Primary Keywords: high-performance teams | team leadership | team culture
Success at the highest level is rarely achieved alone. Whether you are building a championship sports organization like we did at the UW or in the NFL, leading a Fortune 500 company or in my case Sports Illustrated, or climbing the world’s highest mountain (like Mt EVEREST), one truth remains constant:
Extraordinary results come from extraordinary teams and extraordinary EFFORT.
The difference between an average team and a high-performance team is not simply talent. Talent only takes you so far. Many organizations have talented people. The difference is alignment, trust, accountability, communication, and a shared commitment to something bigger than individual success. I happen to see a BIG drop off in leadership. We all go to college to learn a trade but few learn how to be a great leader like I was taught by amazing head coaches.
I have experienced this firsthand through my journey as a former NFL athlete, entrepreneur, leadership coach, and Everest climber. The lessons from the locker room and the mountain are remarkably similar: elite teams are built intentionally. It takes effort and DISCIPLINE to make these things happen and remember: Hard things are Hard.
So what makes a high-performance team successful?
High-performance teams share common traits that separate them from ordinary groups.
Elite teams know exactly where they are going. You need a clear vision on the roadmap that everyone is privy too and then the steps to get there.
A football team does not win a championship because every player is chasing individual statistics. They win because everyone understands the mission: execute the game plan, trust the process, and achieve the ultimate goal. Day to day, week to week and month to month communication is key to achieve those goals.
The same applies in business.
A strong team culture starts with clarity:
In other words, simplify this by the who, what, where ,when and how.
When people understand the mission, they move from simply doing a job to being part of something meaningful.
Trust is the currency of high performance HOWEVER, Trust is earned not given.
Without trust, teams spend energy protecting themselves, avoiding mistakes, and managing politics. With trust, teams can move faster, make decisions quicker, and challenge each other honestly. Leaders must do what they say and then say what they do. Too many lack the communication skills to make this possible.
On an Everest expedition, trust is not optional. Every climber depends on the person next to them. A decision made by one person can impact the survival of the entire team. Too many times I showed up the most in shape ready to go but others chose to take the short cut and not train. Zero trust while creating a lot of angst within the group.
The same principle applies in leadership.
Great teams create environments where people can say:
Psychological safety creates innovation.
Professional sports provide some of the clearest examples of high-performance team dynamics.
A championship team is not always the team with the most stars. It is usually the team with the strongest culture. Take a look at what Jim Mora Jr did at the U CONN (football team) completely turned the culture around to have 2 back to back 9+ win seasons after losing over the years or what Indiana did this last year to win the national championship.
Look at organizations like the New England Patriots during their championship years. Their success was built around preparation, accountability, adaptability, and a team-first mentality. Yes, Tom Brady was super talented but many would argue that it was his preparation and ultimate hard work that produced the results.
The best teams understand:
Talent gets you into the game. Culture determines whether you win. This is a BIG ONE.
Elite sports organizations focus on:
Every player understands their responsibility. This has to be carefully articulated to each player in the player evaluation weekly process.
A quarterback, offensive lineman, special teams player, or backup all have different roles — but every role matters.
In business, leaders must create the same clarity:
Confusion kills performance. Lack of clarity kills ambition.
High-performing teams hold each other accountable.
There is a major difference between:
“Who caused this problem?”
and
“How do we solve this problem?”
The first creates fear.
The second creates improvement. That said, you need to involve the stakeholders to make sure that makes sense so everyone is on the same page.
Climbing Mount Everest is often viewed as an individual achievement, but reaching the summit is actually a team effort.
Every successful expedition depends on:
The mountain does not care about ego, titles, or reputation.
Everyone must contribute.
On Everest, the strongest climber is not always the most valuable person. The person who communicates danger, supports teammates, and makes the right decisions under pressure may save the entire expedition. Also, knowing when to turn around and make a pivot so you don’t jeopardize your life.
This is one of the greatest lessons in leadership:
Your ability to elevate others determines your ability to lead. Empowering others is the major key to making this work.
Trust does not happen because a leader says, “We have a great culture.”
Culture is built through repeated actions.
High-performing leaders create trust by:
Small promises matter.
When leaders consistently do what they say they will do, credibility grows.
Communicating with the entire organization not just the top leaders. This is a big one.
The best leaders do not pretend to have every answer.
They ask questions.
They listen.
They admit mistakes.
I just did a talk with Harvard and they wanted to know more about my failures than my successes. It helps close the gap that everything appears to be perfect.
Great teams do not wait for permission to solve problems.
They take responsibility.
A culture of ownership sounds like:
“I will handle this.”
not:
“That is not my job.”
Communication breakdowns destroy performance.
The best teams communicate with clarity, consistency, and honesty.
Here are several strategies:
People need reminders of what matters.
Great leaders constantly reinforce:
Howard Shultz, the founder of Starbucks did a great job of doing this. As a result, Starbucks became a worldwide leader in selling the 3rd place and coffee.
High-performance teams are constantly improving.
They ask:
Professional sports teams review game film. Everest teams analyze conditions and decisions.
Businesses need the same discipline. This is why my SUMMITS model works. Move, Measure and IMPROVE.
Leadership is not just giving direction.
It is understanding your people.
The best leaders ask:
“What do you need from me to be successful?” Create a great support system so people don’t feel like an avalanche has fallen on them.
Even talented leaders can damage team culture.
Here are some common mistakes:
A superstar who damages trust can hurt the entire organization.
Skills matter.
Character matters more.
Take your time in the hiring process.
Great leaders build people who can operate independently.
Micromanagement tells people:
“I do not trust you.”
Empowerment tells people:
“I believe in you.” and “You can do it”
Weak leaders avoid conflict.
Strong leaders address issues early and respectfully.
Healthy conflict creates stronger teams. Conflict doesn’t have to be a screaming match. It’s understanding the org chart but being confident enough to speak up.
High-performance teams know:
“This is how we operate.”
Without standards, performance becomes inconsistent. Once you define the standard of any organization, you make sure people level up to meet that bar.
Based on lessons from sports, business, and Everest, here is a simple framework for building elite teams:
Everyone understands the mission.
People believe in each other.
Everyone owns their role.
Information flows openly.
Values are demonstrated daily.
Everyone gives their best effort.
The strongest teams do not just climb mountains.
They become mountains.
The greatest teams are not created by accident.
They are built through intentional leadership.
Whether you are leading a company, a sports organization, or an expedition team, the principles remain the same:
Create clarity.
Build trust.
Demand accountability.
Create the standard.
Communicate relentlessly.
Develop people.
Because the summit is never reached alone.
The best leaders do not just build successful teams — they build teams capable of achieving the impossible. That’s why I call my life making the Impossible/ Possible..
Tips from Mark’s life experiences from the NFL
to climbing the Seven Summits, to winning an FORMER NFL WIDE RECEIVER EMMY and running a part of Sports Illustrated.
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