Start the call by asking everyone to share two emojis: one for energy, one for focus. Seeing a row of hearts, coffee cups, and thunderstorms creates quick empathy and calibrates pace. A teammate once posted a tornado and book, signaling overwhelm yet commitment; we slowed our agenda, prioritized blockers, and finished early. Keep it inclusive by allowing text alternatives and encouraging explanations only if people feel comfortable.
Invite each person to name one value guiding their decisions today, plus a short sentence: clarity, kindness, speed, or learning. Patterns emerge fast, exposing implicit expectations before they collide. When a new engineer said “patience, because my internet is fragile,” the team willingly shifted to asynchronous notes. Keep it under five minutes by enforcing one breath per share and capturing highlights in a shared doc.
Pair teammates in breakout rooms, ask them to switch cameras off, and trade 90‑second work stories about a small win. Listeners return and summarize their partner’s story to the group. Removing video reduces bias, improves focus, and centers words. We once learned a quiet analyst had streamlined a gnarly data pull; surfacing that effort boosted confidence and motivated others to propose scrappy, elegant fixes.
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