Patriots Offer Lesson In Teambuilding
By Rick Dacri, Dacri & Associates,
LLC
Football season is just about upon us and many of us are
thinking about another Super Bowl championship. One doesn’t have
to be very old to remember when the Super Bowl and the New
England Patriots were names that were not said in the same
sentence. The Packers, Cowboys, Steelers, 49ers were champions,
but New England? Yet after three titles, we have come to expect
a championship every year.
How did we get this way? Scott Pioli, who is the Patriots VP of
Player Personnel shed the team’s secret in a recent interview.
He and Coach Bill Belichick have a philosophy that they will
always build a team that competes for a championship. This is
not a short term philosophy of win this year and worry about
next year later, but a philosophy of winning now, while always
keeping an eye on the future. A big part of this philosophy is
talent acquisition. Pioli’s job is to get the talent for the
coach.
The talent they go after is special. It is talent that fits with
the Patriot’s belief system. Once assembled, the coach must then
build a culture in the locker room that is in line with the
philosophy of the organization. The culture of the locker room
is key and everyone must buy into their overriding philosophy.
Belichick believes that the best players are going to play now,
but that the team is always developing their players to be ready
to play whenever they are needed. In a highly physical sport
like football, players must always be ready to play.
Each player understands his job and his role. The team looks for
competitive players who are mentally tough and who embrace the
team’s philosophy. Players who do not share this philosophy go.
The Patriot’s goal is simple: build a cohesive team because
teams win championships.
So what can we learn from the Patriots? Four key points:
1. Organizations must have an overriding philosophy to guide
them in how they operate their business.
2. All employees need to buy into this philosophy and hiring
decisions must be based in part on whether the candidate can
adhere to this philosophy. Any employee, new or current, who
does not embrace the philosophy, must go.
3. All employees know their jobs and the roles they play in the
organization.
4. The manager’s job is to put together the best available team
for today, while simultaneously preparing for the future.
While the Patriots may seemingly have an endless supply of
talent who want to play pro football, most employers do not. All
of us are faced with a labor shortage and the problem will only
get worse. The baby boomers, who make up a significant
percentage of our workforce, are beginning to prepare for
retirement and there are few workers who are ready to step in.
One of my clients commented on some of her recent retirements by
saying it is like watching history go out the door. Her
employees are getting older and she questions who will be there
is 5 years.
Faced with a critical labor shortage, many employers are hoping
that if they raise wages they may be able to fix the problem in
the short term. However, getting into a bidding war is a fight
most cannot win. There will always be someone bigger, with
deeper pockets who will win this game. And frankly, hoping is
not a good business strategy. The only way to avert a crisis is
to start doing things differently. Recruiting the same old ways,
hoping to find candidates in the same labor pool in which
everyone else is fishing, will not result in more candidates.
Your recruitment must be strategic. The types of candidates you
are looking for and the places you will find them will require
nontraditional approaches. Working with fewer, more skilled
workers is part of the answer. Efficiencies and technology are
also key.
Focus your efforts on developing your talent. Organizations
should realize that developing their talent through work
experiences and development programs are more likely to keep
their people—and that’s a better alternative than becoming the
farm club for other organizations.
Employers are faced with a critical challenge. At a time when
there are fewer people entering the workforce, organizations
have more people preparing to retire. The time to take proactive
steps to address this crisis is now.
Begin the process by identifying the key positions in your
organization and then assessing whether you currently have the
talent internally. Implement initiatives to develop your people.
Create a bench. If you don’t have the talent, begin plans to
find the talent on the outside. And lastly, take care of your
high potential employees to ensure that they remain with you.
Remember, the Patriot’s philosophy of developing a team that can
win today, while always preparing for the future, has proven to
be quite successful. It works.

Rick Dacri is an organizational development
consultant, coach and featured speaker at regional and national conferences.
Since 1995 his firm, Dacri & Associates has focused on improving the performance
of individuals and organizations. Rick can be reached at 1-800-892-9828,
or
rick@dacri.com |