HomeArchiveAboutDownloadsProductsContact Us

Articles by Matt Hunckler

Thriving in a Team of Strangers

By Matt Hunckler on June 30, 2010 12:42 PM | Comments | No TrackBacks
StartupWeekend.JPGWelcome to the team. You'll be thrown into yet another new workspace with new faces and new challenges. You'll vet possible solutions then rework, refine, and reduce your strategy. At the same time, your new team will have to establish roles, goals, and subgroups to reach a shared vision.

We've all experienced the phenomenon of rapid team development and project management. Sometimes, it's a painstaking process that makes you want to bang your head against the wall. Other times, things just seem to click--teammates communicate, think entrepreneurially, and do whatever it takes to get the job done.

I recently experienced a Startup Weekend--a  56-hour work-a-thon where the common goal is to dream up a fresh business venture and build it. Over 500 startups have come out of these whirlwind events! During my time with my newly formed Startup Weekend team, some common themes emerged. I've taken those insights and boiled them down into three strategies for thriving in new teams:

  • Clarify the vision. Time is your most valuable asset. Before you spend precious minutes moving in any given direction, make sure it's the right move and that everyone is on board. You don't have to hammer out all of the details from the start, but a deep understanding of the project's purpose and the pain you're setting out to solve will go a long way in creating a valuable output.  Once you're all in, it's time to -
  • Find out where you fit. How do your skills complement those of your teammates? You probably have a number of areas in which you can excel and create real value. Find out where the holes are in the team and fill in where it makes sense - the work you do that's in your sweet spot will shine that much more.
  • Be nimble enough to shift directions. It's important to buy into the team vision to some degree, but don't lose your objectivity. If something just isn't working - stop. During a big push in any project, someone will inevitably say, "We've got to stay on track." But who ever said we wanted to stay on that track!? Sometimes it's good to question whether or not you're on the right track.  If you're not, that's okay. Make a call and adjust accordingly.

The next time you find yourself in a new team situation, keep these strategies in mind. I think you'll find that you're better prepared to tackle your project and find the right track.

Our Startup Weekend team certainly had its challenges, but in the end we were able to crank out a cool new conversion tool named Ninja Button in those three short days. By the end of the weekend, the product was a little rough around the edges, but we had a valuable web-based application and the ability to charge for it as a service.


What do you think of these principles? What team strategies work for you?

Power to The Dreamers

By Matt Hunckler on May 5, 2010 11:20 AM | Comments | No TrackBacks
dreambig.jpgI've always related to those who dare to dream big. They come in many shapes and sizes, whether they are inventors, entrepreneurs, researchers, or other professionals. Dreamers change the game and are the ones behind the curtain of all of today's biggest innovative movements - think mobile technology, alternative energy, and the internet (thanks Al Gore).

These daring individuals thrive in today's information age. Ground breaking technologies have equipped armies of collaborative communities with the tools they need to pump out valuable products, tools, services, and content. 

That's not to say that all dreamers create value. It's one thing to dream. To deliver on that dream is a whole different ball game.

It's the disciplined dreamers that deliver.

Disciplined dreamers don't make excuses. They don't care about the crappy economy or that they don't have any money. They don't care they're a small fish in a big ocean and that they don't have a wealth of experience. They just execute.

Commandments like "ship early and ship often" are the mantras of the disciplined dreamers. The people who wake up each day and do what's difficult are the ones who are the pioneers of progress. They're the ones who consistently work hard to create something out of nothing, and they're often the ones who get tagged as the "overnight success."

The sky's the limit.

I'm inspired by the innovators and influencers who are disciplined enough to follow their dreams. Innovation and ideation only spurs further growth and awakens more of the dormant dreamers. With this growing ecosystem of execution, the sky is the limit.

How about you? What's your dream?

Photo Credit: KayVee.INC

« Martyn Sibley | Main Index | Archives | Matt Martin »
  • Now
  • Overall
  • Our Faves
  • Workshifting
  • How Many People Actually Telecommute?
  • The Science of Motivation
  • Professional Space and Coworking
  • 7 Considerations for Setting Up a Home Office
  • The Nature Of Remoteness
  • Thriving in a Team of Strangers
  • Power to The Dreamers
  • From the Trenches: Poor Management
  • Citrix Triathlete Workshifts to Train - in Hawaii!
  • No bandwidth? No worries! Challenges of Workshifting Abroad
  • How to Overcome the Anxiety of an Upcoming Deadline
  • Work from Home Fridays [Infographic]
  • 10 Top Sales Trends: Staying Humble and Hungry in 2012
  • Subscribe to feed Subscribe to this blog's feed

Get every post in your inbox!

Enter your email address below and recieve each post directly to your inbox.

About workshifting

"If you work from your home, out of coffee shops, hotels, and airports every bit as much as the office, workshifting is for you. Tips, reviews, and opinions on the world of web commuting are what workshifting is all about."

Twitter | @WorkShifting

Flickr Feed | Photostream

Add a "workshifting" tag to your photos in Flickr to see them here

Featured Download


Featured Download

The State of Telework in the U.S., is a summary report that reveals who's really teleworking, what they're doing, and where they're doing it. The purpose of this paper is to shed light on when and where work is done in the U.S., how that's changed in recent years, and where the trend might be headed. Download Now

Your Account

Creative Commons License
This blog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

Categories

  • Air Travel (15)
  • Announcement (16)
  • App Review (7)
  • Applications (8)
  • Attire (2)
  • Balance (62)
  • Bartering (1)
  • Business (59)
  • Business Continuity (1)
  • Career (26)
  • Case Studies (3)
  • Case Study (3)
  • Cloud Computing (2)
  • Cloud-Based Apps (6)
  • CoWorking (15)
  • Coaching (3)
  • Coffee (4)
  • Collaboration (51)
  • Communications (72)
  • Community (27)
  • Commuting (8)
  • Conferences (2)
  • Connecting (11)
  • Creativity (12)
  • Crisis (5)
  • Deal Making (3)
  • Disclosure (1)
  • Donations (2)
  • Download (6)
  • Email (5)
  • Employees (60)
  • Employers (53)
  • Environment (9)
  • Family (15)
  • Featured (41)
  • Fitness (7)
  • Focus (39)
  • Fun (28)
  • Generation Y (4)
  • Goals (12)
  • Government (4)
  • Guidelines (5)
  • HR (5)
  • Healthy (12)
  • Hiring Process (3)
  • Holidays (8)
  • Home Business (8)
  • Home Office (29)
  • Independence (4)
  • Infographic (4)
  • Interaction (20)
  • International Travel (12)
  • Interview (4)
  • Kelley Checks In (2)
  • Legislation (2)
  • Lifeshifting (17)
  • Lifestyle Design (53)
  • Longevity (1)
  • Managers (37)
  • Marketing (5)
  • Mind-Mapping (2)
  • Mobile (20)
  • Motivation (16)
  • Non-Profit (1)
  • Office (39)
  • On The Go (72)
  • Organization (33)
  • Personal (39)
  • Personality Type (8)
  • Poetry (1)
  • Politics (6)
  • Presentations (7)
  • Productivity (153)
  • Professionalism (23)
  • Remote Support (8)
  • Research (12)
  • Resources (30)
  • Review (6)
  • Routine (14)
  • Sleep (4)
  • Small Towns (1)
  • Social Media (13)
  • Software (6)
  • Sports (2)
  • Staycation (2)
  • Strategy (20)
  • Stress (19)
  • Technology (65)
  • Time Management (40)
  • Tips (147)
  • Training (1)
  • Travel (40)
  • Trust (12)
  • Unified Experience (19)
  • Video (49)
  • WiFi (10)
  • Work Environment (122)
  • Workshifting (415)

Monthly Archives

  • April 2012 (3)
  • March 2012 (14)
  • February 2012 (5)
  • January 2012 (3)
  • December 2011 (6)
  • November 2011 (6)
  • October 2011 (11)
  • September 2011 (8)
  • August 2011 (17)
  • July 2011 (12)
  • June 2011 (17)
  • May 2011 (8)
  • April 2011 (13)
  • March 2011 (19)
  • February 2011 (17)
  • January 2011 (19)
  • December 2010 (14)
  • November 2010 (16)
  • October 2010 (16)
  • September 2010 (18)
  • August 2010 (18)
  • July 2010 (37)
  • June 2010 (31)
  • May 2010 (25)
  • April 2010 (25)
  • March 2010 (22)
  • February 2010 (14)
  • January 2010 (13)
  • December 2009 (14)
  • November 2009 (16)
  • October 2009 (18)
  • September 2009 (18)
  • August 2009 (18)
  • July 2009 (19)
  • June 2009 (11)
  • May 2009 (11)

Tag Cloud

  • balance
  • business
  • collaboration
  • communications
  • employees
  • employers
  • featured
  • focus
  • lifestyledesign
  • office
  • onthego
  • personal
  • productivity
  • technology
  • timemanagement
  • tips
  • travel
  • video
  • workenvironment
  • workshifting

Citrix | Online
© Copyright 2012 Citrix Online. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy