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Tuesday, September 16, 2025

The Stages of High Performance Teams

The Stages of High Performance Teams: Understanding Tuckman’s Model

Teams are an essential part of organizational success, but as you may know from experience, a newly formed team rarely performs at its best immediately. Team development is a process that takes time and typically follows recognizable stages, transforming a group of strangers into a cohesive, high-performing team united by common goals.

Psychologist Bruce Tuckman introduced a widely accepted framework in 1965, famously known as "Forming, Storming, Norming, and Performing." Later, he added a fifth stage called "Adjourning." This model describes the path most teams take to achieve high performance.


The Five Stages of Team Development




The following table summarizes Tuckman’s model:

Stage

Key Characteristics

Description

Forming

Orientation & dependency

Team members are introduced, roles are unclear, and members rely heavily on leadership for direction. They are testing acceptable behaviors.

Storming

Conflict & resistance

Members challenge roles, experience conflicts over ideas and control, and tensions arise as they push for influence.

Norming

Cohesion & collaboration

Trust develops, team norms are established, and members begin working collaboratively toward shared goals.

Performing

Productivity & effectiveness

The team functions efficiently with high trust and strong collaboration, focusing on task completion.

Adjourning

Closure & reflection

For temporary teams, tasks are completed, achievements are celebrated, and members prepare to disband.


Why Tuckman’s Model Matters

  • Clarifies team dynamics: Helps leaders understand the challenges and behaviors typical of each stage.

  • Boosts team effectiveness: Guides teams through conflicts toward smooth collaboration and productivity.

  • Improves leadership focus: Allows leaders to adapt their style to meet the team’s needs at each stage—from directing to delegating.

  • Drives high performance: Teams that successfully navigate these stages deliver stronger results, innovation, and employee satisfaction.


Final Thoughts

Every group has the potential to become a high-performance team, but success requires understanding and guiding natural team dynamics. By applying Tuckman’s model, leaders can help their teams move smoothly through forming, storming, norming, performing, and adjourning—unlocking the true power of collaboration and driving lasting success.



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3 comments:

  1. I don't agree that performing is the last stage.
    yes these are the 4 stages (or 5 depending if you take the last changes)
    For me it is a circle.
    All teams go back to forming at multiple occasions.
    Like a new team member joins the team or a team member leaves the team, or a new boss or another project, or maybe even when they are out of coffee.
    Important to mention is that most teams never pass the storming phase.
    Teams that do pass the storming phase and fall back to forming for whatever reason are quicker to come back to norming.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Tim,

    Nice summary of the Storming-Norming model. There is a lot of value in that team building model. I'd like to make your webenar Friday but I have a conflict....

    Chris

    ReplyDelete
  3. Chris, The webinar was recorded and should be available for viewing in about a week. I will send out a post when it is ready.
    Tim

    ReplyDelete