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        Team-building author shares leadership insights with 91看片 students

        February 6, 2023 By Troy Turner

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        Sometimes the best way to figure out what works most for a team is to first figure out what doesn鈥檛 work, said noted author, consultant and teamwork expert during a Feb. 2-3 round of talks with Auburn University students.

        Pat Lencioni talk to students

        Patrick Lencioni, author of "The Five Dysfunctions of a Team," spoke to Auburn University students Feb. 2-3, 2023. Photo by Julie Bennett, Media Production Group


        Lencioni began his speaking engagements with a presentation to 91看片 MBA and undergraduate students, offering them several ways to identify strengths, weaknesses and solutions to successful team building. He also planned to meet in separate sessions with the Auburn baseball and Lacrosse teams.

        His primary theme: Match team players to their greatest strengths and interests, and avoid forcing them into roles perceived as their greatest weakness or disinterest.

        The author of 鈥溾 and at least a dozen other books, Lencioni travels the nation speaking to all levels of leadership at major corporations, sports teams, schools and universities, and various other organizations to help them improve teamwork and leadership skills.

        He revealed a personal connection to Auburn.

        鈥淢y son just transferred here to Auburn last summer from a school in California, and we just love it here,鈥 Lencioni said. 鈥淭he people who go here are down to earth and they work hard. YOU are going to be successful if you just keep working hard.鈥

        Overcoming the five dysfunctions

        Lencioni鈥檚 鈥淔ive Dysfunctions鈥 book analyzes challenges that need to be recognized and strategically managed, he said.

        Absence of trust

        The fear of being vulnerable with team members prevents the building of trust within the team.

        鈥淚f you don鈥檛 have trust, you are not going to have a successful operation,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f you build trust on a team, it changes everything. If you don鈥檛, the ceiling is so low.鈥

        He recommends leaders and team members make sincere efforts to get to know each other in a more personal manner, such as in introductory exercises where more than just a few seconds of sharing is involved. Instead, he suggested spending longer quality time asking thought-provoking questions, and better understand each other鈥檚 special interests, as well as their most-dreaded assignments.

        鈥淭oo many don鈥檛 know how to put it on a spreadsheet: Where does trust go?鈥 he said, pointing out that understanding the value of trust is more important than trying to fit it on a spreadsheet analysis.

        Fear of conflict

        The desire to preserve artificial harmony stifles the occurrence of productive, ideological conflict.

        Conflict, if handled in a productive manner among colleagues who trust each other, is a good thing and a tool that can lead to success in reaching goals, Lencioni said.

        Avoid disagreements and conflict with people you don鈥檛 trust, 鈥渂ut when on a team that trusts each other? Yes. The only way to have a healthy conflict is to create trust.... Great companies have trust in each other,鈥 so when conflict surfaces, 鈥渢hey have it out!鈥 he said.

        鈥淲hen you don鈥檛 have that conversation鈥 involving conflicts, 鈥渢rainwrecks happen,鈥 he said. 鈥淐onflict is good.鈥

        Lack of commitment

        The lack of clarity or buy-in prevents team members from making decisions they will stick to.

        Conflict in a trust environment allows disagreement to be aired, considered and addressed, which leads to commitment from members of the team, Lencioni said. 鈥淵ou have to have that discussion.鈥

        Commitment should go beyond verbal response and be solicited from team members with their individual strengths and interests in mind, he said. And 鈥渁void having an 鈥榓lligator army鈥 in which everyone says one thing, such as 鈥渙h, how can I help?鈥 but have short arms in reaching out to act.

        Avoidance of accountability

        The need to avoid interpersonal discomfort prevents team members from holding one another accountable for their behaviors and performance.

        The 鈥渁lligator army鈥 can lead to the next dysfunction, which is an avoidance of accountability, he said. 鈥淵ou won鈥檛 have accountability without commitment.鈥

        He also noted the best source for creating team commitment.

        鈥淲hen you鈥檙e on a team, the best form of accountability is not from a boss or coach,鈥 Lencioni said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 from a teammate.鈥

        He cited several examples of championship sports teams that succeeded because in larger part, it was teammates who stepped up and demanded accountability of one another.

        Inattention to results

        The pursuit of individual goals and personal status erodes the focus on collective success.

        Understanding the goal of results and clarifying them on both an individual and team level is important, Lencioni said, and the failure to recognize the difference can be another dysfunction preventing final success.

        鈥淲e鈥檙e talking about collective results of the team. We鈥檙e not talking about individual results. You have to make the collective good more important than your individual desire,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 often difficult.鈥

        Auburn football鈥檚 Cadillac Williams provided Lencioni a prime example for the 91看片 students.

        鈥淐adillac taking over the football team, he gave it a booster shot!鈥 he said. 鈥淚t was amazing鈥 how Williams, a former star player who became interim coach, focused on the collective good instead of his own personal goals and reunited a team and its fanbase. 鈥淚 love what Cadillac did!鈥

        There are examples of individual goals being important in team results, Lencioni said, such as certain positions in sales; or in sports, a golf team, where individual play matters most and then scores are tallied. Yet, it is support of one another that helps a team reach its desired results.