チームビルディング
Team Building / トム・ビルディング
Team building is the process of improving collaboration, trust, and coordination so a group can perform effectively.
Team building involves clarifying roles, establishing norms, and strengthening relationships to improve how people work together. It can include structured exercises, shared goals, and conflict resolution practices. The concept helps leaders create teams that communicate well, adapt quickly, and deliver consistent results.
Determines which team practices are needed to improve collaboration and clarity. Guides interventions when a team is underperforming or newly formed. Influences how to balance task execution with relationship building.
- Determines which team practices are needed to improve collaboration and clarity.
- Guides interventions when a team is underperforming or newly formed.
- Influences how to balance task execution with relationship building.
- Clear roles and shared goals reduce friction and duplication of work.
- Trust grows through reliability, transparency, and constructive feedback.
- Regular rituals (check-ins, retrospectives) reinforce team norms.
- Diverse teams need explicit communication standards to avoid misalignment.
- Team building is ongoing, not a one-time event or retreat.
A cross-functional product team struggles with missed deadlines and unclear handoffs. The manager organizes a workshop to define responsibilities, create a shared roadmap, and agree on communication rules. They introduce weekly retrospectives and a decision log. Over two months, the team reduces rework and improves on-time delivery.
Compare Team Building with adjacent concepts before deciding. Team Building | Current concept | Use when the team needs the primary decision lens Adjacent metric or framework | Supporting lens | Use when the team needs evidence or process detail General vocabulary | Broad explanation | Use only for orientation, not final decision-making
| Metric | Difference | Why read together |
|---|---|---|
| Team Building | Current concept | Use when the team needs the primary decision lens |
| Adjacent metric or framework | Supporting lens | Use when the team needs evidence or process detail |
| General vocabulary | Broad explanation | Use only for orientation, not final decision-making |
- Team building is only social events; it should change how work is done.
- High talent alone creates strong teams; coordination still must be built.
- Conflict means failure; healthy conflict can improve decisions.
When should I use Team Building?
Use it when the team needs to decide scope, priority, owner, or trade-off, not when it only needs a short definition.
What makes Team Building useful in practice?
It becomes useful when it is tied to evidence, a decision owner, and a concrete next operating choice.
What should I avoid?
Avoid using the term as a label without clarifying assumptions, boundaries, and how success will be judged.