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Work Team Recognition Day

December 4th is Extraordinary Work Recognition Day.

Established in 2000, this day is set aside to celebrate those teams that consistently work extraordinarily well together to produce significant results for thier companies or organizations.

QPC, Inc sponsers an Extraordinary Work Team Day Recognition contest where team leaders, team members and managment are encouraged to recognize their team's exceptional performance.

Submit your story today for a chance to win $200 gift certificate for the team to spend as they wish. The team's orgnization receives a commemorative plaque and a letter notifying them of the honor.

Enter your team by completing the online entry form no later the November 20th. The winner wil be announced on December 4th, Extraordinary Team Recognizition Day.

Team Celebration Ideas:
  • Dinner for the Team
  • Limo Ride
  • Bowling, anyone??
  • Catered lunch for the Team
  • Donation to the company's employee relief fund
  • Get the team together and brainstorm the celebration ideas!
And the Winners Are...

2004
Henrico Educational Alternative Review Team (HEART)

The H.E.A.R.Team is comprised of teachers, principals and coordinators of alternative educational programs in Henrico County, Virginia. The team provides a review process for alternative education applications submitted by counselors and students. The team recognized that a number of their staff had valuable experience that could be put to work county-wide. In fact, many of the coordinators noticed that they were spending valuable time on the phone with each other discussing applications from the same students. So, without a mandate from management or a budget, a team atmosphere evolved with a core group meeting once a week.

We quickly learned that if we were going to accomplish what we wanted to do, we needed buy-in from management and students. So, once a month we conduct educational outreach sessions. We work hard to reach a consensus, and when we can’t agree, we compromise,” says Sylvio Lynch, Youth Coordinator and the team’s scribe. “The result is that our students benefit from understanding all the options available to them, and that the school system isn’t trying to jam a specific recommendation down their throats.

In the four short years H.E.A.R.T has been meeting to share resources, they have also tried to take a step back to evaluate trends related to their work. The team pulls from their diverse professional backgrounds to provide a unique perspective on a challenging issue. And the leadership role is shared, depending on what that issue is.
Many students in our programs face hardships, but the H.E.A.R.T team works to give these students a sense of pride about themselves and their school. It’s a process that seems to be working for them – and is therapeutic for us, says Lynch. We have learned that together, we achieve more.



2003
The City of Norfolk Environmental Crimes Task Force.

The winning team works for the city of Norfolk in the field of environmental inspections. They attribute their success to “our ability to seriously communicate with one another.” According to team members, “People like to be a part of the team because they get things done.” “We feel good about what we are doing, knowing that we are making Norfolk a better place”. “Processes and laws have been changed, communications with citizens are more positive than ever. We work hard!

This team uses positive and effective communication, and strives to complete their mission while building relationships within the team and the community. They practice the skills and behaviors that make a team extraordinary such as establishing goals, providing an environment where decision making, creativity, good communication, respect for each and managing conflict flourish. They’ve been a catalyst to form additional inspection teams and identified training needs. They’ve opened avenues of communications for inspectors and Norfolk’s citizens in response to specific concerns of code and code compliance.

I was impressed with the team’s energy, enthusiasm and accomplishments. They love the work that they do to protect the environment, by investigating acts that damage their environment. And they love the people they do it with, their fellow workers and the citizens of Norfolk.

2001
Willaims Employee Learning & Development Team

The ELDT consist of fifteen people who demonstrate an incredible commitment to their mission and to each other. In all the teams I interviewed, this team truly practices what it preaches. From hiring diverse team members with the same values and core beliefs, providing systems that support their work (even while working in remote locations) and measuring performance and value to the business.

I talked with/ e-mailed several of the team members who were positively "gushy" about being part of the team. Even though the "business" had been through a radical realignment, the team was absolutely upbeat about their role as a business partner. "We have faced a lot of change and critism..and we have risen above them all by being able to rely on one another.

The team leader, Michelle Boyes is described as a "phenomenal servant leader" who inspires a participative, team environment. She wraps the work around the people with the talent and disire to suceed.

2000
Criminal Investigation Bureau Project Team
Missouri Department of Revenue

The CIB team consisted of seven volunteers within the DOR from all over the State of Missouri. They met once a week for four months to identify opportunities and to recommend improvements without aditional funds nor staff.

By actively listening to their key customers (internal end-users and county prosecutors) and considering every single idea, the team was able to integrate customer insights into a redesigned referral process for felony violations. The end result is in a increase in the number if referrals to discover tax, drivers license and motor vehicle fraud as well as an increase in successful prosecustions of felony activities.

The added benefit was an opening of communications between the heretofore "secretive" CIB and their key customers. Not only did customer satisfaction increase (timeliness, ease of use, certainty), cycle time decreased, but the team significantly improved the overall image of the CIB within DOR.

The team attributes its success to the team's openness and willingness to explore "a multitude of ideas without blowing anything off," the sponsor's intial clarification of the goal and then "getting out of the way," customer involvement in the process, and having agreat facilitator to keep the team on track.


 
   
     
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