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How to Drive Teams to Success with Effective Facilitation

The best facilitators look like they’re doing nothing at all. The team is driving toward a solution, being creative, working together, and having fun. What’s the facilitator doing, just taking credit for the team’s hard work? As it turns out, the easier it looks, the harder it is. But, if you use these techniques, you have a chance to look like you’re doing nothing, and doing it really well!

1. Stick to the charter.
This is the reason the team got together in the first place. Make sure all activities are conducted within the scope of the charter. It’s very easy to get off-track, or work on things that aren’t explicitly in the charter. The team should be reminded and guided back to the charter.  An easy way to do this is to share a copy of the charter with every team member and have them read and discuss it at the appropriate time(s). They should be able to recognize if they are veering away from the charter.

2. The team solves the problem, the facilitator guides them to the solution.
Keep the roles separate, as the team will sometimes want the facilitator to give them the solution. This is not a good idea, as the team must own the solution and will not if they didn’t come up with it. The facilitator is responsible to come up with a solution path for the team, not the actual solution. There are times when a facilitator may have to provide direct help, but this should be rare, and only used as a last resort.

3. Everyone participates with an equal voice.
It’s very easy for some team members to dominate conversations, but in doing so, other team members may not have an opportunity to share their ideas. When this happens, there is no true consensus or full support for the solutions developed. Great care must be taken to give every team member an equal voice. One technique to do this is to give everyone a pack of sticky notes and let them write their ideas down, one per sticky note. Then, they share one idea at a time, one person at a time. Place each sticky note on a flip chart for everyone to see. Be careful not to let a team member share more than one idea before another team member gets a chance to share.

4. Keep the team moving.
I mean this both mentally and physically. If team members sit in one place too long or spend too much time on one topic, they will get bored, disengaged, and lose momentum. Get the team members out of their chairs, moving around the room, or out of the room. Break up activities into small chunks, so that there isn’t a chance for complacency or boredom. This tests the facilitator’s creativity, but it is vital for positive momentum and progress.

5. Time is precious. Break down barriers to progress.
Sometimes the team is looking for an answer and the expert is not in the room. A good facilitator will challenge the team to get the answer from someone else, in a different way, or by some quick estimate. In extreme cases, the facilitator will encourage the team to interrupt a meeting to get the answer they need. In even more extreme cases, the facilitator will get the answer for the team by interrupting a meeting or going to a higher-level leader for an answer.

6. The more ideas the better.
When a team is thinking up ideas and alternatives, their first ideas are typically things they are most comfortable with or don’t challenge them. Facilitators should drive the team to think of things that haven’t been tried before. The first step this is to ask team members for more ideas. Most people can come with 3 alternatives for almost anything. Ask for 7 in this case. If the team has stopped writing ideas, ask questions in as many different ways as possible, pulling more ideas out of the team. When we challenge ourselves, we are more often able to deliver breakthroughs.

7. Don’t let best get in the way of better.
We want teams to make improvements. Sometimes team members want things to be perfect before trying their solutions. The problem with this is that nothing is perfect and if we wait to have everything perfect, we will never test our improvement(s). So, the facilitator should encourage team members to try their ideas out before they are fully designed. It’s perfectly acceptable to make mistakes, as long as we learn from them and improve upon them. I tell teams to shoot for 60% confidence. It gives them more opportunities to try things quickly.

8. Use frequent check-ins of progress.
Once team members start working on their improvement projects, it’s easy to assume everything is going as planned and issues are addressed when they arise. However, that’s often far from the case. Team members often get stuck and struggle on their own until time runs out, if left to their own devices. Frequently connect with the team to check on their progress and determine any areas needed support. I have found that 1 ½ hours is about the maximum amount of time that team members should work independently before coming back together to share their progress. This is also a way to integrate efforts of different team members and eliminate duplication of efforts.

9. Teams that are having fun will accomplish more.
People like to win, laugh, have fun, and share in success. As a facilitator, you should be looking for ways to help the team win. Find activities that will make their time spent together engaging and fun. You may even need to develop team activities that help them work together better. 

10. Less you, more them.
The reason the team was brought together was to solve a problem. If you had the answer to the problem, you wouldn’t need a team in the first place. A good facilitator will encourage as much participation from the team as possible by asking probing questions and creating a participatory atmosphere. Once the questions are asked, you must allow the team answer to them, not you. Often, they will want an answer from the facilitator, but you must resist the temptation. This is their effort, not the facilitator’s, so it’s best to let them struggle through hard questions.

These 10 facilitation techniques take practice, but they will help you get the best out of the teams you are working with. Take pride in knowing your teams solved their problems and it appeared you did nothing at all to help them!