The eight dimensions of a healthy team
What actually makes a team work — the eight things we measure, and why each matters more than a fun day out.
The default hybrid experience excludes
Most ‘hybrid’ events are really an in-person event with the remote people watching on a screen. The room has the energy, the snacks and the side conversations; the remote half has a laggy video feed and a growing sense of being an afterthought. Designed badly, hybrid is worse than fully remote — it actively reminds people they’re on the outside.
A team isn’t one thing, so ‘how’s the team?’ can’t have one answer.
Design for the remote experience first
The fix is counter-intuitive: design the experience from the remote participant’s point of view, then add the in-person layer. If it works brilliantly for someone on a screen, it’ll work for everyone. If it only works in the room, the remote half always loses.
Mix the teams, don’t split them
The instinct is to put ‘the room’ in one group and ‘the remote folks’ in another. Do the opposite. Deliberately mixed teams — some in-person, some remote, working on the same thing — force genuine collaboration across the divide and stop the two groups from drifting apart.
Give everyone an equal way to take part
Use formats and tools where a remote participant can contribute exactly as much as someone in the room — same access to the activity, same voice in the conversation, same chance to lead. Equal footing is what turns ‘watching’ into ‘participating.’
Check that the remote half felt it too
When you measure the impact afterwards, look at the remote participants’ experience specifically, not just the average. If belonging improved in the room but not on the screens, the design failed the people it most needed to reach — and that’s the thing to fix next time.
We don’t stop at the experience. We read the team before, design around what the data shows, and measure the change at Day 14, 30 and 60 — so the difference is proven, not just felt.
Want hybrid experiences where nobody’s on the sidelines?
Tell us what you’re trying to fix or celebrate, and we’ll design the experience around it. No hard sell — just a real conversation about your team.