With literally 100’s of icebreaker questions, dozens of activities and team-building games, this book will help you to use icebreakers with ease, build effective teams and be a team leader who makes things happen. Icebreaker topics include: Getting To Know One Another, Hates ‘n’ Loves, Hopes & Dreams, Fun Ice Breakers, Icebreakers for Men, Icebreakers for Women and Ideas & Creative Thinking.
You’ll learn what makes a good icebreaker and how to avoid icebreaker blunders.
set the right climate use icebreakers the right way introduce groups quickly and easily open conversations with strangers start meetings creatively use icebreakers to get to know your team create a problem solving atmosphere discover your teams strengths and weaknesses break down barriers & boost teamwork skills build trust stimulate communication skills share personal highs and lows think outside the box get results in minutes use fun activities to energize your team
Whatever your team or small group is like, this book will give you the tools to build a great team!
Jennifer is the author of several Christian titles that reflect her deep passion for those living through challenging times and building the local church.
With a heart for encouraging others through Scripture, her books invite readers to explore the power of faith, hope, and purpose—especially in life's most challenging seasons.
Jennifer is a proud mother of three grown children and a joyful grandmother to ten. She divides her time between a peaceful beachside apartment in the south of England and a cozy country cottage in Sweden—both of which inspire her writing and provide space for reflection and creativity.
Title and descriptions are completely misleading. Out of over 600 questions (I wouldnt call them icebreakers), i have just highlighted around 10 that I think could somehow fit to my team one day... so quite dissapointing.
I found Out that anybody could also write a book of over 1000 icebreakers by just following the same pattern on this book. There are pages filled with the same questions, like “What’s your favourite x?”, “Do you like x? And why?”, type of questions.
I was certainly looking forward to a book filled with team activities and not just plain questions.
Definitely there’s one question in the book that I wouldn’t expect anybody to their teams team. I won’t say which one. But the fact that question is in the book makes me wonder if the author ran out of questions and wrote it just so to count it as a part of the 600 icebreakers... but to waste readers time.
Only interesting part of the book I found useful was how the questions are split in levels. The author made an effort to describe the best times and the type of group you should use the questions (yet again not what I would consider as icebreakers).
If you’re actually looking for some source of icebreakers for your team, might as well find another book or look online. I definitely don’t recommend this book.