3 Powerful Ways to Develop Trust in Your Work Teams
Team training 101: The five dysfunctions of a team
Have you ever been part of a team that just worked? Where the team members just clicked and everybody pulled their weight to produce something extraordinary?
I have, but it hasn’t happened often.
It to be part and parcel of working with others where people just won’t gel or work well together.
Team training is a fine art. It starts with understanding the unique strengths and weaknesses of team members.
One way in which I’ve worked on my team training understanding is with the book ‘The Five Dysfunctions of a Team’ by Patrick Lencioni.
It’s one of the most remarkable books I’ve ever read and I find that I keep coming back to it again and again.
His five dysfunctions are: absence of trust, fear of conflict, lack of commitment, avoidance of accountability and inattention to results.
Over the period of the next four weeks, I will focus my blogs on these dysfunctions, and give you tips to overcome them in your training company.
The first is the absence of trust. This is usually the basis of all team training problems.
Dysfunction #1: The Absence of Trust
The first and most prominent dysfunction of teams is an absence of trust among team members.
When it comes to team training at work, trust mean having confidence that the intentions of colleagues are good.
It means showing up with your shortcomings and being open to asking for help.
Work environments where people are afraid to be open about their weaknesses and mistakes don’t function well.
The issue is vulnerability. If people can’t be true to themselves at work, then the team won’t flourish. Great leaders understand this.
Great leaders build trust, not walls
Truly great leaders lead from a place of vulnerability and honesty. They build trust, not walls.

The inspiring feat of Nelson Mandela as mentioned in Forbes is the perfect example of this.
When he was inaugurated as President, his former prison guards who abused him were invited to the ceremony as guests of honour.
The message is this: if Mandela could move on and trust, then so can you.
Your business might depend on it.
Absence of trust at work means that people waste time and energy trying to manage their interactions with one another. It eats into productivity.
To avoid this, leaders must demonstrate vulnerability first. They must put themselves out there and risk losing face in front of their team if they want to build trust in team training.
This helps create an environment where others can do the same. It builds a space for healthy conflict and creative ideas.
3 Tips for Building Trust in Your Workplace
#1: Be consistent
Inconsistency causes stress, especially in an office. If a team member is unpredictable in mood from one day to the next and is liable to “fly off the handle” at any moment, it can easily create a negative atmosphere and cause stress.
As Open Forum point out, people don’t produce their best work in this kind of environment.
#2: Foster a sense of accountability
For effective team training and building trust, encourage your team members to hold themselves and others accountable.
This involves carrying through with what you said you would do and always doing the best you can.
Your best can change depending on circumstances, but being honest with yourself and knowing you have given a good effort is central to accountability.
#3: Communicate the vision
Perhaps the most effective way to build trust is to be open, honest and communicate your vision.
Team training takes on a new momentum when direct supports are trusted with the realities of running a business.
Let your team know what’s going on in the business, and from there, communicate the dream and the vision of where the business is headed.
Final thoughts…
When it comes to team training, I personally love by Patrick Lencioni’s book ‘The Five Dysfunctions of a Team’.
The first of his five dysfunctions is the absence of trust. A sense of trust is critical to effective team training.
TTI tools can give powerful insights into a person’s behaviours, driving forces (motivators), acumen and competencies. Why not try it out on yourself with a free report?

What is the best leadership development programme in Ireland? The Complete Leader
Understanding yourself is the first step on the leadership journey. One thing I’ve always noticed about great leaders is that they are skilled at managing themselves and their relationships with others. Understand that if you’re the kind of person who leans forward all the time, don’t let yourself stop thinking about the future. Because if you do, you will fall on your face.
The two leadership qualities that will make you or break you
Problem solving and decision making are two essential leadership qualities which are associated with how leaders are clear thinkers. In this week’s blog we look at why these skills are important and how you can develop them to become a more complete leader.
7 easy ways to improve your futuristic thinking skills
When people have new, original and out-there ideas they are so often surrounded by small-minded people who poo-poo their visions. As Henry Ford reportedly said, “If I had asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses”. Futuristic thinkers can imagine and predict changes that others don’t see. They look beyond current circumstances and realities and envision their lives the way they’d like them to turn out.
UPCOMING WEBINAR: 8th March 2017 - '5 WAYS TO GUARANTEE TEAM SUCCESS'
Join me, Padraig Berry, and Ronan Flood for an in dept discussion where we will give you our best tips to forming highly successful teams.
Some of the topics we will cover are:
- Absence of Trust
- Fear of Conflict.
- Lack of Commitment.
- Accountability.
- How to achieve Collective Success.



