In a team building session with 25 members of a leading French luxury brand, Paris-based facilitator Patrick Duhoux found a simple way to help team members understand their differences so they could work together better and speed their path to high performance.
Patrick introduced the team to a 4-stage problem-solving framework called FourSight. He explained the four stages of the FourSight Framework:
Individuals, he explained, have preferences for each of these stages. Clarifiers will tend to ask questions that clarify the situation. Ideators prefer to come up with ideas. Developers like to build systems for their solutions. And Implementers want to take action.
The team listened politely. Then Patrick broke them into smaller groups. He told each group they had 10 minutes to produce improvements in the team’s rituals.
What he didn’t tell them was that their groups were organized according to their FourSight preferences.
After 10 minutes, the groups came back together and made their presentations. Patrick listened with amusement. “The Clarifiers read a precise list of questions they had carefully produced. The Ideators had a long list of unrelated ideas that their presenter eventually stopped reading because he had more ideas popping up. The Developers presented a thorough process, and the Implementers used only action verbs to describe what needed to be done.”
The groups had all problem solved exactly to type.
Patrick is an expert at team building. As head of training at Dodeca, an organizational development company headquartered in Paris, he has served hundreds of teams throughout Europe. He aspires to give teams two things: a greater awareness of how they work together and tools to improve their performance.
Of course, different teams have different objectives. New teams need to get to know each other and establish norms. Existing teams may need to “reinvent” themselves, onboard new team members, or deal with change or conflict.
When working with a team, Patrick first analyzes the team’s needs. Then he designs the workshop, stringing together activities and reflections that will lead a team to insight and new agreements.
Patrick uses the FourSight framework to help team members understand the essential problem-solving process. He uses the FourSight assessment to help people understand their own preferences in that process. He also uses the Tuckman model to help teams understand the natural development phases every team goes through: Forming, Storming, Norming, Performing and Adjourning. (See graphic.)
Patrick explains, "FourSight helps teams accelerate through the development process."
The secret to FourSight’s success is a two-sided approach to team development:
One facilitator's view of exactly how FourSight accelerates the team development cycle.
Patrick Duhoux is head of training at Dodeca in Paris and FourSight certified facilitator.