The Power of Team-Based Challenges in the Workplace
Steps Challenges6 May 20263 min read

The Power of Team-Based Challenges in the Workplace

Creating meaningful engagement across a workforce is no easy task.

Most workplace wellbeing initiatives are designed for individuals. A personal step target. A solo fitness goal. A self-directed wellness app. And while these tools have their place, they share a common weakness: when personal motivation dips — and it always does — there's nothing to catch the fall.

Team-based challenges solve this problem at the structural level. They don't rely on willpower. They rely on belonging.

Why Teams Change Everything

When employees participate as individuals, engagement is driven entirely by personal discipline. That's a fragile foundation. Life gets busy, priorities shift, and the initiative quietly fades from view.

When employees participate as part of a team, the dynamic changes completely. There's accountability to colleagues. There's a shared goal worth working toward. There's a reason to show up on the days motivation alone wouldn't be enough. Participation stops being a personal choice and becomes a social commitment — and social commitments are far harder to abandon.

Driving Accountability and Motivation

Accountability is the most underutilised tool in corporate wellness design, and teams create it automatically.

Employees who know their colleagues are relying on them behave differently. They take the lunchtime walk they'd otherwise skip. They check the leaderboard. They send the encouraging message. None of this requires a nudge from HR — it emerges naturally from the team structure itself.

Layer in friendly competition between teams, and motivation compounds further. Employees who might be indifferent to their own ranking become fiercely invested in their team's position. The challenge becomes something they're doing together, not just alongside each other.

Strengthening Workplace Connections

Team-based challenges do something that most wellbeing initiatives can't claim: they build real relationships.

Key takeaways
Team structures replace personal motivation with social accountability — far more durable in practice
Friendly competition between teams multiplies engagement beyond what individual challenges can achieve
Cross-departmental team mixing builds relationships that improve culture long after the challenge ends
Pooled contributions make team challenges genuinely inclusive for every fitness level

By mixing employees across departments, locations, and roles, challenges create the conditions for connections that wouldn't form through normal working patterns. A finance team member and a product manager, placed in the same team for four weeks, develop a rapport that persists long after the challenge ends. These cross-functional relationships improve communication, reduce silos, and contribute to a culture that's genuinely more cohesive.

The step count is almost incidental. The relationship is the outcome.

Balancing Different Activity Levels

One of the persistent failures of corporate wellness programmes is designing for average. A challenge built around 10,000 steps a day works for the already-active and alienates everyone else.

Team formats solve this elegantly. Contributions are pooled, which means a less active employee and a regular runner can participate in the same challenge and both feel like they matter. The pressure of individual performance is replaced by collective progress. Employees at every fitness level have a genuine role to play — and when people feel they can contribute, they do.

Making Engagement Enjoyable

Sustainable engagement isn't built on obligation. It's built on enjoyment.

Team challenges introduce something most wellness programmes quietly lack: fun. The friendly rivalry, the shared celebrations, the team chat reactions to a colleague hitting a milestone — these moments shift the experience from something employees feel they should do to something they genuinely look forward to. That distinction is everything. An initiative employees enjoy doesn't need to be promoted after week one. It promotes itself.

A Smarter Way to Build a Healthier Culture

For organisations looking to improve participation, strengthen teams, and create a wellbeing culture that lasts, the evidence consistently points in one direction.

Team-based challenges combine the three things that individual initiatives rarely deliver together: motivation that doesn't depend on willpower, connection that builds genuine relationships, and an experience inclusive enough for the whole workforce to feel part of. That combination is hard to replicate any other way.

"

"Participation stops being a personal choice and becomes a social commitment — and social commitments are far harder to abandon."

STEPPI on Team Design, 2025
TS
The STEPPI Team
Workplace Wellbeing Experts

Ready to run your next challenge?

Book a demo and see how STEPPI can help your team get moving.

Book a Demo
The Power of Team-Based Challenges in the Workplace
Steps Challenges6 May 20263 min read

The Power of Team-Based Challenges in the Workplace

Creating meaningful engagement across a workforce is no easy task.

Most workplace wellbeing initiatives are designed for individuals. A personal step target. A solo fitness goal. A self-directed wellness app. And while these tools have their place, they share a common weakness: when personal motivation dips — and it always does — there's nothing to catch the fall.

Team-based challenges solve this problem at the structural level. They don't rely on willpower. They rely on belonging.

Why Teams Change Everything

When employees participate as individuals, engagement is driven entirely by personal discipline. That's a fragile foundation. Life gets busy, priorities shift, and the initiative quietly fades from view.

When employees participate as part of a team, the dynamic changes completely. There's accountability to colleagues. There's a shared goal worth working toward. There's a reason to show up on the days motivation alone wouldn't be enough. Participation stops being a personal choice and becomes a social commitment — and social commitments are far harder to abandon.

Driving Accountability and Motivation

Accountability is the most underutilised tool in corporate wellness design, and teams create it automatically.

Employees who know their colleagues are relying on them behave differently. They take the lunchtime walk they'd otherwise skip. They check the leaderboard. They send the encouraging message. None of this requires a nudge from HR — it emerges naturally from the team structure itself.

Layer in friendly competition between teams, and motivation compounds further. Employees who might be indifferent to their own ranking become fiercely invested in their team's position. The challenge becomes something they're doing together, not just alongside each other.

Strengthening Workplace Connections

Team-based challenges do something that most wellbeing initiatives can't claim: they build real relationships.

Key takeaways
Team structures replace personal motivation with social accountability — far more durable in practice
Friendly competition between teams multiplies engagement beyond what individual challenges can achieve
Cross-departmental team mixing builds relationships that improve culture long after the challenge ends
Pooled contributions make team challenges genuinely inclusive for every fitness level

By mixing employees across departments, locations, and roles, challenges create the conditions for connections that wouldn't form through normal working patterns. A finance team member and a product manager, placed in the same team for four weeks, develop a rapport that persists long after the challenge ends. These cross-functional relationships improve communication, reduce silos, and contribute to a culture that's genuinely more cohesive.

The step count is almost incidental. The relationship is the outcome.

Balancing Different Activity Levels

One of the persistent failures of corporate wellness programmes is designing for average. A challenge built around 10,000 steps a day works for the already-active and alienates everyone else.

Team formats solve this elegantly. Contributions are pooled, which means a less active employee and a regular runner can participate in the same challenge and both feel like they matter. The pressure of individual performance is replaced by collective progress. Employees at every fitness level have a genuine role to play — and when people feel they can contribute, they do.

Making Engagement Enjoyable

Sustainable engagement isn't built on obligation. It's built on enjoyment.

Team challenges introduce something most wellness programmes quietly lack: fun. The friendly rivalry, the shared celebrations, the team chat reactions to a colleague hitting a milestone — these moments shift the experience from something employees feel they should do to something they genuinely look forward to. That distinction is everything. An initiative employees enjoy doesn't need to be promoted after week one. It promotes itself.

A Smarter Way to Build a Healthier Culture

For organisations looking to improve participation, strengthen teams, and create a wellbeing culture that lasts, the evidence consistently points in one direction.

Team-based challenges combine the three things that individual initiatives rarely deliver together: motivation that doesn't depend on willpower, connection that builds genuine relationships, and an experience inclusive enough for the whole workforce to feel part of. That combination is hard to replicate any other way.

"

"Participation stops being a personal choice and becomes a social commitment — and social commitments are far harder to abandon."

STEPPI on Team Design, 2025
TS
The STEPPI Team
Workplace Wellbeing Experts

Ready to run your next challenge?

Book a demo and see how STEPPI can help your team get moving.

Book a Demo
The Power of Team-Based Challenges in the Workplace
Steps Challenges6 May 20263 min read

The Power of Team-Based Challenges in the Workplace

Creating meaningful engagement across a workforce is no easy task.

Most workplace wellbeing initiatives are designed for individuals. A personal step target. A solo fitness goal. A self-directed wellness app. And while these tools have their place, they share a common weakness: when personal motivation dips — and it always does — there's nothing to catch the fall.

Team-based challenges solve this problem at the structural level. They don't rely on willpower. They rely on belonging.

Why Teams Change Everything

When employees participate as individuals, engagement is driven entirely by personal discipline. That's a fragile foundation. Life gets busy, priorities shift, and the initiative quietly fades from view.

When employees participate as part of a team, the dynamic changes completely. There's accountability to colleagues. There's a shared goal worth working toward. There's a reason to show up on the days motivation alone wouldn't be enough. Participation stops being a personal choice and becomes a social commitment — and social commitments are far harder to abandon.

Driving Accountability and Motivation

Accountability is the most underutilised tool in corporate wellness design, and teams create it automatically.

Employees who know their colleagues are relying on them behave differently. They take the lunchtime walk they'd otherwise skip. They check the leaderboard. They send the encouraging message. None of this requires a nudge from HR — it emerges naturally from the team structure itself.

Layer in friendly competition between teams, and motivation compounds further. Employees who might be indifferent to their own ranking become fiercely invested in their team's position. The challenge becomes something they're doing together, not just alongside each other.

Strengthening Workplace Connections

Team-based challenges do something that most wellbeing initiatives can't claim: they build real relationships.

Key takeaways
Team structures replace personal motivation with social accountability — far more durable in practice
Friendly competition between teams multiplies engagement beyond what individual challenges can achieve
Cross-departmental team mixing builds relationships that improve culture long after the challenge ends
Pooled contributions make team challenges genuinely inclusive for every fitness level

By mixing employees across departments, locations, and roles, challenges create the conditions for connections that wouldn't form through normal working patterns. A finance team member and a product manager, placed in the same team for four weeks, develop a rapport that persists long after the challenge ends. These cross-functional relationships improve communication, reduce silos, and contribute to a culture that's genuinely more cohesive.

The step count is almost incidental. The relationship is the outcome.

Balancing Different Activity Levels

One of the persistent failures of corporate wellness programmes is designing for average. A challenge built around 10,000 steps a day works for the already-active and alienates everyone else.

Team formats solve this elegantly. Contributions are pooled, which means a less active employee and a regular runner can participate in the same challenge and both feel like they matter. The pressure of individual performance is replaced by collective progress. Employees at every fitness level have a genuine role to play — and when people feel they can contribute, they do.

Making Engagement Enjoyable

Sustainable engagement isn't built on obligation. It's built on enjoyment.

Team challenges introduce something most wellness programmes quietly lack: fun. The friendly rivalry, the shared celebrations, the team chat reactions to a colleague hitting a milestone — these moments shift the experience from something employees feel they should do to something they genuinely look forward to. That distinction is everything. An initiative employees enjoy doesn't need to be promoted after week one. It promotes itself.

A Smarter Way to Build a Healthier Culture

For organisations looking to improve participation, strengthen teams, and create a wellbeing culture that lasts, the evidence consistently points in one direction.

Team-based challenges combine the three things that individual initiatives rarely deliver together: motivation that doesn't depend on willpower, connection that builds genuine relationships, and an experience inclusive enough for the whole workforce to feel part of. That combination is hard to replicate any other way.

"

"Participation stops being a personal choice and becomes a social commitment — and social commitments are far harder to abandon."

STEPPI on Team Design, 2025
TS
The STEPPI Team
Workplace Wellbeing Experts

Ready to run your next challenge?

Book a demo and see how STEPPI can help your team get moving.

Book a Demo
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