High Performing Teams: What They Are, Why They Matter, and How to Build Them
A high performing team consistently exceeds expectations through shared purpose, psychological safety, and mutual accountability. They deliver 23% higher profitability, 51% lower turnover, and 78% less absenteeism.
High Performing Teams: What They Are, Why They Matter, and How to Build Them
A high performing team consistently exceeds expectations through shared purpose, psychological safety, and mutual accountability. They deliver 23% higher profitability, 51% lower turnover, and 78% less absenteeism than average teams. The difference isn't talent — it's culture. And culture is shaped by leadership.
The opportunity is massive. Only 23% of employees are engaged globally — meaning 77% are either not engaged or actively disengaged. The cost: $8.9 trillion lost annually, approximately 9% of global GDP.
This guide covers everything you need to know: what high performing teams actually are, the seven characteristics research consistently identifies, which frameworks are backed by evidence (and which aren't), and why most team development fails despite good intentions.
Here's what we've learned from 8,000+ leader reflections: most organisations already know what high performing teams look like. The challenge isn't knowledge. It's building them.
What Is a High Performing Team?
A high performing team is a group of people with complementary skills who share a common purpose and consistently exceed expectations. Unlike regular teams that complete tasks, high performing teams adapt, improve, and sustain excellence over time.
Gallup's analysis across 3.3 million employees found that high performing teams deliver measurably better outcomes: 23% higher profitability, 18% higher sales productivity, 51% lower turnover, and 78% less absenteeism.
Google studied 180 of their own teams and found individual talent barely mattered. What mattered was how people worked together — especially psychological safety, the belief that you won't be punished for speaking up.
Woolley's research in Science (3,844+ citations) explains why: collective intelligence isn't correlated with individual IQ. Assembling the smartest people doesn't create the smartest team. What matters is social perceptiveness and equal participation.
Read our full guide: What Is a High Performing Team? → →
The 7 Characteristics of High Performing Teams
Research — and our data from 8,000+ leaders — consistently points to seven characteristics: trust, psychological safety, clear communication, constructive feedback, accountability, shared goals, and resilience.
Psychological safety ranks #1. Google's Project Aristotle and Amy Edmondson's research (18,921+ citations) both confirm it as the foundational condition — without it, the other characteristics can't take hold.
But here's what matters: none of these can be installed in a workshop. Trust is built through thousands of small actions. Psychological safety is built by how a leader responds in difficult moments. These capabilities develop over months, not days.
McKinsey's research confirms this at scale: teams scoring above average on trust are 3.3× more efficient and 5.1× more likely to produce results.
See all 7 characteristics explained: What they look like and how to build them → →
High Performing Teams Frameworks: Which Are Evidence-Based?
Dozens of frameworks exist for building high performing teams. Some are peer-reviewed and empirically validated. Others are popular business books with no scientific backing. Knowing the difference matters.
| Framework | Evidence Base | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Hackman's 6 Conditions | Harvard research, 80% variance explained | Designing teams from scratch |
| Google's Project Aristotle | 180 teams, validates Edmondson | Identifying what matters most |
| Edmondson's Psychological Safety | 18,921+ citations, peer-reviewed | Building learning culture |
| Woolley's Collective Intelligence | Published in Science, 3,844+ citations | Team composition decisions |
| Lencioni's 5 Dysfunctions | Popular but no peer-reviewed validation | Conversation starter only |
One of the most widely-used frameworks — Lencioni's 5 Dysfunctions — has no peer-reviewed validation. The CIPD found "no relevant scientific studies in which the model was empirically tested."
Read our full review: 6 frameworks compared for evidence quality → →
Why Most Team Development Fails
Here's the uncomfortable truth: most team development doesn't work. Not because the content is wrong, but because of how it's delivered.
Goals explain only 28% of whether people actually change their behaviour. The knowing-doing gap operates at roughly 50% efficiency.
The forgetting curve makes this worse. Memory decays exponentially without reinforcement. Learners forget 50-70% of new material within 24 hours. After a week, retention drops to 10-20%.
I went to a two-day offsite. We covered trust, communication, feedback. Great content. But three weeks later, nothing had changed. We were back to our old patterns.
— Leader reflecting on past training
Read our evidence-based guide: How to Build a High Performing Team → →
How Leda Develops Leaders Who Build High Performing Teams
At Leda, we don't train teams. We develop the leaders who create the conditions for high performance.
Our methodology is grounded in what peer-reviewed research shows actually works: spaced learning over 6-9 months, cohort-based learning with peer support, real-world application between sessions, and manager involvement throughout.
This finding from Gallup's Q12 meta-analysis means developing leaders is the highest-leverage investment an organisation can make.
The result: 88-98% completion rates. See how our High Performing Teams Training works., compared to 3-15% for typical digital learning. Behaviour change visible to managers and peers. Participants promoted.
Results from organisations like yours
MYOB: 264 leaders developed over 5 years. 50% of 2020 cohort promoted. 98% completion rate.
Supagas: 150+ participants across 4 years. 70% increase in program applications. "Remarkable improvement in team dynamics."
Camp Quality: 21 team leaders trained. 30% promoted. Engagement score increased from 84% to 89%.
Learn about our approach: High Performing Teams Training → →
Related Topics
Read: Emotional Intelligence for Leaders →
Read: Difficult Conversations Training →
Read: Team Building Training →
About the author
Ashley Leach is Founder of Leda. Leda's leadership development methodology was co-developed with Professor Anne Lytle (Monash Business School, Kellogg PhD) and has been recognised by AACSB's Innovations That Inspire.
Frequently Asked Questions
A high performing team is a group of people with complementary skills who share a common purpose and consistently exceed expectations. They collaborate under pressure, maintain trust and accountability, and create psychological safety even when things get difficult. The difference isn't talent — it's culture, shaped by leadership.
Research consistently identifies seven characteristics: trust, psychological safety, clear communication, constructive feedback, accountability, shared goals and purpose, and resilience with a growth mindset. Google's Project Aristotle found psychological safety was the #1 predictor of team effectiveness.
Gallup's analysis of 3.3 million employees found high performing teams deliver 23% higher profitability, 18% higher sales productivity, 51% lower turnover, and 78% less absenteeism. The cost of NOT having high performing teams? Gallup estimates $8.9 trillion lost annually to low engagement globally.
Typically 6-12 months of sustained effort. Research shows spaced learning significantly outperforms intensive workshops. Teams move through developmental stages, and leader capability needs time to develop.
Three main reasons: (1) The forgetting curve means learning fades without reinforcement — learners forget 50-70% within 24 hours, (2) Goals alone explain only 28% of behaviour change, and (3) Transfer depends on supervisor support and practice opportunities that most programs don't provide.
Hackman's 6 Conditions has the strongest evidence base, explaining up to 80% of variance in team effectiveness. Edmondson's psychological safety research (18,921+ citations) and Google's Project Aristotle are also rigorously validated. Lencioni's 5 Dysfunctions, while popular, has no peer-reviewed empirical validation.