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Jackson Hole Mountain Resort Summer Team Building Adventure

Monday, February 20th, 2012

Groups heading to Jackson Hole this summer have an opportunity to experience the Jackson Hole Mountain Resort Grand Dynamics Style. One such program is the Grand Dynamics All Mountain Challenge program, and in particular the Mountain Traverse.  The Mountain Traverse is a modification on our programming that has been taking place on the mountain for over ten years.  This program involves a 4,000 foot  aerial tram ride and navigation down the mountain on access roads to the Gondola.

This hike provides a scenic walk of about two miles, which is mostly moderate down-hill!  There is a short ten minute uphill finish, approximately 10 minutes,  to complete the experience and to access the gondola ride back down the mountain.

What makes this program unique is what happens along the way.

Headquartered in Jackson Hole since 1998, Grand Dynamics International has been offering unique team building programs and events for nearly 15 years. Grand Dynamics offers programs to groups who are seeking to optimize their time in Jackson through unique experiential learning programs. The setting of the Jackson Hole Mountain Resort offers an outstanding venue for such an experience.

The programing that takes place on the mountain is unique to each group experience.  After careful consideration of the groups goals and objectives, Grand Dynamics designs a series of experiential initiatives which take place at various “secret” locations on the mountain.  Amazing race style checkpoints to longer facilitated initiatives, Grand Dynamics will choose the program that is most appropriate for your group in a way that maximizes the value and return for the investment.

One of the key focus ares is determining the critical conversations that would best suit the group throughout the experience.  Sharing experiences on best practices, information sharing, relationship building, systems thinking, overcoming challenges, courageous leadership are just a few of the focus areas which are common in this type of an experience.

Contact Grand Dynamics today and discover what an amazing experience that awaits you, your team and your business in the mountains of Jackson Hole!

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Top Winter Corporate Retreat Destination – Arizona

Friday, November 25th, 2011

Inspiration is a key ingredient to a retreat destination. And when you combine amazing destinations, outstanding resorts and a beautiful outdoor environment you have the beginning recipe for a successful corporate retreat or team building destination.  Check out this time lapse video of Arizona. Quite Nice.  Grand Dynamics offers amazing corporate retreats and training programs in Arizona and Winter is one of our favorite times of year to be there.  Contact us to find out about programs in the surrounding landscapes of Phoenix and about our favorite spot – Sedona~

Landscapes: Volume Two from Dustin Farrell on Vimeo.

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Ultimate Customized Corporate Retreat Team Building Adventure

Sunday, November 13th, 2011

Track Line Rap Team Traverse

Check out this Grand Dynamics ADVENTURE element.  This is one element we designed for a recent customized corporate retreat for one of our favorite annual clients based out of NYC.

Setting: Dunton Hot Springs, Colorado; Day 2 of a 4 Day Corporate Retreat

The waterfall you see in the picture is coming out of the mouth of the canyon and is about 100 fee high to its base. The sides of the canyon from left to right span about 400 feet from wall to wall.

Event Elements: Adventure, “Wow” Exposure, Overcoming Individual Fear, Teamwork, Trust

System:  There are three ropes you see in this picture. One rope is know as the track line. This is a static line that is fixed from a high point anchor on the left side of the canyon and to the mid-low point on the far (right) side of the canyon. If you look closely you can actually see someone in an orange jacket at the bottom ride side of the picture – this is the LZ (Landing Zone). The track line is a 300 foot static rope.  Rope # 2 is a 100 foot single rappel line. This is the rope the participant starts out on when they rappel over the cliff edge on the vertical left side of the canyon.  As they rappel down the cliff the participant is also attached to the track line via 2 lanyards (Webbing with biners attached to the pulleys on the track.) Rope 3 is the belay line which runs all the way across the canyon.

Process: Participants begin with the rappel down the initial steep cliff face (Out of site to the left of this photo). About 25 feet into their rappel the slack line tightens and the lanyards catch on the pulleys on the track line, and they begin to float down and out on the track line across the canyon.  This happens for 100 feet, until the rappel line runs out!

At this point the participant is now belayed by the third rope, the belay line, which was originally the back up belay for the rap. This is the crux moment. You are hovering 150 feet off the deck and must let go all control and put your trust in your team, and the system to get you to the ground safely.

What makes it even more complicated is that the participant on the traverse cannot actually see the teammates who are belaying them!  However, they can see one “communication relay” person who is standing on the pinnicle where this picture was taken.  The Person traversing communicated to the person on the pinnacle who then relays the information to the team, which then executed the release of tension of the belay line.

COMMUNICATION AND TRUST!  The participant lets the rope go through the ATC  (belay device) and the breakthrough moment where the rope ends and trust begins occurs.   Teammates then lower the participant down and across the canyon to the far side. At the termination, the track line is then released and GDI staff lowers the system to drop the participant perfectly in place next to the pool beneath the waterfall.

How about that for an experiential team adventure element in a natural environment?   We take whats available in the outdoor natural environment and create the most exciting and metaphoric experiences a team can imagine. An individual overcoming fear. A communication system requiring clear and timely information to enable trust in the team.  All positioned in a dramatic and inspiring location.  Now that’s GRAND DYNAMICS.

Want a dialed in customized adventure for your next team business corporate retreat? You know who to call!

BOOM!

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Treasure Island, California is all the buzz! Join us starting July 9th for a dynamic week of events!

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

Whirlwind Promo Week coming up!

At GDI SF, we’re getting geared up for our whirlwind promo event week on Treasure Island!

Our week begins starting with the Treasure Island Triathlon the weekend of July 8th-10th, where we’ll be partnering with the folks who founded the T.I. Triathlon to bring an incredible endurance adventure event to the heart of the Bay! Visit me at our booth in San Francisco at the Presidio on Thursday and Friday and on Treasure Island on Saturday.  Cheer on GDI President Tim Walther as he braves the cold waters and competes in the Triathalon Sprint Race on Sunday. There is still time to register!

Up next we have our signature Wine Interactive preview on Thursday, July 14th from 5:30pm-7:30pm (Bastille Day for all you Frenchies!),  hosted at The Winery SF on T.I. during happy hour!  Meet great people and share a variety of fun, interactive experiences while wine tasting at Winery SF. You’; never look at a cork the same again.  AWESOME!

Friday, July 15th from 3pm-6pm, we will be previewing our signature Team Expedition Race on T.I. for GDI resort reps, event planners, and DMCs and and anyone interested in booking business with Grand Dynamics.  This programs will provide a sample of Grand Dynamics awesome experiential training programs. You will learn about the psychology of individual performance, discover team facilitation and processing tools and have an outstanding shared team building experience on Treasure Island! It’s gonna rock!

Sunday, July 17th (2pm-5pm), I’m ecstatic to say that we’ll be hosting Stu Mittleman, one of the greatest endurance athletes of all time on T.I. for a promo run! Stu is known for running from San Diego to New York – 52 miles a day for 56 consecutive days!  Want to find out how he did it?  You’ll discover things about your body that you never thought were possible! Get out your running shoes and Hermes wings!

TOURS OF THE ISLAND TO FIND OUT MORE ABOUT GRAND DYNAMICS EVENTS ARE AVAILABLE ALL WEEK!

A summary of the upcoming week is below.  I am off to go climb and ski Mount Shasta this weekend!  Have a happy 4th of July and celebrate our FREEDOM!!!  I look forward to seeing you next week!

Reuben Gibson -

A break down of upcoming GDI Promo events on T.I.:

Saturday – Sunday:  July 9th-10th: Treasure Island Triathalon

Thursday, July 14th from 5:30 pm opening: Wine Interactive Networking Event Preview

Friday, July 15th from 3pm-6pm: T.I. Team Expedition Preview

Sunday, July 17th from 2pm-5pm: Stu Mittleman promo run on T.I.

For questions and all inquiries, send an email to info@granddynamics.com

Check out our Treasure Island Program Page

 

An Outstanding Venue with a compelling history:

Treasure Island California is host the newest division of Grand Dynamics International and the perfect destination for experiential training and corporate events. Treasure Island is literally the “treasure” of the San Francisco Bay Area waiting to be discovered. “T.I.” as we refer to it, is located right next to Yerba Buena Island between the East Bay and San Francisco, and is only a five-minute ride from downtown SF.

Boasting incredible resources, astonishing views, playing fields, space, and a rich history, Treasure Island is the perfect venue for an off-site group event!

Treasure Island, named after the novel of the same name by Robert Louis Stevenson who lived in San Francisco in 1879, was artificially built for the World’s Fair Golden Gate International Exposition in 1939.  Treasure Island was originally planned for and used as an airport for Pan American World Airways flying boats. During World War II, Treasure Island became part of a US Naval Base and served largely as an electronics and radio communications training school and as the major Navy departure point for sailors in the Pacific.

From the late 1980s and onward, Treasure Island’s old aircraft hangers served as sound stages used in film and television productions. Numerous pictures starring Robin Williams were filmed on the island, including Flubber, What Dreams May Come, Patch Adams and Bicentennial Man as well as many other films staring other famous actors. With the development of commercial enterprises like The Winery SF, special events are starting to pop up more frequently, and there is a palpable buzz!

Building one depicted as airport Flughaffen in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade

The Grand Dynamics SF office is located in Building One, which is a Streamline Modern-styled remnant of the World’s Fair and is one of the few buildings remaining from the exposition.

 

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The Equinox Resort & Spa offers ideal corporate retreat destination in New England

Monday, April 11th, 2011

When I started my branch of Grand Dynamics International (GDI) in Middlebury, Vermont, I thought to myself, what resorts are in located less then 3-4 hours from NYC and Boston that could help me promote our corporate team building services.  I made it a priority to connect with as many resorts as possible that had the following criteria; a spa, hiking or nature preserve on property or near by, a golf course, conference facilities, wireless internet throughout the hotel, AAA 4 diamond awards, a pond or water source and above and beyond guest services. The Equinox met and exceeded all of these expectation, so I sent them a packet of information about GDI and waited for a response. One week later I received a call from Janet Walsh telling me that she was interested in our services and thought it would be beneficial to bring me in and present to the sales team. This was the break I was looking for and the moment of truth of whether or not this entrepreneurial venture was going to fail or succeed.

When I first arrived on property I was overwhelmed with the beauty and the grand size of the hotel. It was exactly like what the pictures on the web displayed. So I took the first hour to walk around the property and while doing so I set a couple of way points with my hand held GPS unit to set up a mock Teaming With GPS event  so that the sales team could get a taste of what we could provide for their clients. After my presentation on the events, activities and services  I set the sales team loose to go and find as many way points as they could in 20 minutes. The experience was a success because when all the teams arrived at the finish line each sales rep was laughing and smiling about what they had just completed.

The Equinox Resort & Spa had everything that we were looking for when delivering events and now that we had created a strategic partnership as their preferred team building provider it allowed us to start creating  customized events on property. These events include our Amazing Race Adventure which highlight the Land Rover off road driving school, Orvis fly fishing headquarters, the falconry and the 80 acres of hiking trails. Change of Perspective which is a photographic scavenger hunt around the property and our  Team Expedition which takes participants up to the pond pavilion area to have kayak races and fly fishing contests.

So to all of you who work at The Equinox Resort & Spa we really value our partnership and thank you for the opportunity to provide a great experience for your hundreds of guest all year round. We look forward to the many years of successful programs a head of us.

Will Leggett & The Grand Dynamics International Team

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Grand Dynamics International Team Building programs help businesses operate better, faster and cheaper

Wednesday, April 6th, 2011

Wouldn’t it be nice if team building programs actually offered a way to measure team performance improvement in a way that has a bottom line impact? How can you actually do that? Our team expedition model with a better, faster, cheaper framework does just that. And we can do it in 4 hours or less.

The framework is below. When you finish reading this summary, contact Grand Dynamics for a special offer when you book the team expedition with a better, faster, cheaper framework!

Better Faster Cheaper Model

If you are looking to highlight the importance of critical team elements such as: Information sharing, effective communication, problem solving, decision making, improving team effectiveness and efficiency, reducing cycle time, improving strategy, networking and interacting with team members and collaborating as an organization. This program involves utilizing specific team metrics and tracking for a very specific examples of team performance improvement.

* Step 1: Teams participate and compete against, yet collaborate with, other teams to complete a series of team initiatives. Team performance is tracked throughout the entire program. There are many, many challenges to choose from! The essential ingredient is that the problem facing a team seems difficult, even impossible, at first and requires the entire group participating to be successful. Certain strategies and team processes allow for both increased effectiveness (task completion) and efficiency (time or resources to complete the task.) IE: How can you retrieve an object in the center of a 25 foot circle without touching the ground in 20 minutes or less? Check out our blog posting that explains a team building experiential initiative here: What is a team building experiential initiative?
* Step 2: Teams get together with other teams at the “information/collaboration station” where they network, interact, and share strategies for the various challenges. Specific guidelines are provided by GDI staff.
* Step 3: Teams implement continuous improvement strategies they learn from others to improve performance. GDI facilitators insert team models, methods and tools which provide a mechanism for improving the team performance.
* Step 4: Specific GDI metric tracking involves dynamic facilitation and review of the progression of HOW teams, divisions and an organizations become BETTER, FASTER and CHEAPER.
* Step 5: Teams debrief and share highlights and insights that transfer lessons learned to the workplace. Celebrate success!

OUR PROMISE: Grand Dynamics will track your team performance and facilitate the development of actual team behaviors specific to your team that either take away from or support effective team functioning. We have PROVEN STRATEGIES we are ready to have you experience them. Contact us today and take the test of the Team Expedition!

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What is an experiential team building initiative? What is the facilitators role when facilitating an experiential initiative?

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

An experiential initiative is essentially a challenge that is proposed to a group or team.  The challenge is ones that is unique to the participants so that no participant is an expert in the task. The focus then becomes on the process in which the group interacts together, rather than the specific task. The beauty of great experiential initiatives is that they initially seem nearly impossible to accomplish.  Only through effective teamwork will the team be able to accomplish the task at hand.  This transition from “This is impossible” to “We did it” offers great value in the overall perception of what the team can accomplish when everyone works together.

The Facilitators Role: Experiential initiatives involve a facilitator presenting the challenge by providing the rules, guidelines, resources and framing, or presentation, for the challenge.  This often includes a specific timeframe for the challenge to be completed, and the consequences for not following the rules and guidelines.  Keeping participants physically and emotionally safe throughout the experience provides the foundation for participants being able to participate fully.  The facilitator’s job is to observe the team in action, listening and paying close attention to how the team interacts.  Depending on the focus of the event, the facilitator will present the challenge in such a way that the activity relates the desired outcome.

For example, if the event is focused on fun and excitement and the experience of the group overcoming the challenge, the facilitator will present the experience with high energy and encouragement with a focus on keeping everyone engaged in the activity. If the focus is on team communication, then the activity will be framed in such a way that participants will focus their attention on how they are communicating with one another, and what processes lead to greater team effectiveness.

 

These challenges present an opportunity for the facilitator to provide a model, method or tool that will improve the collective team functioning.  When the focus is on team improvement then the reflection period, also know as processing or debriefing, is an integral and important part of the initiative.  During the processing participants discuss what they observed and how the team interacted and what lessons and actions are important to bring forth.

As the team experiences a lesson in process improvement the challenge is to apply those lessons in additional activities and practice what they have learned in an effort to experience better elements of teamwork, such as effective communication between team members, creating a shared mental model of the goal or team process or efficiently deciding on and evaluating the actions to take place.

This is where the skill and experience of the facilitator becomes very important. The art and science of effective facilitation is to be able to recognize the need for the right tool at the right time. This comes from understanding complex team dynamics and key elements of human psychology, experiential learning and business.  The methodology is one of the Socratic method, where the facilitator uses questions to lead the group to their own insights and conclusions, thus increasing buy-in and ownership for the insights and actions as a result.

Often times collaboration is a key part of a team building experience. Experiential initiatives create the opportunity for participants to hold or share information, hinder or support the progress of another team, and to focus on working together verses competing.  Our psychological make-up is typically one that is founded on competition.  Our inner drive to get ahead of another person is based on our instinct and survival mechanisms.  The art of creating collaboration is one that requires practice and a visceral experience of seeing the collective benefit through collaborative efforts.

Often times we refer to an “AH-HA” moment in experiential training. This happens when someone has an insight or breakthrough that allows for an individual to shift their beliefs or actions. When this occurs in a collaborative setting the shift in actions become readily apparent in future interactions in any environment.The benefit of experiential team initiatives comes from the fact that they are novel, dramatic, experiential, consequential and metaphoric experiences. Because participants are fully engaged physically, socially, intellectually and emotionally the retention of concepts soars high above traditional methods of learning.

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How safe is a team building or experiential leadership training program?

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2011

How safe are Grand Dynamics team building or experiential leadership programs, physically and emotionally?

Grand Dynamics programs often involve activities such as rock climbing, rappelling, bridge building and team problem solving initiatives. These activities feel adventurous because the perceived risk of these activities is much higher than the actual risk. As such, these activities can be powerful tools to help people confront fears, set goals, and feel what it is like to step out of the “comfort zone” and into the “growth zone.” That said, there is a distinct science behind challenging people to push their limits and also maintain safety. Over eleven years of providing adventurous activities, we are proud to report that GDI has never had an accident or hospitalization. In our opinion, the biggest risk in experiential training programs is the emotional risk when participants challenge themselves among their peers. At GDI we make every effort to provide not only a physically safe experience, but an emotionally safe experience as well. We adhere to the “Challenge By Choice” philosophy and emphasize the Full Value Contract, where participants respect the level of engagement of their peers.

For more information and frequently asked questions about team building, experiential leadership training or Grand Dynamics International, check out our FAQ page and of course, contact for detailed information.

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Executives Learn Through Experiential Courses

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

By Douglas MacMillan

Even with shrinking budgets for lavish off-sites, companies are pouring money into programs that promise unique ways to develop top talent. The $12.3 billion market in leadership development is expected to expand annually by up to 5% over the next few years, according to research firm Bersin & Associates, almost double the growth of overall corporate training. And Bersin has found one-third of companies now use some form of “experiential” leadership development—where managers learn by engaging in an activity such as sailing, archeological digs, fire walking, and even horse whispering. Read on to find out which companies have signed up and how much they’re paying.

The rest of the article….
As a senior director for insurer Health Care Service (HCSC) in Dallas, Steve Thompson is used to learning from his company mentor. But on a Tuesday morning in June, standing on a hill in eastern Pennsylvania, he heard from a new business adviser: General John Buford, a Union cavalry officer in the U.S. Civil War.

Thompson was learning about Buford’s leadership prowess in Gettysburg, site of the famous battle of 1863. Military historian Cole C. Kingseed talked about how Buford had been sent to survey the enemy but instead dismounted his horsemen to defend a ridge, giving his colleagues an edge in the coming battle. “He had the courage to execute,” said Thompson as executives from companies such as State Farm and Nationwide (NFS) nodded in agreement. Then they moved on to Cemetery Hill to debate whether Confederate General Robert E. Lee was a poor succession planner.

The three-day Gettysburg course, organized at a cost of up to $5,000 per person by the Conference Board, is part of a growing trend in leadership programs: experiential training. Even with shrinking budgets for lavish off-site events, companies are pouring money into programs that promise unique ways to develop talent. Among those that have shipped managers off to Gettysburg: Pfizer (PFE), Sony (SNE), Honda Motor (HMC), Target (TGT), and the beleaguered Freddie Mac (FRE). The $12.3 billion market in leadership development is expected to expand annually by up to 5% over the next few years, according to research firm Bersin & Associates, almost double the growth of overall corporate training. And Bersin has found one-third of companies now use some form of experiential leadership development. That means more incentive to create offerings that generate buzz.

Along with Civil War battlefields, companies can sign up for leadership lessons involving sailing, archaeological digs, fire walking (walking barefoot over hot coals), and even horse whispering. The talent consultancy ChangeMaker, in Upper Rissington, Britain, takes groups of managers from companies such as Electronic Data Systems (EDS) and Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) to East Africa, where they visit several villages of the sprawling, semi-nomadic Maasai tribe. The cost: about $4,000 per head, plus airfare. At debriefing sessions, participants talk about how the Maasai maintain a consistent culture across such a large organization. ChangeMaker Chief Executive Chris Howe argues that “if you put people in a hotel, if you lecture at them, they’re not discovering for themselves.”
No Clear Payoff

Maybe so, but paying for that insight may be a hard sell to human resources directors. It’s tough enough to gauge the return on traditional leadership programs, never mind trying to attach metrics to an executive’s newfound mastery of tribal politics or ability to communicate with horses. “For these to work, they have to have a strong connection between what you see there, what you feel, and what you’re going to face when you get back to the office,” says Michael Useem, a management professor at University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School. Useem has taught MBA students and business professionals by engaging them in Shakespeare plays, modern dancing, hiking in Patagonia, meditation, and, yes, battlefield tours.

Even if some courses have dubious educational value, they can serve as incentives to rising stars. HCSC’s Thompson, for one, says traipsing around Gettysburg gave him “a sense of reward” for a job well done. As with a lecture or video, the tips may not stick. But for the lucky executives who receive such special grooming, the training can double as a company-paid vacation.

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