The document provides 9 things to do to build a dream team: 1) Know your purpose, 2) Get your people involved, 3) Make everyone accountable for culture, 4) Recognize progress, 5) Build trust through transparency, 6) Create opportunities to connect, 7) Hire for attitude and train for skill, 8) Reward value with value, and 9) Build advocacy. The key is connecting each individual to something meaningful and showing their contribution counts through autonomy, advocacy, transparency, and empowering each team member as a custodian of culture. This transforms the team into a place people want to be a part of to do their best work.
2. So you want to build
your dream team…
Whether it is on a sporting field, in your office or at a pub trivia
night, we all know a dream team when we see one. They share
certain unmistakable qualities that have the power to make
magic happen and success seem so attainable.
Chances are your team has a few “dream
team” qualities here and there, but you’re
struggling to make the magic happen because
some people “get it”, and some people don’t,
and some people will work cohesively while
others won’t.
Some people give all they’ve got for your
team, but only until a better offer comes
along and then they leave with you a big hole
to fill.
3. Teams aren’t working
- and it’s costing you
• People in your team are disconnected. You’re constantly worried
that they aren’t on track to meet their goals or if they’re meeting
them, you’re worried about what they are (or aren’t) doing along
the way.
• Disengaged team leaders or managers aren’t providing the open,
constructive feedback that their team members need to improve.
• Teams or individuals are siloed. They aren’t working cohesively
and probably think they’d be better off without the others.
• Absenteeism is on the rise, as is presenteeism. People aren’t
turning up for work and those that do, don’t get much done.
• Attrition is also on the rise. You feel stuck in an endless
recruitment cycle because the highly capable employees are
either getting poached or are getting sick of being under-
appreciated.
6. 1. Know your purpose
Purpose is a fundamental human need. We need a reason to get out of bed every day. We
need a source of motivation for us to continue with a challenge even though it seems too
hard. When we do something for a purpose we believe in, we work harder and give more.
Tim Brown, CEO and President of innovation and design firm IDEO, believes that only
businesses with a clear ‘reason for being’, or purpose, will be innovative and truly
sustainable in the future.
7. So what are you doing to inspire purpose in
your people? Have you thought about what
your business does to serve the needs or
solve the problems of others? How do link
everyday, mundane work to the “big
picture”?
8. 2. Get your people involved
Change Management guru John Kotter is renowned for his ‘8-Step Process’ for change. One
of these critical steps is to build and maintain a guiding coalition. What does this mean? It
means you need to find people who will align themselves, and support and advocate your
mission from up, down and across the organisation.
These people serve as the cultural change “engine” of your organisation. Without them,
your initiatives won’t get very far. Without representation from across your business, you
miss important perspectives and information. You also miss the opportunity to build
advocates in areas that your leadership or HR team don’t see or interact with.
9. Do you create opportunities for employees
to share ideas and take part in designing
their employee experience? You don’t have
to change everything immediately or
implement every idea - you just need to
listen, respond, and give your people tools
to make the magic happen.
10. 3. Make everyone accountable for
culture
Autonomy — the ability to decide what and how one responds to the challenge in front of them —
is one of the three drivers of intrinsic motivation, according to Dan Pink’s infamous “motivation
trifecta”.
Ownership automatically instils a sense of responsibility, but it also encourages a sense of pride.
Those who want a workplace worth working for will create one, if they’re given the tools and
freedom to do so.
This is the secret to Redii’s best-practice employee recognition programs and why they help effect
long-term change in a company’s culture. We encourage businesses to let their employees lead,
which (unlike traditional, top-down recognition) takes the responsibility for workplace culture away
from just the leaders, and gives it to everyone. Instead of relying on managers to recognise work
they may or may not see on a daily basis, giving your employees the power to recognise is a
perfect way to empower them and show them you trust in their judgement and work ethic.
11. Let your people determine what
“excellent” looks like for you! Give your
people a forum to discuss the positive
stories of people demonstrating what a
good culture looks like in your business.
Have them share memorable moments of
team mates living the values that set your
organisation apart from others.
12. 4. Recognise progress
Progress is a massive motivator, but it’s hard to stay motivated when lofty business
strategies or mission statements make goals seem far off and unattainable.
Frequent recognition — whether it be a simple “thank you”, or by giving a colleague peer-
to-peer points — means employees receive positive reinforcement during the journey.
Writing in Harvard Business Review about how to drive innovative work inside
organisations, researchers Teresa Amabile and Steven J. Kramer shared their findings after
exhaustive analysis of the diaries of knowledge workers:
13. So, are you recognising progress in your
team regularly?
Old-school recognition programs recognise
high performers once a year (if people are
lucky). Imagine the change in morale — and
culture — when your communication
channels are filled with hundreds or
thousands of moments where people shine
the light on great achievements every day
of the year.
14. 5. Build trust through
transparency
The rising use of social networks means it’s easier than ever to share information, shape
opinion and provide insights between people. Already, our constantly connected world is
disrupting the way employers interact with employees. In its Human Capital Trends Report
2014, Deloitte underlines the shift of power from centralised teams (management-driven,
top-down and controlled messaging) to co-creation (360 degree feedback and crowd-
sourced reviews).
The transparency social media provides also demands accountability and responsibility;
when messages are linked to an account or email addresses, people need to be respectful in
how they comment or interact in a public forum.
15. How much of your team communication
relies on top-down or one-way messaging?
How are you running your meetings? Do
you create opportunities to encourage
input and participation in shaping your
company’s messaging — both internally
across teams, and externally, with
customers? Make a conscious effort to
investigate platforms that promote
immediate, transparent and social
communication.
16. 6. Create opportunities to
connect
As companies go national or global, or start providing services around the clock, it makes
sense for people to be able to work from anywhere, without commuting. Not all companies
can thrive in this set-up. You need to foster a sense of trust and also provide ways to
support both distance workers and the managers who don’t get to see their employees.
How does employee recognition help in this instance? By creating both an expectation and
opportunity to identify individual contributions - regardless of what team they’re in or
where that are. Authentic recognition can help start a conversation and help people connect
their time at work with something meaningful.
17. Building communities starts with individual
relationships. You don’t have to get
complicated, you just have to be
consistent. Start by saying hello and
making eye contact with people. Use the
first few minutes of the day or meeting to
ask how people are. And, share stories of
accomplishment somewhere accessible, so
people off site still get visibility of what’s
going on.
18. 7. Hire for attitude, train for skill
The evidence is undeniable — you can’t build a great company without great people. But
the common experience for many businesses is that the recruitment process is rarely
designed and executed in a way that lets you really evaluate your candidates for cultural fit.
Hiring someone whose values align means they’re more likely to respect company decisions,
uphold your quality and service standards, meet deadlines and fit into your company
culture. Bill Byham, CEO of Development Dimensions International (DDI) and perhaps the
world’s foremost authority on hiring, goes by the simple principle that the best way to
select people who’ll thrive in your company is to identify the personal characteristics of
people who are already thriving and hire people like them. While you obviously want to hire
a team with a wide skillset, there’s merit in the argument that those with similar values will
work better together.
19. Do you assess cultural fit in the recruitment
process? Ask candidates what type of
culture they thrive in, or what values they
are drawn to and what that looks like (they
should give situational examples).
20. 8. Reward value with value
When an employee is rewarded for the positive impact they make to a business, this
reinforces the message that their work matters. Recognition and reward based on impact
(or, what psychologists like Judy Camerson call “competency-contingent rewards”) have
more a positive effect on an individual’s feelings of competence and self-efficacy, compared
to awards given for non-competency contingent rewards like length of service or birthdays.
Not only do they receive the recognition for their impact — thereby increasing their feeling
of competence and mastery, they also receive benefit of a experiential or material reward
that is valuable to them.
21. When was the last time you assessed your
employer value proposition? Is it time to
rethink the way you show your people that
they are your most important asset?
22. 9. Build advocacy
When most people talk about work outside the office, they moan about their boss, politics
or how stressed the environment is. Imagine what that does to your brand, and the effect
that would have on anyone thinking about applying for a job in your business? Imagine
having the power to change the way your employees (and customers) experience your
brand and how they talk about it.
The good news is, you do! When you commit to the employee experience consistently,
people naturally talk about the positive moments, and you build natural advocates for your
brand.
23. Turn convention upside-down and put
YOUR PEOPLE first. Your employees are
your first customers and (though you may
not intend it), an extension of your
marketing team. Invest in happy
experiences — both inside and outside the
work environment — and model the
behaviour your want employees
demonstrating to your customers.
24.
25. Value your most valuable asset
The secret to building the dream team, then,
is not adding employee benefits, increasing
bonuses or incentivising work with any old
recognition and reward scheme. It is
connecting each individual to something
meaningful, and showing them their
contribution counts by providing
opportunities for autonomy and advocacy
both internally and externally.
Your goal is to build transparency and
empower each team member as the
custodian of culture within the business.
Giving everyone the ability to recognise and
amplify success engages your people in
authentic conversations about your values
and how they contribute to the organisation.
This transforms your team and your
business into a place that people want to be
a part of and do their best work; every day.
26. Want more?
Download the e-book for more research, customer stories and
practical tips on uniting, engaging and empowering your team:
27. A bit about us…
Redii is not your average SaaS company. We don’t just develop
software; we want to change the way people do business. We believe
companies who put their people first, connect them to a meaningful
purpose, and recognise their contribution, actively build an
environment where people do their best work. And when we do our
best work, we make the biggest impact.
Our product and founding team were born after years of working with
RedBalloon during its early growth years. Named #8 on JobAdvisor’s
Coolest Companies List 2014 and a 5-time BRW listed Best Place to
Work, RedBalloon showed us the challenge and importance of
keeping a growing team connected, and the role culture and
recognition plays in keeping employees and customers happy.
Our experience working with businesses who are committed to the
development and wellbeing of their people has shown us first-hand
the impact that recognition and reaffirmation (through reward) has on
performance. This gave us the energy and vision to design software
that helps other businesses succeed in creating awesome places to
work.
www.redii.com | 1300 856 356 | hello@redii.com