Summary
What makes an effective team? Many leaders emphasise shared purpose, collaboration, and trust. While these priorities are important, they also present a hidden trap: equating niceness with success. Smooth meetings, minimal conflict, everyone getting along…
But here’s the problem… Some of the least effective teams look the nicest on the surface: they’re polite, they nod along, they avoid disagreement, and they underperform¹.
While it may feel great to work in a harmonious environment, the reality is, teams that are “too nice” often suppress the very friction that drives better thinking and stronger performance. They shy away from constructive challenge and don’t fully use the range of perspectives in the room. As a result, they make decisions that feel safer, move slower, and innovate less.
This article looks at what effective teams actually look like, not just how they feel. It explores why a little tension, when handled well, isn’t a sign of dysfunction but a sign of health. It breaks down how leaders can move from nice-but-ineffective to respectful-and-productive, where debate is welcome, and performance improves because of it.
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