Lecture good cooperation
Reviews
Highlights
- Duration 3 hours
- Interactive lecture, cooperation is key
- Audience responds with mobile phone
- Introducing the Scale of Cooperation
- Team building exercise for all participants
- From 12 to ± 250 participants
The lecture Good Working Together examines (and brings to heel) team cooperation in an interactive and inviting way, with humour and a serious thread.
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When is lecture good cooperation a good choice?
This lecture works well in modern organisations, where working together in and between teams has become increasingly complex and where teamwork makes all the difference. Every organisation has fixed moments in the year, for example to present quarterly figures. A combination with this interactive lecture is then optimal. There are also key moments, e.g. in the event of a reorganisation, or when a different leadership style is needed. Even then, attention to cooperation is important and, because of the way the lecture mainly looks ahead, insightful and hopeful where necessary. The lecture Working well together also works well with new teams, as a kick-off at the start of a construction project, for example. This lecture is also a good choice if you are considering a team development project to boost cooperation in the organisation. Possible at any location of your choice, so also Incompany.
'What works' for the audience and 'what doesn't'? Guiding principle in the lecture good cooperation is The Scale of Cooperation, a roadmap to good cooperation in teams, horizontally and vertically. With all interactions, the lecture will last about 30 to 45 minutes. Afterwards, there will be a multicomplex team assignment. In teams of about 15 participants, a kind of sporting battle naturally develops which team works best together. If desired, we make new groups after 45 minutes and the teams can then show how a change process works through in the new teams.
MINIMUM DURATION: | ± 2 hours |
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MAXIMUM DURATION: | ± 4 hours |
MINIMUM NUMBER OF PARTICIPANTS: | ± 12 |
MAXIMUM NUMBER OF PARTICIPANTS: | ± 250 |