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Team-Building Strategies: Building a Winning Team for Your Organization
Posted By PON Staff On June 3, 2008 @ 12:58 pm In Freemium | No Comments
[3] Dear Business Builder,
Peter’s story says a lot about the value of effective team-building. Here’s how he tells it:
It happened one morning in late September in a small auditorium.
We were 27 people who didn’t know each other very well — not very well at all.
Sure, we all worked for the same company, but so did hundreds of other people.
It was unclear how each of us had been selected to attend this meeting, because we represented vastly different departments, job functions and skill sets.
Nevertheless, there we were, assembled in our chairs, attentively listening to one of the vice presidents.
His words were welcoming. His voice was upbeat. His thoughts were coherent. He was even inspiring. So, I initially felt a rapport with this executive.
Of course, the corporate merger project he described was monumental, would involve resolving a myriad of details, and would ignite numerous contentious issues.
And then he said something that was so incongruent and puzzling, that I winced.
“We’ve assembled this team to solve our biggest business challenge,” he announced. “It will require each of you to be skilled at business negotiation.”
But as I looked around, I didn’t see a team. All I saw was a group of ambitious individuals who didn’t even know each other.
Each of us had an individual agenda. We were all competing for recognition and promotion.
How did he expect to organize us? Unify us? Handle disagreements? Solve problems? Make decisions?
How was this experienced and respected business executive planning to transform us from a disparate group of individuals into a viable business negotiation team?
I was about to find out…
Over the next few months, I had a front row seat at a real-time workshop on effective team building.
Mr. Anderson (not his real name) was masterful in his ability to develop common goals and a shared vision of our group’s mission.
Eventually, Mr. Anderson harnessed the team’s talents and energy so effectively that we negotiated all the details of our corporate merger successfully and ahead of schedule.
It was truly one of the most rewarding experiences of my entire career.
Peter’s story is an eye-opener, but not a shock. At the Program on Negotiation at Harvard Law, we’ve grown accustomed to these success stories.
The Harvard PON students who master business negotiation and team building become successful CEO’s, cabinet members, ambassadors, diplomats, and advisors to other world leaders.
Now, you can learn the skills required to be a team builder … an effective negotiator … and a negotiation coach.
In Team-Building Strategies: Building a Winning Team for Your Organization, you’ll discover:
Team-Building Strategies: Building a Winning Team for Your Organization is a fast-reading report from the Program on Negotiation at Harvard Law School that provides penetrating insights into:
Plus, Team-Building Strategies: Building a Winning Team for Your Organization sheds new light on the myths and realities of:
If you’re like me, you spend a lot of time reading. Books. Newsletters. Magazines. Websites.
It’s practically endless. So, if you’re going to put something on my reading pile, it better be worth my attention.
That’s why I so appreciate a fast-reading report that distills the most essential information down into a format I can read and absorb easily.
I urge you to download your complimentary copy of Team-Building Strategies: Building a Winning Team for Your Organization, right now. Simply click the button below.
I promise, it’s worth your time to read it.
With my sincere best wishes for your business negotiation success,
Sincerely,
Robert H. Mnookin

Samuel Williston Professor of Law
Faculty Chair, Program on Negotiation
Harvard Law School
P.S. Are you the leader of a team, or merely the referee of a group of individuals trying to achieve personal recognition?
Tough times can create conflicts within organizations.
When conflict threatens to disrupt the harmony on your team, smart leaders are proactive, not reactive.
I urge you to download your free copy of Team-Building Strategies: Building a Winning Team for Your Organization, right now. Here’s how:
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