TeamTech: 30 Years of Trauma-Informed Practices
For more than 30 years, TeamTech has partnered with organizations, primarily nonprofit and governmental, to help grow their capacity and leadership strength.
From the very beginning, we’ve done this through strategic planning and implementation - top to bottom - using all voices. For the past 25 years, we’ve utilized our innovative leadership curriculum, Everyone A Leader®, which teaches how to lead at all levels in a facilitative style grounded in trauma-informed principles.
TeamTech Announces Everyone A Leader® DEI Focused Training
We are excited to announce a new Everyone A Leader® Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) focused curriculum. This new leadership training was developed in partnership with Brandi Turner, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Officer for the Kansas Department for Children and Families (DCF), and tailored to focus on the experiences of people of color.
The Importance of Self-Care and Keeping Your Resilience Cup Full
When I first heard “Take time for self-care,” I immediately thought, “Seriously, have you seen my schedule? Do you have any idea of the responsibilities I carry?” The idea of self-care has been preached for years - especially to women - from legitimate medical sources to unrealistic (and sometimes harmful) wellness marketing. And while most everyone recognizes its importance; it can feel more like an unjustifiable luxury than a necessity.
Leadership During a Paradigm Shift
“When a paradigm shifts, everybody goes back to zero,” Joel Barker, futurist. I remember when I first heard this phrase. It was the early 1990’s and I was just completing my internship with Dr. W. Edwards Deming, the father of the quality management movement in Japan and then here in the U.S.
A paradigm shift had occurred then as U.S. manufacturing raced to change its approach to quality and employee engagement. A paradigm shift has occurred again today. COVID was the catalyst.
Introducing Remarkably Resilient®
Remarkably Resilient® workshops, presentations and keynotes are anchored by the experiences of three sisters who survived a childhood of incest and abuse. The story of the three Harnish sisters offers participants an opportunity to explore the healing role that individuals and communities can play for people recovering from childhood trauma.