Build High-Performance Teams

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High-performance teams are dedicated to their work toward a common goal, and they can be held to a high standard. Over time, the members of a high-performance team will continue to hone their individual skill sets in a way that benefits the group as a whole. If you have high-performance teams in your company, you can rely on these professionals to get complex, sensitive work...

Key Takeaways

  • This article explains Common characteristics of high-performing teams in simple medical language.
  • This article explains 6 benefits of a high-performance team in simple medical language.
  • This article explains How to build a high-performing team in simple medical language.
  • This article explains 5 exercises your team can implement to become high performers in simple medical language.
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High-performance teams are dedicated to their work toward a common goal, and they can be held to a high standard. Over time, the members of a high-performance team will continue to hone their individual skill sets in a way that benefits the group as a whole.

If you have high-performance teams in your company, you can rely on these professionals to get complex, sensitive work done in a quality manner. There are a number of additional benefits to cultivating high-performance teams at work, too—this guide will show you how to get started.

Common characteristics of high-performing teams

While every high-performance team will be a little different due to companies’ unique needs, the highest performing teams tend to share several common characteristics:

  • High skill levels: Members of high-performance teams are often experts in areas that complement their colleagues’ skill sets.
  • Trust among teammates: For teams to work effectively at a high level, they need to trust each other—and their leaders. Luckily, trust is something that can be cultivated and improved over time.
  • Dedication to group goals: A high-performance team is typically focused on achieving the goals of the group over the goals of the individuals. Because they’re powered by a shared vision for team success, high-performance team members can work in sync and collaborate effectively.
  • Commitment to results: High-performance teams are also interested in the results of their work. This goes beyond simply reviewing metrics—the most high-performance teams will want to have a deep understanding of how they are performing in pursuit of their teams’ goals as well as individually. Team members are likely to be committed to ongoing improvement in multiple areas.
  • Accountability and adaptability: Individual members of high-performance teams are also generally willing to be held accountable for the results of their work—and adaptable if things need to change. If a project doesn’t go quite as planned, a high-performance team will be able to regroup, reassess, and adapt to a new plan for continued peak performance.

6 benefits of a high-performance team

The benefits of building a high-performance team include:

  1. High productivity
  2. Strong decision making
  3. Diverse skill sets
  4. Innovative solutions
  5. A strong work ethic
  6. A commitment to quality

You can build a high-performance team by hiring with specific characteristics in mind, conducting performance-building exercises with your team, and following the eight steps in this article.

How to build a high-performing team

When you really need outstanding results on a project or initiative, you may want to be involved in the hiring process in order to ensure that the people you’re bringing onto your team have the right characteristics. But what if you can’t handpick your team?

If you’re working with a team that’s already formed, there are still steps you can take to help them develop their skills for maximum performance.

  1. Work to build trust in your team
  2. Keep lines of communication open
  3. Support team members’ needs
  4. Establish clear direction for the team
  5. Set SMART goals
  6. Encourage constant teamwork
  7. Invest in education and training
  8. Grow your team strategically

1. Work to build trust in your team

The first thing you can do to build a high-performance team is work to build trust among its members. For a team to work together effectively at a high level, they’ll need to trust each other—and you. When your team members have strong bonds of trust, they will be more likely to:

  • Respond to your guidance and leadership
  • Rely on each others’ capabilities and skill sets
  • Support each other in times of high pressure or demand
  • Feel more comfortable communicating their concerns and needs to each other and team leaders

If you’re leading a distributed team, you may need to invest additional time and resources to build trust with your remote team members. The same principles and practices that work in the office may not always translate well to a remote environment.

Regardless of where your team works, though, the steps on this list are a great place to start increasing performance.

2. Keep lines of communication open

Clear and open communication is an important part of building trust and high performance.

When leaders of high-performance teams are transparent about company, department, and individual performance, it encourages workers to grow professionally and strengthens dedication to a common cause. To maintain clear communication with your in-office or remote high-performance team, remember to:

  • Let team members know that they can come to you with questions, concerns, or for support in the workplace
  • Provide constructive feedback to team members about how they can continue to grow individually and as a collective unit
  • Streamline communications and make sure everyone understands where to turn for updates, especially when working remotely
  • Schedule periodic all-hands team meetings to ensure everyone is kept up-to-date about important company developments and key priorities
  • Check in with team members regularly

3. Support team members’ needs

In addition to giving feedback to team members, it’s important that the leaders of high-performing teams are open to receiving it as well. By creating a safe space for your team members to come to you with questions, comments, concerns, and needs, you can further strengthen the bonds of trust.

It’s also a good way to learn how to better support your team members and help them perform at a higher level. This support can take several forms, such as:

  • Providing professional guidance
  • Helping team members work through roadblocks on project progress
  • Advocating for your team with other departments when engaging in cross-functional work
  • Supplying your team members with the tools, training, and resources they feel they need to perform their jobs effectively
  • Identifying and addressing skills gaps

4. Establish clear direction for the team

Even the best teams need guidance and direction from leaders. When working with a group of high performers, you’ll want to show them how their work supports your company’s overall mission and goals. This creates a shared sense of purpose and gives your team a clear path. Combined, this can help boost productivity.

5. Set SMART goals

High-performing teams also work toward achievable, measurable goals. These goals can be personal or shared—and “achievable” doesn’t have to mean easy! You can create realistic yet complex goals, and even stretch goals, for your teams.

The SMART goals framework can help guide you toward the creation of effective goals. When setting a goal, you’ll want to make sure that it is:

  • Specific
  • Measurable
  • Actionable
  • Relevant
  • Time-bound

Remember to also link your team members’ individual goals back to department and company priorities. This will help to create a sense of purpose and cohesion throughout the team.

6. Encourage constant teamwork

When setting goals and priorities for your team, remember to keep teamwork at the forefront. By giving your high-performing team members continual opportunities to work together, you can continue to strengthen professional bonds and develop team members’ reliance on each other.

If your team is partially remote, be sure to pair distributed and in-office team members on projects. This way, all members of your high-performing team have equal opportunities to collaborate and work together.

7. Invest in education and training

By investing in continuing education and professional development training, you can help your high-performance teams (and their output!) grow. This can take many different forms. Depending on your unique team needs, purpose, and goals, you may decide to:

  • Provide individual team members with access to skill development courses
  • Run group training webinars for your team to learn from together
  • Send your team to relevant industry conferences and seminars
  • Provide an optional continuing education benefit, such as tuition reimbursement

If you’re planning training sessions for your team, focus on both hard and soft skill development.

  • Hard skills are typically job-related and technical, such as using specific software programs, understanding complex equations, and preparing or delivering effective presentations.
  • Soft skills are often considered personality traits (but can be learned). They include things like customer service acumen, being a good listener, having a strong work ethic, managing your emotions, and giving or receiving feedback.

Ongoing improvement in both hard and soft skills can help your team continue to level up its performance.

8. Grow your team strategically

The most effective teams are often fairly small. Large teams can make it difficult for everyone to participate, provide input, and feel heard. According to McKinsey & Company, large teams may also separate into smaller “sub teams” that are not fully aligned on common group goals and initiatives. By keeping team size small, you can create better cohesion among team members and improve performance.

That said, there is still a time and a place for larger teams. In some situations, such as building a corporate leadership team, it can be beneficial to have the diverse array of experiences and opinions that you get from a larger team. When it’s time to grow your team, a management consultant can help you build the best organizational structure for your company.

5 exercises your team can implement to become high performers

You can also lead your team through these five types of exercises to boost their performance:

1. Brainstorming exercises

You can conduct brainstorming exercises any time your team has a new project or goal to work on. This activity is best done synchronously, either in person or over a video call. Introduce a topic to the team, explain the problem or goal, and give everyone a set time frame to think about solutions.

Jot everyone’s answers down in a shared document and review them as a group. This exercise helps build high-performing teams thanks to its collaborative nature—everyone gets a say and can recognize their colleagues’ input.

2. Storytelling exercises

Storytelling exercises are a way for your team members to get to know each other better and improve team dynamics. This is a great team exercise to do when you first form a group, or when adding new members to your team.

Storytelling exercises can take several forms, including:

  • Have team members fill out a mad-libs style document about themselves (remember to keep it professional!)
  • Giving each team member the chance to tell a story about a time they changed their viewpoint on something, and why
  • Asking team members to interview each other and tell a short biographical story about the colleague they interviewed

3. Emotional intelligence assessments

Emotional intelligence (sometimes called emotional quotient) is a soft skill that can help to strengthen team performance. When team members have high emotional intelligence, they can modulate their emotions in stressful settings and be attuned to the emotions of those around them.

To help your team members improve their emotional intelligence, you can lead them through targeted exercises like:

  • Selecting their top three strongest and weakest professional traits off a list and discussing how they can support and be supported by others with different skills
  • Practicing listing traits they’ve noticed about each of their colleagues or other important people in their lives

4. Mission and vision exercises

Because high-performing teams are focused on a common goal, it can be useful to have your team engage in collaborative mission and vision exercises like:

  • Brainstorming what the mission statement and guiding vision is for a newly created team
  • Examining an existing mission or vision statement and identifying their personal mission and vision that will guide their contributions toward a shared goal

5. Personality trait assessments

Finally, you can turn to exist personality assessments to help your high-performing teams better understand each other’s communication and work styles. There are a variety of these assessments commonly used in workplaces, such as Myers-Briggs and CliftonStrengths.

While these tests aren’t a definitive explanation of someone’s personality and preferences, they can be a great jumping-off point for discussion about how each team member prefers to work. Team members can discuss what does and does not feel accurate to them about the test results, and learn more about qualities they may not have previously realized to be strengths.

Understanding each others’ personality traits can help your team:

  • Develop and strengthen complementary skills
  • Maintain open communication
  • Improve problem-solving abilities
  • Establish a culture of mutual respect

Gathering everyone together for an off-site event once or twice a year can also be useful—especially if your team is partially or fully remote. Off-sites give your team a chance to connect, work through exercises, undergo training sessions, and get to know each other better.

Examples of high-performing teams

You can find high-performing teams across all industries, including at both for-profit and nonprofit companies. Many of the products and services you use on a daily basis are the result of high-performing team members working together! A few notable examples of high-performing teams include:

  • The New Zealand All Blacks are the most successful men’s rugby team of all time, with over a 77% win rate. They’ve also held the number one spot on the World Rugby rankings scale for about 15 of the past 19 years. Every member of the All Blacks is dedicated to peak performance and positively representing their country on a global scale.
  • The Apollo 13 mission involved coordination between two high-performance teams: one in space and one on the ground in Texas. The team contained both spaceflight veterans and an astronaut on his first voyage out of the Earth’s atmosphere. When a crisis-level oxygen problem developed, all team members worked together to bring the flight crew back to Earth safely.
  • The Going-to-the-Sun Road, which cuts through Glacier National Park in Montana, is quite the engineering feat—especially when you consider that it was built in the 1930s after two decades of planning. Before construction began, a team of 32 men s3urveyed the land. This task required walking 3,000 feet every morning and taking measurements while dangling from ropes. The road project team’s immense coordination and focus made it possible to safely survey the land and, in turn, build a safe road for drivers.
  • Surgical teams throughout the world are high-performing. They have to be, in order to keep patients safe during complex medical procedures! If you or a loved one has ever had a lifesaving medical procedure, you have a high-performing surgical team to thank for it.

Start building your top-notch team

Building your own high-performance teams can help your company reach new levels of growth and success.

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Which doctor may help?

Start with a registered doctor or the nearest qualified health center.

What to tell the doctor

  • Write when the problem started and how it changed.
  • Bring old prescriptions, investigation reports, and current medicines.
  • Write allergies, pregnancy status, diabetes, kidney/liver disease, and major past illnesses.
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  • Which danger signs mean I should go to hospital quickly?
  • Which tests are necessary now, and which can wait?
  • How should I take medicines safely and what side effects should I watch for?
  • When should I come for follow-up?

Tests to discuss

  • Vital signs: temperature, pulse, blood pressure, oxygen saturation
  • Basic physical examination by a clinician
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Safe first steps

  • Avoid heavy lifting, sudden bending, and prolonged bed rest.
  • Use comfortable posture and gentle movement as tolerated.
  • Discuss physiotherapy, X-ray, or MRI only when clinically needed.

OTC medicine safety

  • For mild back pain, pain-relief medicine may be discussed with a doctor or pharmacist.
  • Avoid repeated painkiller use if you have kidney disease, stomach ulcer, uncontrolled blood pressure, or are taking blood thinners.

Avoid these mistakes

  • Do not start antibiotics without a proper medical decision.
  • Do not use steroid tablets or injections casually for quick relief.
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  • Relevant blood, urine, imaging, or specialist tests only after clinical assessment
Questions to ask
  • What is the most likely cause of my symptoms?
  • Which warning signs mean I should go to emergency care?
  • Which tests are really needed now?
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Go to emergency care if you notice:
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Doctor / service to discuss: Orthopedic/spine specialist, physical medicine doctor, physiotherapist under guidance, or qualified clinician.
  1. Step 1

    Check danger signs first

    If danger signs are present, seek emergency care and do not wait for online information.

  2. Step 2

    Record the symptom story

    Write when symptoms started, severity, medicines already taken, allergies, pregnancy status, and test results.

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  4. Step 4

    Do only useful tests

    Discuss neurological examination first. X-ray or MRI may be needed only when red flags, injury, nerve weakness, or persistent severe symptoms are present.

  5. Step 5

    Follow up and return early if worse

    If symptoms worsen, new warning signs appear, or treatment is not helping, return for review quickly.

Rural patient practical tips
  • Take a written symptom diary and all previous prescriptions/test reports.
  • Do not hide medicines already taken, even herbal or over-the-counter medicines.
  • Ask which warning signs mean urgent referral to hospital.
  • Avoid forceful massage or bone-setting when there is weakness, injury, fever, or nerve symptoms.

This roadmap is for education. A real diagnosis and treatment plan requires history, examination, and clinical judgment.

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Frequently Asked Questions

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