looks like, they can self-correct in real time rather than waiting for a review cycle to surface problems.
Clarity isn’t a soft skill. It’s the foundation every other performance habit rests on.
Feedback loops accelerate skill development faster than almost any other single factor. Build in short daily or weekly check-ins where your team reviews what worked, what didn’t, and what one adjustment will improve tomorrow’s output. Keep these sessions focused and brief so they become a habit rather than a burden.
Protect recovery as seriously as you protect output
High performance degrades without deliberate recovery, and most teams treat rest as optional until something breaks. Recovery isn’t passive. It means protecting attention by reducing unnecessary meetings, giving people uninterrupted blocks of focused work time, and treating sleep and physical conditioning as direct performance inputs rather than lifestyle preferences.
Build a weekly rhythm that alternates high-intensity work periods with structured recovery, so your team sustains output across months, not just during peak pressure windows. Robyn Benincasa has applied this principle directly across multi-day adventure races, where the teams that actively managed recovery consistently outlasted those who burned their reserves early and had nothing left when it mattered most.
Next steps to apply this at work
Now that you have a clear answer to what is peak performance, the next move is to stop treating it as a concept and start treating it as a design problem. Pick one area from this article, whether that’s building clearer goals, establishing feedback loops, or protecting recovery time, and apply it with your team this week. One focused change, executed consistently, will do more for your team’s results than ten ideas applied halfway.
Your team’s performance ceiling is higher than you probably think. The gap between where your team operates now and where it could operate usually comes down to environment, habits, and structure, all things you can influence directly as a leader. If you want a proven framework for building that kind of team, explore Robyn Benincasa’s keynote programs and leadership resources and see how these principles translate into results your organization can actually measure.