Dayton Daily News

Team building at corporatio­ns evolves from trust falls

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“It’s not clear yet what are the benefits of it, other than people love it because it’s something outside of work,” said Eduardo Salas, an organizati­onal psychology professor at Rice University in Houston. “But when they go back, the same conditions are there, so the long-term effects of team building are unknown.”

A series of exercises meant to encourage cooperatio­n, goodwill and, ultimately, increased productivi­ty, team building has long been fodder for corporate satire. The quintessen­tial team-building activity was the trust fall: closing your eyes and falling backward into the arms of your colleagues, secure in the knowledge that they have your back — or not.

While team-building facilitato­rs proliferat­ed and business was brisk, the old-school outings rarely hit the mark, according to experts.

“It really didn’t improve their performanc­e,” said Wendy Bedwell, an assistant professor of organizati­onal psychology at the University of South Florida.

In recent years, team building has evolved in more creative and engaging ways, Bedwell said, amping up both the fun quotient and the potential benefits to the workplace. Activities include solving simulated crime scenes, building bicycles for charity and competing in “Survivor”-inspired challenges, among others.

Improv training is also popular as a corporate team-building activity, with Second City Works, the business consulting arm of the Chicago-based comedy troupe, a logical player in that arena.

“We’ve built a pretty significan­t business,” Kelly Leonard, executive director of insights and applied improvisat­ion at Second City Works, where a half-day team building workshop starts at about $12,000.

Escape rooms, however, have emerged as perhaps the go-to team-building activity. In a typical scenario, six teammates are locked in a themed room, where they must work together to find clues and solve puzzles to escape within 60 minutes.

The activity can be both intellectu­al and physical, and for those who are not claustroph­obic, apparently a lot of fun. It also provides some actual team-building benefit, Bedwell said.

“Anything that really requires people to work together, think critically and solve a problem is going to have more of a benefit than just standing in a forest and falling backwards and having everyone catch you,” Bedwell said.

PanIQ Room, a Hungarian company that opened a Chicago outlet in March 2016, is in the basement of an industrial three-story brick building near downtown.

The facility consists of three rooms dubbed “Infection,” “Prison” and, in homage to Chicago, “Mob,” where participat­ing groups generally pay between $129 and $189 for a one-hour escape.

Camille Wheeler, 36, senior manager in contact center applicatio­ns for United Airlines, recently funded a PanIQ Room outing for herself and 14 members of her team, who split into groups to tackle the three rooms simultaneo­usly.

“I wanted to get the team out and do some team-building exercises in a new and different way,” Wheeler said.

The groups dug into the task, connecting via walkie-talkies for occasional clues from the PanIQ Room managers. Only one group emerged within the allotted time, escaping from the Infection room in about 45 minutes.

 ?? CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? United Airlines employees, including Nikole Rucinski (right), take part in a corporate team building exercise.
CHICAGO TRIBUNE United Airlines employees, including Nikole Rucinski (right), take part in a corporate team building exercise.

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