Five with Fry
A retreat can feel productive while it is happening. People talk more honestly. The tension lowers. The team gets a little space from the pressure of the regular schedule. But if leaders have not named the real problem before the agenda is built, the team usually comes back to the same habits on Monday. Jen closes this season by walking through what actually makes a retreat useful: clear purpose, behavioral goals, timing that interrupts old patterns, and enough structure for conflict to become part of the work instead of a complaint session. Fun can help people breathe. It cannot carry the conversations leaders have been avoiding. This episode also gets into psychological safety, accountability, and the guardrails teams need if they are going to be honest with each other without letting harm or avoidance run the room. The work does not end when the retreat ends. It shows up in decision-making, meeting habits, follow-through, and whether leaders keep the hard things visible after everyone is back at work. If you are planning a retreat or team session between July and September and want help designing it with more purpose, visit jenfrytalks.com.
71 episodios
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