The Keller Williams Realty Agent Leadership Council Clinic says that in team meetings, all team members must be made aware of the following about the company, prior to launching into problem-solving or brain-storming: the mission (why the company is in business); the vision (what the world will look like after the company's mission has been accomplished); the values (principles the company operates under in order to reach its mission and vision); the beliefs (what is true, according to the company's honest appraisal); and the perspective (how the company sees itself).
PROBLEM #4: Prior to the first meeting of the group, the selection process is flawed, and as a result, teams sometimes are poorly put together; just because 8 people from the creative department are brought together in a room, with coffee, bagels, and comfortable chairs around a nice table, doesn't mean there are a "team." Can they build relationships with each other? Are they that kind of people? If not, there is no "team." John C. Maxwell, in his book, The 17 Essential Qualities of a Team Player (pp.110-113), writes that there are several ways to know whether, after a meeting or two, whether individuals have "built solid relationships with other team members." One, each must respect the other; two, there must be shared experiences; three, trust must developed; four, there must be reciprocity ("one-sided relationships don't last"); and five, the people who are members of the team must have a mutual enjoyment.
PROBLEM #5: Sometimes meetings move along toward the end of the allotted...
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