Team Cohesion, Hierarchy, and Values

June 20th, 2024

NOTICING AND WONDERING

Groops Coaching for Leaders Program with Travis County Fire Rescue

​I notice that patterns of human behavior repeat across different organizations. Although each organization has its own culture and context, there are universal behaviors, human needs, and dynamics that play out regardless of industry. 

We work with Fortune 10 companies to small accounting firms to the military. Cohesion (or lack thereof) is a universal problem that all organizations face, especially in the post-Covid landscape. That is what Groops solves for. 

We spent last week working with Travis County Fire Rescue (Austin, Texas) running a Coaching for Leaders Workshop with their Lieutenants, Battalion Chiefs, and Administrators. We have worked with them for over a year regularly meeting with their leaders (virtually) and providing AI-enabled insights and recommendations to deepen cohesion on their teams. We periodically do live workshops as needed. 

Aside from being deeply committed, smart, purpose driven people, they were so engaged, vulnerable, and actively wrestled with how to build strong relationships while also operating in a hierarchical, paramilitary environment. 

They asked questions like, “How can we have a servant heart and also have high expectations, non-negotiable values, and give direct feedback? Mediocrity is not tolerated.” Thankfully, for the community. 

Although cohesion has a different weight here - lack of it could cost someone’s life, the dynamics that support it and block it are similar across other organizations we work with (tech, creative agencies, healthcare, insurance, multinationals etc). 

Some of these organizational truisms are:

  • Humans have a need for belonging and social connection

  • Intrinsic motivation is shaped by the opportunity to master new skills, have choice at work (time, team, task), and feel a sense of purpose with the mission

  • Communication (verbal / non-verbal) can make or break a team

  • Leaders have an outweighed impact on the culture

  • Conflict is inherent and healthy when resolved effectively

  • Organizations continuously change and strong ones evolve

I wonder if Travis County Fire Rescue, a paramilitary organization, has the humility to look at themselves and their core operating approaches, what would need to happen for other organizations to do the same? I also wonder how law enforcement and rescue services would change if all of these organizations learned psychology-based coaching skills?

Chief Bailey is leading a new way and we are proud to be on this mission with him and his team. Despite being in the field for over two decades, he was very quick to say, “I am uncomfortable with the idea of presenting myself or our organization as having figured this out….We are still trying to find our way.”  That is servant leadership. 

He shared his favorite quote below.


A QUOTE TO THINK ABOUT

Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought.
— John F. Kennedy

SOMETHING TO TRY

Write down when you felt most frustrated at work recently. Assume one of your opinions was challenged. Assume your thought was just an opinion, not a fact. Now, write down why you were holding on to that opinion so tightly. Next, assume you were wrong (and the other person was right). How would that change things?


A DEEP-ish QUESTION (or Three)


CASE CONSULTATION

Question: What should I consider when I am not sure if my leadership style is working?

Dr. Bobbi: Like parenting, everyone has their own leadership style and every organizational context is different. The questions I would ask myself are:

  • In three words, how do I describe my leadership style?

  • What is the shared goal (and 2-3 subgoals) of my team? What is team success?

  • How is my leadership style supporting / blocking those goals?

  • What feedback have I received on my leadership style?

  • What is one new thing I want to try to help my team get closer to achieving our shared goals?


ANNOUNCEMENT

People are loving our Coaching for Leaders Workshop where leaders learn coaching skills to build stronger 1:1 and team relationships with the opportunity to practice skills in a supportive learning environment. Leaders walk away with basic theory and most importantly, actionable psychology-based coaching skills they can use immediately. We offer this workshop virtual or live. Email for more information.


Keep on connecting. Cohesion is built one connection thread at a time. 

Best,

Bobbi

Bobbi Wegner, Psy.D.
Founder and CEO of Groops: helping teams feel and function their best
Lecturer at Harvard University in Industrial-Organizational Psychology

If you are curious about a workplace dynamic or issue, send me an email at [email protected] and I will anonymously post it and respond. If you are thinking it, others are too. We can learn from each other. Also, if you are curious about the cohesion and health of your team, book a complimentary 30-minute consultation HERE with one of our Groop Guides.


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Pivots Happen, Lessons Learned, Startup Mentality

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The Epidemic of Loneliness and Coaching as Leaders