Team Building
High-flying executives these days are exposed to so much training that they are actually becoming ‘immune to it’ says Liz Morrison a remarkable business coach and expert horsewoman. We find that teams pull together far more easily when there’s no small talk, management jargon, or performance reviews in the way …in fact no words at all.
So just how can you enhance leadership skills, build a team and implement greater communication techniques without words? It all becomes so much clearer when you realise that your coach is actually…..a horse!
Like you and I horses respond much better to someone that we respect, trust and feel comfortable with. A horse doesn’t recognise status, authority or who the boss might be, so delegates quite quickly come to realise and understand the values of empathy, clear intention and sincere communication.
The horses are well tempered, friendly and responsive but hey! If you lose their attention then it’s up to you and your colleagues to fathom out how to rebuild the relationship in order to complete the task…your ‘team’ feeding back their observations and providing constructive coaching and ‘you’ perhaps taking a journey of self discovery.
After all a horse just tells it as it is, they have the uncanny knack to reflect back things that you didn’t even know that you were feeling!
'Horseplay’ is an absolutely unique and rewarding way to deliver valuable lessons in teamwork, motivation and leadership skills. Liz Morrison is an accredited expert in sports psychology and one of the UK’s leading ICF accredited coaches and quite remarkably brings these two separate but related areas together in a way that allows people in business to gain feedback that is pure, direct and utterly honest on any issue which can be brought to the process.
For further information, dates and prices please contact: Ian Phillips Southern Creative Media Group Phone:020 8669 0127Email:
info@southerncreative.co.ukQuote:ECLIPSE
Classes can be tailored to suit the needs of your organisation, geared to accommodate 5-10 people at a time and typically lasting for a day.