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Dec 5, 2022

Two-Minute Drill: Tips for Success When Your Team is Racing the Clock

Steve Brisendine, Content Creator at SkillPath

In an ideal world, your work team would always complete projects ahead of schedule, with plenty of time to tie up any loose ends. In reality, any number of factors can cause unforeseen delays, putting you and your team up against a tight deadline with a lot on the line.

In sports, one hallmark of successful teams is their time management under pressure, late in games. They’re masters of the two-minute drill.

Your team doesn’t have to work in front of thousands of screaming fans, plus millions more watching on TV, but the principles remain the same – for both leaders and team members.

  1. Be realistic but positive

Acknowledge the challenge, but then tell the people around you that you believe they’re up to it. If they can’t feel your confidence in them, why should they be confident in themselves?

  1. Know where you’re going

Sometimes, the objective is still a long way off and you need a lot of things to go right to get there in time. Other times, however, you just need to hit one more short-term goal, and you can breathe easy from then on. The important thing is to know exactly how far you still have to go, and then focus on the “how” of getting there.

  1. Know exactly how much time you have to get there

Break that time down into concrete chunks: “By this time, we’ll have done this. Then we have this much time to get to the next point.” Then, focus on each chunk of time and its activity, rather than jumping ahead to the next.

  1. Stay sharp

Time crunches magnify the effects of mistakes. Just as a penalty or unforced turnover can derail a late drive, a mental lapse can derail your efforts to hit your deadline. Whatever your go-to concentration aids might be – music, something caffeinated, closing the office door – now’s the time to make use of them.

  1. Don’t dwell on the setbacks

You don’t have time to hang your heads or play blame games. Sort all of that out later. In the moment, if someone stumbles, pick them up, give them a quick pep talk and keep moving forward.

  1. Know when to stop the clock

Something not looking right? People on different pages? Stop everything, immediately, and figure it out. It’s better to take a short break to get things right than to go forward when there’s confusion. That’s how disasters happen. Also, make sure you empower everyone on the team to put up a hand and say, “Hey, wait. Something’s off.”

  1. Celebrate the wins

You pulled it off against the clock. That’s a victory. Treat it like one. Take some time to congratulate everyone and recognize their contributions. Above all, remind them that they reached the goal as a team.

Every game plan needs a Plan B, a Plan C and beyond

If you have to discuss what to do next after something goes wrong (or right), you’re wasting time. Your plan should include contingencies for any foreseeable events. That’s why it’s important to prepare for short-deadline situations and make sure everyone knows the “if/then” plan. Don’t try to make things up on the fly. The teams that excel in two-minute drills are those who’ve established a sequence of actions and practiced it thoroughly.

Sometimes, the only option is to play for more time. What’s your last-ditch plan to buy that time – to force overtime, to continue the metaphor? Know that plan, and when to execute it, in advance.

The time to practice is when urgency isn’t a factor. This is the best time to hone techniques and processes, to learn what works and what doesn’t. Pick a time when your team has less to do and there’s a risk of losing focus. Throw them a task on a short deadline.

It should be a task that your team might have to perform in a short timeframe, but – as with any practice situation – let them know that learning is the main goal.


For more on time management, check out Time Management Power Tips


Short timeframes shouldn’t be all-the-time frames

Short deadlines – whether externally or internally imposed – shouldn’t be the norm for most businesses. In their proper place, they can bring a lot of benefits to your team: cohesion, ability to work under pressure and a sense of accomplishment.

But if you’re always under a deadline crunch, and if that’s not the norm for your field, then you have other time management issues to work out – issues that can lead to stress, lowered productivity and burnout. Solve those issues, and you might not have to play against the clock quite so often.


Ready to learn more? Check out some of SkillPath's live virtual training programs, on-demand video training or get it all with our unlimited eLearning platform.

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Steve Brisendine

Content Creator at SkillPath

Steve Brisendine is a Content Creator at Skillpath. Drawing on a 32-year professional writing and journalism history, he now focuses on helping businesses discover new learning opportunities, with an emphasis on relationships and communication.