Ropes courses have their fit with team building and leadership development, if properly facilitated any experience can be metaphorically tied-back to work life.
The challenge for the consumer wanting a ropes course experience is to have realistic expectations of what can be done.
Climbing walls have gone the way of Ping Pong Tables,
Everyone has one and all they are used for is Beer Pong Courts"
-Anonymous
Why Ropes Courses are not the proper fit for your Team Building and Leadership Development program.
Obesity makes many adult and child participants unable
A climbing wall, challenge course and a high ropes course are a challenge to many as well as a safety risk. These high challenge elements were created to help people build their self-esteem and believe in themselves to "push past their assumed limits". When participants who are unable to safely pull their own weight and fit into a harness are unable to participate, this develops an enhanced negative self image.
When a participant is peer pressured by work mates and school peers to climb a telephone pole and can barely make it off the ladder.
This does not help the self-esteem or self-confidence of this individual. It does just the opposite to view themselves as a failure and brings them down, I have seen many employees quit their and students hang their head in shame after a ropes course experience.
How is that building a team culture, when you humiliate your team members?
Ropes course are individual: Person vs. Element
Many Ropes Course facilitators work really hard to create programs that are team oriented on high ropes courses. The majority of facilities do not have the proper set up and staff to make these elements team active. One or at the most three people are being active on the ropes course, while you have the rest of the team sitting and watching. Generally you will have some participants cheer most people lose interest and this takes away from the team process. The only active time is often 10 to 15 minutes on the element and 3 to 4 hours of just sitting on a bench eating snacks and gossiping about each other.
How is this Team Building, when the majority of the team is not engaged in any activity at all?
Concerns about "Hostile Work environment" and "Peer Pressure amongst classmates"
team members feeling forced to climb a rock wall or zip line off a platform
This is a concern for Human resources departments and school guidance counselors; we live in a litigious society. Great team building facilitators create a "Challenge By Choice" environment. They let participants know that they choose how far they wish to go in the element, and it is alright to choose your personal level of comfort.
When the CEO of the company is watching (your teacher, your entire class, the girl you have crush on) and encouraging you to climb a 60 foot climbing tower and you are about to wet your pants out of fear you start to think, can NOT doing this effect my future, possible promotions, who my friends are, how others will view me?
If I do not succeed will I be in the out group?
Flash backs of the Cool Kids Lunch table and the table for the outsiders, is not team building!
Team building is meant to make everyone feel and behave like an insider. Participants feel bullied and a great amount of peer pressure to perform on ropes courses. If you are passed over for a promotion (or a date) by someone who did climb the 60 foot tower, it makes you think is this why I did not get the promotion? is this why teams pick me last? is this why I am being treated differently?
Is this just re-affirming how classmates and my teacher feel about me, that I am small, obese, weak.
Unfair hostile work and classroom environment lawsuits, can your organization afford one?
Poor Facilitation of experience, the ropes course becomes an amusement park of wasted opportunity.
This is the one that causes the most damage!
This is why choosing your experiential facilitator is important. SO IMPORTANT!
When you hire a team building facilitator and go to a Ropes Course (Challenge Course) for a team building day, interview the facilitator working with your group. You should treat this person as you would any individual coming to you wanting to be hired by your organization. Do not trust that because they work for a college or a well known conference center that they are going to deliver on your teams' needs.
Ask for references, follow up on the references ask people in the community.
Additionally what I have seen companies do is the Bait and Switch technique. The facilitator you are speaking with and meeting with who is creating your team building program is not the one that actually runs the program on the event day.
They send an intern, would you hire an intern to lead a training for your company? Would you hire an intern to teach your C-level executives about leadership?
With poor facilitation what a Ropes Course does become is an amusement park with long waits, bad weather, overpriced and crappy food, and an annoying guide [team building facilitator].
Afterwards your team is asking why did we do this?
Ropes courses have their fit with team building, leadership development, as well as school based culture building and anti-violence programs, if properly facilitated any experience can be metaphorically tied-back to student and work life.The challenge for the consumer wanting a ropes course (challenge course) experience is to have realistic expectations of what can be done.
What team members should realize is that there are great team building activities out there that do not require a ropes course, that push your limits mentally and physically and allow the team to use all its power to replicate and solve work and organizational problems.
What it takes is a paradigm shift in the thought process of the ropes course facilitator and the organization wishing to take part in the ropes course experience.This paradigm shift is the realization that team work requires all of the team to be present and active for a return on investment in the workplace and classroom. Be an informed consumer of your team building needs and realize that success comes to those who choose unconventional paths for team building.
A great team building facilitator takes the time to get to know your group and gives the team leaders open and honest feedback about what is best to accomplish your team goals. Realize that you do not need a ropes course or a climbing tower to make a breakthrough in your leadership and teams' potential. What you need is a great environment and open dialog to see where the path you are on is taking your team.
Push past the comfort zone and change your view on what team building is and you will find success!
Contact Us - To Facilitate your Teams Ropes Course (Challenge Course)
Create-Learning-Team Building Facilitators are Certified and Trained for
Corporate-Adult Team Building as well as School-Youth group Team Building
- Michael Cardus is the Founder of Create-Learning-Team Building, an experiential based training and development consulting organization, as well as a blogger for TeamBuilding NY. Mike specializes in team building, team development, leadership development consulting and training, creating team building programs that retain talented staff members, increase production and effectiveness of your team.
Located in Buffalo NY.
We travel to your location and facilitate team building and leadership training, wherever and whenever best serves your team.