Why a “happy” team isn’t enough for your startup to be its best

Teams that focus their attention purely on relationships may look good on the surface, however, they fail to deliver, end up disbanded or fired.
‘Tis the season to be jolly, but one team I worked with, the Joy Team, focused on being jolly all year round!
The Joy Team were living in a bubble of surface happiness; they were having fun, they socialised together and they achieved very little.
They were failing to deliver results and were all at risk of being fired!
But they were happy. Or were they?
George, the leader of the Joy Team was baffled because when he first met the team he felt really good about leading them.
However, this was not so much the case as time progressed!
He found them hard work, and complained that they whinged a lot and took up so much of his time. Meetings flew by with laughter and merriment, with no decisions being made and a scramble to cram the agenda in the last five minutes when the team realised that they were running out of time.
The focus for the Joy Team was on getting along well; high engagement was their key metric so they did everything to maintain a positive and happy environment.
To fit in in this team you had to nurture relationships.
Well, that doesn’t sound too bad does it?
Relationships are important, and a key component to developing sustainable high performing teams. The problem is that focusing purely on relationships is ineffective.
High performing teams also focus on output – on the stuff that needs to get done. They create an environment where the tough conversations can happen without becoming personal or personalising.
In the Joy Team, you are expected to run with the pack and you are are not allowed to rock the boat.
There was a culture of “that’s not how we do things here”, which was quickly communicated to newer team members when they brought in new and diverse thinking and operating rhythms.
The major gaps with the Joy Team included:
What else do you think may be going on in the Joy Team?
Yep, passive aggressive behaviours and passive aggressive humour.
The Joy Team are not looking so joyful when you look under the hood. Their roles were at risk, and their reputation in the organisation had long past being at risk.
In what ways is your team like the Joy Team?
To see a related article go here.
Pollyanna Lenkic is an author, coach, and speaker who works with leading organisations. To work with Lenkic visit to her website.
This article was originally published on SmartCompany.
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