"Shallow fun," like happy hours, offers a temporary high without lasting impact. "Deep fun" occurs when teams collaborate on activities that improve their shared experience, such as researching the best office coffee. The goal is not the fun itself, but the bonding that happens when a group takes ownership of a shared, meaningful project.
To combat remote work isolation, Atlassian designates one team member per week as the "Chief Vibes Officer" (CVO). This person's job is to inject fun and connection through activities like posting prompts in Slack. This simple ritual builds social bridges, leading to higher trust and better problem-solving.
The most valued parts of the event were not the keynotes, but breakout groups and off-site excursions like pickleball. These activities create a "third space"—separate from work and home—where attendees can form genuine human connections, which is often the ultimate, unstated goal of attending.
The company culture at Lifetime uses shared physical activity—like group classes and training sessions—as a core team-building tool. This practice moves beyond typical corporate bonding, creating a deeper level of trust and shared values among colleagues, which they believe is invaluable in an increasingly remote world.
Common team-building activities like happy hours or escape rooms often fail because they allow existing dynamics to persist: the loud get louder, cliques huddle together, and nothing new is revealed. Effective team building must intentionally break these patterns to foster new connections and build genuine trust.
Constantly shielding your team from discomfort to optimize for short-term happiness ultimately builds anxiety and fragility. True resilience comes from a culture where people can face hard things, supported by leadership, and learn to cope with disappointment.
Global teams miss the spontaneous chats of co-located offices. Leaders can fix this by formally dedicating 5-7 minutes at the start of meetings for non-work check-ins. This "structured unstructured time" materially improves team cohesion, performance, and long-term collaboration, making the perceived inefficiency highly valuable.
Most people have social (fun) and collaborative (work) communities, but lack a 'formative' one. This distinct type of community is dedicated to the process of 'becoming together,' where members ask questions about personal growth ('are you becoming a better you?') rather than task completion ('did you get it done?').
To break down silos, leaders should encourage teams to "move as a group." This means using shared, informal communication channels like group texts to brainstorm and tackle challenges collectively in real-time, rather than having individual members work in isolation.
Focusing a team only on a distant, major goal is a recipe for burnout. Effective leaders reframe motivation to include celebrating the process: daily efforts, small successes, and skill development. The journey itself must provide fuel, with the motivation found in the effort, not just the outcome.
Instead of typical corporate offsites, the Tim Hortons marketing team spends a day at one of its children's camps. They participate in team-building activities designed for campers, directly connecting their daily work to the brand's larger purpose and strengthening internal bonds through a shared mission.