Find out why organizations like Intel, Google, Twitter, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Carl Zeiss, Harvard, MIT, and Nokia have all tapped into IA Innovation’s unique and effective training approach to help them continue to be leaders in their space. Now, what can we do for your team? Let us know by contacting bob@iainnovation.com.
The Global Leaders in Innovative and Effective Training
WELCOME TO ASYLUM TEAM BUILDING
This is Norm b ' b He's the guy that talks
He’s a performer and director who’s been producing sketch comedy theatre for over 20 years. He’s the Founder and CEO of Improv Asylum with venues in both Boston and New York. He helped create Laugh Boston,
a comedy club and events venue in Boston's Seaport District. He’s also a partner in Worcester’s WooHaHa! Comedy Club.
Norm is a performer, director, producer, writer, and girls softball coach. He helped create the nationally acclaimed Laugh Boston in the Seaport District. He is a partner in over a dozen comedy and entertainment businesses in New England and beyond. Norm grew up in the blue collar mill town of Grafton, MA. He attended UMass Amherst with the intent of pursuing a career with the State Department. He decided to pursue comedy instead, which really is not that far off from government work. Today, Norm is a happy man. In addition to managing the multi-million-dollar business he helped build from the ground up, Norm provides corporate training, workshops, and keynote speeches around the globe. He even wrote a book about it. And not only is it funny, it is also short. Much like him.
People follow energy and passion; they don’t necessarily follow ideas. We want to create a culture that allows ideas to flourish. Really, what we’re talking about is the ability to listen to somebody else and to turn off your own prejudging, your own preconceived notions and just listen for a little while and then have the courage to put your ideas on top of it. What we know in the idea phase when we work together is that if we’re going to constantly shoot ideas down at the very beginning, it’s got nowhere to go. You have the courage to start an idea, to get it out–and that takes a lot–there’s a million ways to create ideas. I’m not as interested in that. What I’m far more interested in is building cultures of people that want to work together. What we know is that when we question something it can be another form of negation. We’ve created a culture that’s said its okay. And, if you do that, if you create cultures that lets ideas get out there and flourish by listening to each other, you can do amazing things.”
-Norm
Our approach and method will focus on and demonstrate how to build off of others' ideas on the spot. We will examine the power of saying “Yes” versus the power of saying “No”, and we will ultimately introduce the concept of "Yes, and…" - that is, to listen and truly understand someone else and then build off of their idea. We will explore listening skills and “reading” a group
(whether it’s an individual or a full team) and we will demonstrate how to communicate more effectively. We will show how all of this relates to teamwork, communication skills and innovation – with the goal of providing concrete skills to reach better solutions and to achieve more effective results.
HERE ARE SOME HIGHLIGHTS
Train Your Mind To Think On Its Feet
An improv group is an ensemble, and they have to work collaboratively in a pressurized environment to move a story forward to its logical (or outrageous) conclusion. That means listening carefully to the offering put forward by one member of the group and building on its essence to keep the thread alive.
Improv Asylum has provided corporate and leadership training to organizations including Intel, Google, PwC, Harvard University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Companies are making big investments in training and education, and moving more and more to outside providers.
What can improv teach worker bees? The secret is in the “yes, and” ethos. When they're collaborating onstage, improv performers never reject one another's ideas—they say “yes, and” to accept and build upon each new contribution. It's a total philosophy of creativity. “Yes, and” creates, while “no” stops the flow.
Getting to “Yes, And” : How improv comedy skills became a must-have for entrepreneurs.
“The energy in the space was outstanding. Everyone left feeling energized, motivated, and inspired to do their work better.” MEI LI ZHOU Parnterships Specialist at General Assembly Boston
Business is typically no laughing matter, but could comedic improv be used to improve office communication?
Companies are using comedy to help their employees overcome those issues. They are hiring improv instructors to train their employees to become better listeners, collaborators and managers. These skills are particularly useful in office brainstorming sessions, where employees may be too shy to float their ideas or worried that their idea isn’t the best one. “‘Yes, and’ is about giving over your idea,” said Norm Laviolette, President and Founder of Improv Asylum. “It’s saying I have the courage to start an idea and let it get changed. As a manager, you are far more powerful if you can learn to work with everyone else’s ideas and move them forward.” Consumer robot maker, iRobot, hired Improv Asylum to host a half-day class for a gathering of its global product management team in June. Many of the employees on the team had never met before and the company was looking for a way to break the ice and ease any cultural barriers. “We got to know each other on a human level, which helped us collaborate,” said Ken Bazydola, iRobot’s director of product management. Since then, the team has been using the techniques they learned from the “Yes, and” exercise in their meetings. “It’s amazing what you can come up with even if the initial idea is crazy, there is a kernel of opportunity you can build upon.”
Why every boss should take an improv class... Unproductive meetings, bad leadership and poor communication in the office are no laughing matter.
I’m a firm believer that being able to think on your feet, react in the right way in situations and be creative under pressure are vital skills for any marketer.
PETE MARKEY CMO, TSB Bank
We had a group of about 75 from different offices in the US and abroad, who work together heavily by email, but many had not met each other before. The IA facilitators were great at getting them all interacting with each other, practicing building on each other, and tailored their style to a mix of extroverts and introverts, both those quick to volunteer, and those who appreciate being voluntold. My event team could feel us building great “glue” for our work together in the future.” Improv Asylum did such a great job bringing my team together and setting them up to work together better in the future.
JOHN C. S. ANDERSON Global Head of Corporate Finance & Infrastructure
recommend Improv Asylum to anyone in the corporate world who is trying to find a unique way to help leaders build on their teamwork, listening skills, communication and camaraderie! The techniques used were very effective and educational while being fun for everyone! Even the people who were most skeptical came away surprised and happy that we used the experts at Improv Asylum to bolster our team dynamics for future success!”
SUSANNA FIER VP Public Affairs & Marketing
"We brought in Improv Asylum as a part of our Annual Sales Meeting to bring
to life. We were looking for a way to increase communication and collaboration across teams, eliminate silos and give people tools and techniques to listen and build off of each other’s ideas. We wanted to do something different that got everyone involved and engaged in a fun yet educational way. We met with the Improv team to make sure they understood our needs and our business. They listened and ensured they would be aligned with what we wanted to accomplish. Improv was an ideal solution and the content was spot on. Although people were a bit intimidated and somewhat skeptical at first because they did not know what to expect, their fears were quickly diminished as soon as we got into small groups, engaged with the outstanding facilitators and got to work. People are still talking about it and have mentioned using “yes, and” as they engage in discussions with different points of view. It was a perfect way to end the day and the meeting with high energy, camaraderie and learning!” “A Culture of Meaningful Participation”
LISA CIAMPOLILLO Head of Talent, Welch’s Foods
Not to brag but we have been hired by some incredible organizations…from Fortune 500 companies to Start Ups to leading Educational Institutions… and have brought our impactful and engaging (yeah, we mean fun…think smiles!) programs to just about every corner of the globe.
travel the world to bring innovation to you
While each organization and location have their own culture, needs and style, we have found that they all have one thing in common. Whether the location is Boston, Berlin or Beijing, every organization wants us to help them lift their teams up, to help them encourage everyone’s ideas and to help them to be stronger TOGETHER… That is what we do! And...we love to travel!
Asylum Team Building delivered the goods and the fun and London was never the same again. Now, everyone is listening!
Accenture Alaska Air American Student Assistance Arnold Worldwide Athena Health Avalon Bay Babson College BAE Systems Bain & Co. Bank of America Biogen Idec Booz Allen
General Electric Genzyme Gillette Glaxo Smith Kline Globoforce Goodwin Procter Google
Portsmouth Abbey School Prudential Putnam Investments PwC Radio Shack Rapid7 Raytheon Red Bull Roger Williams University SAIC Saint Gobain Sales Force Sanofi Sanofi Genzyme Sapient Shawmut Design SilverLink Simmons College Sloan Smuggler’s Notch Speechwork International Staples Starwood Resorts State Street Bank State Street Global Advisors
Greenburg Traurig Guinness Imports Hanover Insurance Harvard Business School Harvard JFK School of Government Harvard School of Law Harvard University
Boston Celtics Boston College Boston Duck Tours
Heineken HubSpot IDX Corporation Imagitas Intel Intercontinental Hotel Intergen Intuit Jaegermeister SA John Hancock Kaiser Permanente Kind Snacks LinkedIn Lockheed Martin
Boston Medical Center Boston Public Schools Boston Red Sox Boston University Boston University School of Management Brandeis University Bristol-Meyers Squibb Carl Zeiss Charles River Associates Children’s Hospital Choate Hall & Stewart Chubb Citizen’s Bank
AND YOU THOUGHT WE WERE KIDDING...
Stonehill College Storage Networks Sun Life
Coca Cola Constant Contact Continuum Converse Curry College Dana Farber Darling Consulting Group The David Project Dellaria Salons Deloitte Delta Airlines Thompson Financial Treetop Technologies Twitter Unilever United Way United States Bankruptcy Court United States District Court Verizon Vertex Web Summit Dublin and UK Welch’s Foods Wellesley College Wentworth Institute of Technology WestJet WGBH Wheelock College William Fry WilliamsMarston Winter Wyman Worcester Polytechnic Institute Wyeth Bio Pharma YMCA of Greater Boston Take a look at some of the folks we have worked with. Dunkin Donuts Dunkin Brands Eastern Bank Eli Lilly EMC2 EMD Millipore EMD Serono Exact Target Experian QAS Facebook Fidelity FirstBlood Fleet Center Flo Design Wind Turbine Forrester Research GameStop LoJack Mass College of Pharmacy Mass Mutual Massachusetts Bar Association Massachusetts General Hospital McDonalds Merck Research Laboratories Millenium Millipore MIT Engineering Leadership MIT Global Education and Career Development MIT Laboratory of Multi Scale Regenerative Technologies MIT Medical MIT Residential Life Mohegan Sun Needham Public Schools Nokia Northeastern University Novartis Nuance Communications Oxfam Partners Health Care PayPal Philip’s Health Care Philip’s Lighting Phoenix Group Plymouth State University Telefluent Teradyne Textron Thermo Fischer Scientific
Nobody knows anything. The longer my career continues, the more I am certain of this. People think they know shit. They have ideas about things. They have thoughts and theories, hypotheses, and past studies. Yet the more things I do and the longer I do them, I have come to discover that most everybody is making shit up on the fly. And that is a good thing. No longer do you have to feel that creating something is the domain of chosen virtuosos who have either been tapped by the gods or spent all of their time studying in their chosen field with the most eminent teachers available to them. If you have access to either of those things, then good for you. For the rest of us, sucking is the first step to greatness. Or at least mediocrity. Mediocrity leads to proficiency, proficiency leads to mastery, and mastery leads to excellence. It is heartening to know that the best of the best sucked at one point. If you're looking for motivation, here's Norm's pep talk: Become an Unstoppable Powerhouse This is Norm Laviolette’s Magnum Opus, published in 2019 by Wiley. It contains the best advice he could come up with after 20+ years in the business, but it won’t teach you how to become an improv star. Instead, Norm demonstrates how the skills of improv can be used in business to build teams, move ideas forward and achieve innovative results.
The Global Leaders in Innovative and Effective Training
ASYLUMTEAMBUILDING.COM
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