The Five Dysfunctions of a Team
The Five Dysfunctions of a Team is a model that identifies common pitfalls preventing teams from achieving their full potential. It posits that teams must overcome these dysfunctions, building a foundation of trust to foster healthy conflict, commitment, accountability, and ultimately, a focus on collective results.
When participants seem unmotivated or disengaged
You need to understand what drives adult learners and how to create conditions for genuine engagement and retention.
This framework is most effective when working with established teams experiencing performance issues, communication breakdowns, or interpersonal conflicts. It's also valuable for newly formed teams to proactively establish healthy working dynamics.
Absence of Trust
Team members are unwilling to be vulnerable and open with each other, hiding weaknesses and mistakes. This lack of trust makes it impossible to build a foundation for effective teamwork, as individuals are hesitant to ask for help or offer constructive criticism.
Fear of Conflict
Because trust is absent, teams avoid healthy debate and difficult conversations, leading to artificial harmony. Suppressing conflict prevents the exploration of diverse ideas and perspectives, ultimately hindering innovation and problem-solving.
Lack of Commitment
Without engaging in open conflict and debate, team members struggle to fully commit to decisions and plans. This ambiguity results in a lack of buy-in, causing hesitation and second-guessing that undermines execution.
Avoidance of Accountability
When team members haven't committed to a clear plan, they are reluctant to hold each other accountable for performance or behavior. This avoidance leads to missed deadlines, unmet goals, and a decline in overall team standards.
Inattention to Results
When individuals aren't held accountable, they prioritize personal goals or departmental agendas over collective outcomes. This focus on individual status and ego undermines the team's ability to achieve shared objectives and deliver meaningful results.
Taps into intrinsic motivation so participants actually want to participate.
Facilitators can use this model to diagnose team weaknesses through observation and assessments. Design activities that specifically address each dysfunction, such as trust-building exercises, conflict resolution simulations, and goal-setting workshops. Regularly revisit the model to track progress and reinforce positive team behaviors.
- 1Give participants autonomy over how they engage
- 2Connect content to their real challenges
- 3Build confidence through early wins
- 4Create psychological safety for sharing
- Team building
- Leadership development
- Conflict resolution
- Organizational development
- Vulnerability-based trust is the foundation of effective teamwork.
- Constructive conflict is essential for generating innovative ideas and solutions.
- Clear and shared commitment ensures everyone is aligned and working towards the same goals.
- Accountability among team members drives high performance and prevents complacency.
- Collective results should always take precedence over individual ambitions.
- Requires a safe and open environment for team members to be vulnerable.
- Addressing dysfunctions can be uncomfortable and requires skilled facilitation.
- The model is a simplification of complex team dynamics and should be used in conjunction with other diagnostic tools and interventions.