Need help team building? Try to escape an escape room!
From the Easy in theory, difficult in practice Blog
by Kiron Bondale
My musings on project management, project portfolio management and change management.
I'm a firm believer that a pragmatic approach to organizational change that addresses process & technology, but primarily, people will maximize chances for success.
This blog contains articles which I've previously written and published as well as new content.
Recent Posts
Leading Through Crisis Means Leading Through Context
"It's the end. But the moment has been prepared for." - retirement lessons from the Doctor
Just because they are non-critical, doesn't mean they are not risky!
Just because they are non-critical, doesn't mean they are not risky!
How will YOU avoid these AI-related cognitive biases?
Categories
Agile,
Artificial Intelligence,
Career Development,
Change Management,
Communications Management,
Decision Making,
Governance,
Hiring,
Kanban,
Lessons Learned,
Personal Development,
PMO,
Portfolio Management,
Project Management,
Resource Management,
Risk Management,
Risk Management,
Schedule Management,
Scheduling,
Tools
Date
There are multiple types of external events which a project manager or Scrum Master could consider to increase the level of collaboration and cohesion within their team. Escape rooms provide a fiscally responsible, but highly effective option.
For my readers who have never experienced one of these, an escape room provides a small team (ideally no more than eight people) with the task of completing a set of puzzles within a fixed duration of usually 45 minutes to one hour. These puzzles are incorporated within a fictitious scenario such as escaping a prison or surviving a zombie apocalypse. The narrative and challenges in lower quality rooms will follow a linear path and focus on solving one combination lock after another whereas better ones will provide the opportunity for parallel and alternate paths as well as providing puzzles which test multiple senses.
So why am I such a proponent of this type of team building activity?
Collaboration is a must, not a nice-to-have
I've enjoyed almost a dozen escape rooms and the mental and physical work involved in solving most challenges requires close collaboration. If one is shackled to a fellow "cell mate" at the start of a scenario, both have to work together to ensure that the keys to their shackles can be reached. Many puzzles require team members to coordinate their activities across different points in the room so once again, you can't go it alone!
We is greater than the smartest Me
It's a lot of fun trying to solve escape rooms with a group of self-stated Type A leaders. As the clock ticks down, it becomes apparent that the wisdom of the group needs to be harnessed rather than relying on a single leader. Situational leadership is exercised as some puzzles require spatial acuity, some memory or mathematical skills and others will demand physical dexterity. Escape rooms often have a few fiendish red herrings which can mislead one or more team members and ignoring these can be a good exercise for overcoming group-think.
We all need a helping hand sometime
All escape rooms provide teams with the ability to ask for assistance from a staff member at least once over the duration of the game. Deciding when is the right time to ask for help can pose its own challenges, especially if some team members are unwilling to show vulnerability. The same is true within the team - someone might believe they can solve a puzzle, and refuses to ask for help, but with limited time, the team will need to have the discipline to swap them out if they aren't making progress.
Communicate, communicate, communicate!
With clues to solve a puzzle scattered around the room or even split across multiple rooms, team members need to effectively communicate with one another in order to efficiently solve puzzles.
Focus
There are lots of distractions in an escape room. Multiple puzzles, false clues, artwork and interesting (but useless) trinkets and gadgets can trap us into losing focus. Support from the team is needed to help individual players focus on solving one puzzle at a time.
Unless the escape room is very simple it's rare that a team will complete their first escape room. When time runs out, rather than just rushing to the nearest watering hole, it might be worth holding a quick retrospective to understand what everyone learned and to identify opportunities for improvement with the next escape room event as well as with our projects.
To plagiarize Michael Jordan, a single team member's talent can solve individual challenges, but teamwork completes escape rooms.
Posted on: September 23, 2018 07:00 AM |
Permalink
Comments (20)
Please login or join to subscribe to this item
Drew Craig
Sr. Agile & Product Coach| Vanguard
Philadelphia, Pa, United States
Good suggestions, and rationale, Kiron. Made me think, though. What can be done for those distributed teams? What has been your personal experience? I did a quick search and thought this article had some cool and creative ideas.
https://blog.trello.com/team-building-activities-video-meetings
Damian Perera
Monitoring & Evaluation Specialist| Chrysalis
Mellawagedara, Western Province, Sri Lanka
Thanks Kiron for sharing these team building activities.
They are meaningful and relevant when we work as a team supporting one another to make progress.
Thanks Damian - have you ever tried an escape room?
Damian Perera
Monitoring & Evaluation Specialist| Chrysalis
Mellawagedara, Western Province, Sri Lanka
Escape room is a new team building activity for me. It seems this is a good technique for creating high performance teams.
Ashleigh Kennett-Smith
ICT Project Manager| Australian Red Cross Lifeblood
Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
Very interesting Kiron, and great insights. are able to elaborate a little more on the following?
- have you found that after such an exercise it becomes obvious the team is actually mismatched in some way that would jeopardise project delivery? How do you work through that?
- I can visualize a situation where the team (or members) could see this as simply a bit of fun and/or a waste of time (not really engage). You mentioned the idea of a quick retrospective. Are their other ways you have found successful in capitalizing on and internalizing the learnings?
- Are there teams or situations where you wouldn't bother using this "tool" (don't think it would work or add value to the team building process)?
More like a Panic Room in many organizations :-)
Rami Kaibni
Community Champion
Senior Projects Manager | Field & Marten Associates
New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada
Good Points Kiron.
Not a big fan of escape rooms lol
Thanks Ashleigh and good questions! Its unlikely that any of the team members have specific skills specifically relevant to solving the puzzles so it does create a more level playing field than a real project where you'll have a mix of seasoned experts and newbies, but you can certainly identify if a particular team member has corrosive habits (e.g. bullying).
To avoid it being perceived as just "fun" (No harm in that, BTW :-) ), I like to set expectations upfront that this is a team building exercise to both increase collaboration and to help team members get to know each other better and that we'll be reflecting on what worked well and could have been improved after.
The only teams I can think of where I wouldn't want to use something like this would be those where I'm not expecting real collaboration. If everyone is doing a very specific task and there's little integration and cooperation between them and other team members, then it might not be as useful. Probably still helpful in getting folks acquainted with one another but there are easier ways to do that...
Thanks Rami - you just need to be with the "right" group of escapees :-)
Bamidele Apata
Project manager | IBADAN ELECTRICITY DISTRIBUTION COMPANY
Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria
I haven't been through any kind of escape room before, but it sure looks like a great way for team building and team bonding, a way to create trust and cooperation among project team members in the heat of actual project execution.
Very interesting, thanks for sharing.
Pench Batta
Enterprise Lean Agile DevOps Coach /SAFe Program Consultant (SPC6)| Capgemini, Inc.
Bentonville, Ar, United States
Excellent, Kiron! Thanks for sharing!
Amanda Crinks
Consultant| NetImpact Strategies
Frederick, Md, United States
A team I was on did an escape room and I think the unique aspect was to see how people think and interpret clues differently. We didn't escape but had a good time working through struggles. Being part of a team with analysts, developers and our management definitely brought a lot of different view points! :)
Thanks Bamidele, Eduin & Pench!
Amanda, the journey is the reward - finishing is good for bragging rights, but how we got through the puzzles and what we learned is what really makes them fun.
Ashleigh Kennett-Smith
ICT Project Manager| Australian Red Cross Lifeblood
Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
Thanks Kiron. I'll definitely keep this idea in my toolbox!
RAJESH K L
Project Manager, PMP| Bharat Electronics, Bengaluru, India
Bengaluru, Karnataka, India
Good points, Kiron. I haven't tried this technique yet. Looks to be an interesting activity. Thanks for sharing!
Anish Abraham
Privacy Program Manager| University of Washington
Auburn, Wa, United States
Good one Kiron and thanks for sharing.
Nice and interesting. Thanks for sharing.
Hope to try this one day.
Stelian ROMAN
Project Manager| MicroSafety
Carlingford, New South Wales, Australia
Interesting, thanks for sharing
Hi Kiron,
Your article reinforces an important but often lost aspect about building a teaming culture. Escape rooms, and other activities, provide opportunities for shared and distributed leadership. They help members use their passion, creativity, and empathy to work towards a shared goal. I've taken teams to arcades, playgrounds, racetracks, tennis courts, etc. Each activity is an opportunity for members to win and lose in a safe space-- a place where a project, and their jobs, are not at risk.
Thanks for your breakdown on applying this way of thinking to practice.
Kind regards,
Romiya
Please Login/Register to leave a comment.
|
There are two ways of spreading light: to be the candle or the mirror that reflects it.
- Edith Wharton
|