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Aug 31, 2017
3 Brilliant Ways You Can Encourage Collaboration at the Office
Dan Rose, Content Creator at SkillPath
When members of the workforce are able to share insights with one another and work together on an important project, employees can feel more valued and be more productive. Sometimes leaders can see collaboration decline as stress levels rise, yet this doesn’t have to happen. Managers can create a cooperative environment by inspiring workers to get involved in the company culture. They can also develop an effective mentorship program and even encourage curiosity.
Here are three ways leaders can create better collaboration:
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Create fun activities
Many leaders look to liven up meetings and discussions with fun activities to increase communication. These activities usually encourage employees to work together. While this can build collaboration in the present, things often change. Managers often don’t see the same enthusiasm for teamwork after the project is finished.
A great way to really inspire communication between members of the workforce is to form activities not necessarily found in the workplace, such as starting a book club or creating an office softball team, according to career advice resource The Daily Muse. When workers feel more connected with one another outside of their regular duties, it can bring staff members together.
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Foster workplace mentoring
If employees understand they can receive advice and support from another member of the workforce, collaboration may increase. People want to connect with one another, and leaders can foster that interaction by developing an official mentoring program. Strengthening partnerships between staff members may help build collaboration, according to Recruiter.com. The mentor can even evaluate and reward his or her mentee for how well he or she work with and support other members of the workforce to encourage collaboration.
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Challenge workers with new tasks
According to Recruiter.com, leaders inspire curiosity among workers about other aspects of the organization by asking employees to take on a responsibility outside of their job description. Doing this can inspire staff members to seek out workers who may be more knowledgeable about a certain aspect of the business, encouraging employees to use each other as resources. Recruiter suggested this technique is curiosity-based collaboration.
Leaders have numerous options for inspiring communication and interaction among the workforce. While managers can encourage employees to collaborate during a specific project, doing so often doesn’t last long or inspire true partnerships. Lasting collaboration relies on fostering supportive initiatives within the organization.
Dan Rose
Content Creator at SkillPath
Dan Rose is a content creator at SkillPath who uses his experience from a 30-year writing career to focus on timely events that impact today’s business world.
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