A great team-building event does not happen by accident.
Even the most casual team activity benefits from a clear agenda. Without one, people may not know what to expect, the event can lose momentum, and the purpose of the gathering can feel vague. With one, the experience feels easier to join, easier to facilitate, and more meaningful for everyone involved.
A team-building agenda does not need to be complicated. It simply needs to answer a few questions:
- Why are we gathering?
- What will happen first, next, and last?
- How much time will each section take?
- How will employees participate?
- What should people leave with?
The right agenda depends on the occasion. A new hire welcome should feel different from a quarterly retreat. A wellness session should feel different from a project kickoff. A celebration should feel different from a team reset.
This guide includes agenda template suggestions for different team-building occasions, plus facilitation tips, timing recommendations, and sample language you can copy.
Why team-building agendas matter
A team-building agenda helps turn a nice idea into a structured experience.
It gives employees clarity, helps facilitators manage time, and makes the event feel intentional instead of improvised. This is especially important for remote and hybrid teams, where people cannot rely on the natural energy of being in the same room.
A good team-building agenda can help teams:
- Set expectations before the event
- Reduce awkward transitions
- Keep participation balanced
- Create space for connection
- Tie the activity back to a larger goal
- Make new employees feel included
- Prevent events from running too long
- Give managers and facilitators confidence
- Make remote and hybrid participation smoother
- End with a clear takeaway or next step
For teams building a broader culture calendar, Confetti’s employee engagement calendar can help organize team-building moments around timely workplace occasions throughout the year.
What every team-building agenda should include
No matter the occasion, most team-building agendas should include a few core pieces.
Welcome
Start by greeting employees, explaining the purpose, and setting the tone.
Context
Briefly explain why this activity is happening now. Is it for onboarding, connection, celebration, reflection, wellness, appreciation, or planning?
Participation guidelines
Let people know how they will participate. Should they use chat? Breakout rooms? Cameras? A shared doc? Small groups? Verbal answers?
Main activity
This is the core experience: a game, discussion, workshop, reflection, celebration, or collaborative exercise.
Debrief
Give employees a chance to reflect on what they learned, noticed, appreciated, or want to carry forward. Even if its just a quick question to ‘take home’ and think about!
Close
End clearly. Thank participants, and share any next steps.
A simple structure might look like this:
- 5 minutes: Welcome and purpose
- 5 minutes: Warmup
- 30-45 minutes: Main activity
- 5 minutes: Reflection or discussion & Wrap-up
Once you understand this basic structure, you can adapt it to almost any team-building occasion.
Agenda Template 1: Quick Team Meeting Icebreaker
Best for: Weekly team meetings, standups, recurring check-ins, remote team connection
Recommended length: 5 to 10 minutes
A quick icebreaker should be simple, optional, and easy to answer. The goal is to warm up the room without taking over the meeting.
Sample agenda
0-1 minute: Introduce the prompt
“Before we jump into the agenda, let’s do a quick question to get everyone talking.”
1-7 minutes: Team responses
Each person answers in one sentence, or employees respond in chat.
7-9 minutes: Quick reactions
Invite employees to react, comment, or notice patterns.
9-10 minutes: Transition
“Thanks, everyone. Let’s move into today’s main agenda.”
Prompt ideas
- What is one small win from this week?
- What is one thing helping you focus today?
- What is your current workday beverage?
- What is one tool or shortcut you recommend?
- What is one thing you are looking forward to this month?
- What is one song that matches your mood today?
Facilitation tip
Keep it short. A meeting icebreaker should create energy, not delay important discussion. For teams that want more light, repeatable activities, Confetti’s 30 Mins or Less collection can help spark ideas for quick team connection.
Agenda Template 2: New Hire Welcome Session
Best for: New employee onboarding, first-week team introductions, buddy programs
Recommended length: 30 to 45 minutes
A new hire welcome agenda should help the employee feel seen, not overwhelmed. The focus should be connection, context, and early belonging.
Sample agenda
0-5 minutes: Welcome
Manager or team lead welcomes the new hire and explains the purpose of the session.
5-10 minutes: Team introductions
Each teammate shares their name, role, how they will work with the new hire, and one fun or helpful fact.
10-20 minutes: New hire introduction
The new hire shares their role, background, what they are excited to learn, and one personal detail they are comfortable sharing.
20-30 minutes: Team connection activity
Use a light prompt such as “What is one thing a new person should know about working with this team?”
30-40 minutes: Practical guidance
Share communication norms, recurring meetings, go-to resources, and who to ask for help.
40-45 minutes: Close
End with encouragement, next steps, and a reminder that questions are welcome.
Sample facilitator script
“We’re here to welcome [name], help them get to know the team, and share a few things that will make their first weeks easier. This is meant to be casual and helpful, not a formal presentation.”
Prompt ideas
- What is one thing you wish you knew in your first week?
- What is one team norm that helps us work well together?
- What should [new hire] come to you for?
- What is one project or tradition they should know about?
For a more structured experience, Confetti’s employee onboarding collection can help teams create welcoming moments that go beyond paperwork and process.
Agenda Template 3: Team-Building Game Session
Best for: Virtual socials, morale boosts, team bonding, remote connection
Recommended length: 30 to 60 minutes
A game-based agenda should keep the energy moving. The facilitator’s job is to explain the rules clearly, reduce confusion, and leave enough time for laughter and conversation.
Sample agenda
0-5 minutes: Welcome and rules
Explain the activity, how teams will participate, and how scoring works if relevant.
5-10 minutes: Warmup round
Use an easy practice round so everyone understands the format.
10-40 minutes: Main game
Run the main activity in rounds. Keep transitions quick.
40-50 minutes: Bonus or final round
Add a final question, challenge, or team-vs-team moment.
50-55 minutes: Winners and shoutouts
Recognize the winning team, funniest answer, best teamwork, or most creative response.
55-60 minutes: Close
Thank everyone and share any follow-up.
Game ideas
- Trivia
- Bingo
- Pictionary
- Charades
- Guess Who
- Coworker quiz
- Mini-games
- Team feud-style questions
- Two Truths and a Lie
For teams that want professionally facilitated options, Confetti’s games collection offers a variety of hosted formats for different group sizes and energy levels.
Agenda Template 4: Get-to-Know-Your-Team Session
Best for: New teams, remote teams, hybrid teams, cross-functional groups
Recommended length: 45 to 60 minutes
This agenda is designed for teams that need to build familiarity. It works well when employees do not know each other deeply or when departments are starting to collaborate more often.
Sample agenda
0-5 minutes: Welcome and purpose
Explain that the goal is to learn more about how people work, communicate, and connect.
5-10 minutes: Light opening question
Use a simple prompt such as, “What is one thing people usually come to you for?”
10-25 minutes: Paired or small-group conversations
Break employees into pairs or groups of three to discuss prompts.
25-40 minutes: Full-group shareout
Invite each group to share one thing they learned.
40-50 minutes: Team connection mapping
Ask employees to identify shared interests, common work preferences, or collaboration tips.
50-60 minutes: Close
Summarize insights and ask each person to share one takeaway.
Prompt ideas
- What helps you do your best work?
- What is one thing teammates should know about your communication style?
- What is one skill or experience you bring to the team?
- What is one thing you are excited to work on?
- What is one non-work topic you could talk about for 10 minutes?
For teams that want more structured connection activities, Confetti’s Get to Know Your Team collection can support intentional relationship-building across remote, hybrid, and in-person groups.
Agenda Template 5: Team Milestone Celebration
Best for: Company anniversaries, project launches, revenue milestones, growth moments
Recommended length: 45 to 75 minutes
Milestone celebrations should do more than announce success. They should help employees understand what happened, who contributed, and why the moment matters.
Sample agenda
0-5 minutes: Welcome
Open with the reason for celebration.
5-15 minutes: Milestone story
Share what the team accomplished, how it happened, and what made it meaningful.
15-25 minutes: Recognition round
Highlight teams and individuals who contributed.
25-40 minutes: Memory or reflection activity
Ask employees to share favorite moments, lessons, or behind-the-scenes stories.
40-55 minutes: Celebration activity
Run a game, toast, slideshow, team quiz, or photo recap.
55-65 minutes: Looking ahead
Connect the milestone to what comes next.
65-75 minutes: Close
Thank everyone and end with appreciation.
Prompt ideas
- What is one moment from this project you do not want us to forget?
- Who helped make this milestone possible?
- What did we learn along the way?
- What are we proud of as a team?
- What should future teammates know about this moment?
For bigger moments, Confetti’s company celebrations collection can help teams turn milestones into memorable shared experiences.
Agenda Template 6: Employee Appreciation Event
Best for: Employee Appreciation Day, team recognition, quarterly shoutouts
Recommended length: 30 to 60 minutes
An appreciation agenda should make recognition specific. Instead of vague praise, create space for employees to name real contributions.
Sample agenda
0-5 minutes: Welcome
Explain the purpose of the appreciation event.
5-10 minutes: Appreciation warmup
Ask employees to think of someone who helped them recently.
10-30 minutes: Peer shoutout round
Invite employees to share specific appreciation.
30-40 minutes: Recognition activity
Use a recognition wall, gratitude notes, team awards, or values-based shoutouts.
40-50 minutes: Group reflection
Ask what the team wants to carry forward.
50-60 minutes: Close
Thank the team and summarize themes.
Recognition prompts
- Who made your work easier recently?
- Who created clarity during a confusing moment?
- Who helped behind the scenes?
- Who modeled one of our values?
- Who helped you feel supported?
- What team contribution deserves more visibility?
Confetti’s National Employee Appreciation Day collection can help teams plan more intentional recognition moments throughout the year.
Agenda Template 7: Wellness Team-Building Session
Best for: Wellness programming, stress management, mental health awareness, busy-season resets
Recommended length: 30 to 60 minutes
A wellness agenda should feel supportive, not performative. Participation should be optional, and employees should not be asked to share private health information.
Sample agenda
0-5 minutes: Welcome and tone-setting
Explain that the session is about small, practical ways to support wellbeing.
5-10 minutes: Gentle check-in
Use a low-pressure prompt such as, “What is one thing that helps you reset during the workday?”
10-30 minutes: Main wellness activity
This could be meditation, desk stretching, stress-management tips, walking meeting planning, or a wellness habit swap.
30-40 minutes: Small-group reflection
Ask employees to discuss one realistic habit they might try.
40-50 minutes: Optional commitment
Invite employees to choose one small reset for the week.
50-60 minutes: Close
Share resources and remind employees that wellness looks different for everyone.
Prompt ideas
- What is one small habit that helps you protect your energy?
- What is one way to make breaks feel easier?
- What helps you transition out of work mode?
- What is one low-pressure wellness tip you would share with a teammate?
- What is one thing you want to try this week?
For guided wellness programming, Confetti’s health and wellness collection can support teams with hosted experiences around stress, mindfulness, movement, and wellbeing.
Agenda Template 8: Values Exploration Session
Best for: Culture conversations, leadership teams, onboarding, retreats, team resets
Recommended length: 60 to 90 minutes
Values discussions help teams turn company values into everyday behaviors.
Sample agenda
0-10 minutes: Welcome and purpose
Explain which value the team is exploring and why it matters now.
10-20 minutes: Define the value
Ask employees what the value means and does not mean.
20-35 minutes: Values in action
Invite employees to share examples of the value showing up in real work.
35-50 minutes: Values under pressure
Discuss when the value becomes difficult to practice.
50-65 minutes: Behavior mapping
Identify what the value should look like in meetings, decisions, communication, and collaboration.
65-80 minutes: Team commitments
Choose one or two behaviors the team will practice.
80-90 minutes: Close
Summarize themes and next steps.
Prompt ideas
- What does this value look like in daily work?
- When is this value hardest to practice?
- What behavior makes this value visible?
- Where do we already live this value well?
- What is one habit that would help us practice it more consistently?
For a guided format, Confetti’s Virtual Company Values Workshop can help teams explore values in a structured way.
Agenda Template 9: Communication and Collaboration Workshop
Best for: Cross-functional teams, new project teams, teams experiencing friction
Recommended length: 60 to 90 minutes
This agenda helps teams discuss how they communicate, make decisions, hand off work, and collaborate.
Sample agenda
0-10 minutes: Welcome and goals
Name the collaboration challenge or opportunity.
10-20 minutes: Individual reflection
Ask employees to reflect on what helps or hurts collaboration.
20-35 minutes: Small-group discussion
Discuss communication preferences, meeting norms, and handoff habits.
35-50 minutes: Full-group shareout
Capture patterns and pain points.
50-65 minutes: Scenario practice
Use realistic project scenarios to discuss how the team should respond.
65-80 minutes: Team agreements
Choose communication norms or collaboration commitments.
80-90 minutes: Close
Confirm next steps and ownership.
Prompt ideas
- What makes a handoff clear?
- What information do you need before making a decision?
- What meeting habits help us collaborate?
- Where does communication usually break down?
- What should we document more clearly?
- How do we want to disagree productively?
For teams focused on communication, Confetti’s transparency and communication collection can support related programming.
Agenda Template 10: Project Retrospective With Team Building
Best for: Completed projects, launches, campaigns, process changes
Recommended length: 60 minutes
A retrospective can also be a team-building moment when it includes reflection, appreciation, and shared learning.
Sample agenda
0-5 minutes: Welcome
Explain that the goal is learning, not blame.
5-15 minutes: Project timeline recap
Review major moments, decisions, and milestones.
15-30 minutes: What worked
Discuss wins, effective habits, and helpful collaboration.
30-45 minutes: What was difficult
Discuss blockers, communication gaps, and lessons learned.
45-55 minutes: Appreciation round
Recognize contributions from teammates and teams.
55-60 minutes: Commitments
Choose one improvement for the next project.
Prompt ideas
- What helped this project succeed?
- What should we repeat next time?
- What slowed us down?
- What did we learn?
- Who helped make the project better?
- What is one thing we should document for the future?
Agenda Template 11: Team Retreat or Offsite
Best for: Annual retreats, leadership offsites, department planning, culture building
Recommended length: Half-day or full-day
A retreat agenda should balance strategy, connection, reflection, and energy management. Avoid filling every minute with heavy discussion.
Sample half-day agenda
0-15 minutes: Welcome and goals
Set the tone and explain the purpose of the retreat.
15-35 minutes: Connection warmup
Use a get-to-know-you activity or team reflection prompt.
35-75 minutes: Team reflection
Discuss what is working, what is changing, and what the team has learned.
75-90 minutes: Break
Give people space to reset.
90-130 minutes: Strategy or planning session
Focus on priorities, goals, or upcoming challenges.
130-150 minutes: Team-building activity
Use a game, creative exercise, or collaborative challenge.
150-170 minutes: Commitments
Decide what the team will carry forward.
170-180 minutes: Close
End with appreciation and next steps.
Prompt ideas
- What should this team be proud of?
- What do we need to leave behind?
- What should we protect as we grow?
- What is one habit we want to strengthen?
- What does success look like next quarter?
For retreats that include social programming, Confetti’s corporate team building experiences can help teams add a facilitated activity to the agenda.
Agenda Template 12: Hybrid Team-Building Event
Best for: Teams split across office and remote locations
Recommended length: 45 to 60 minutes
Hybrid events need extra structure so remote employees do not feel like observers.
Sample agenda
0-5 minutes: Welcome and tech check
Make sure remote employees can hear, see, and participate.
5-10 minutes: Participation norms
Explain how chat, reactions, breakout rooms, or in-room discussion will work.
10-20 minutes: Shared warmup
Use a prompt everyone can answer equally.
20-45 minutes: Main activity
Choose an activity that does not overly favor the in-room group.
45-55 minutes: Reflection
Ask both remote and in-person employees what they noticed.
55-60 minutes: Close
Thank everyone and share follow-up.
Hybrid facilitation tips
- Assign a remote advocate.
- Use digital tools for all participants.
- Avoid side conversations in the room.
- Repeat in-room comments for remote employees.
- Use chat intentionally.
- Make sure remote employees are not always last to speak.
Confetti’s hybrid experiences collection can help teams find activities designed for distributed participation.
Agenda Template 13: Remote Team Social
Best for: Distributed teams, global employees, virtual happy hours, casual bonding
Recommended length: 30 to 60 minutes
Remote socials should be structured enough to avoid awkwardness but casual enough to feel relaxed.
Sample agenda
0-5 minutes: Welcome
Set the tone and explain the plan.
5-10 minutes: Light check-in
Use chat or a quick verbal prompt.
10-35 minutes: Main activity
Play a game, run a themed discussion, or use breakout rooms.
35-45 minutes: Group shareout
Invite people to share favorite answers or moments.
45-55 minutes: Optional social time
Leave space for casual conversation.
55-60 minutes: Close
Thank everyone and end on time.
Prompt ideas
- What is one thing on your desk right now?
- What is your favorite remote work ritual?
- What is one thing your teammates might not know about you?
- What is one small win from this month?
- What is one show, book, song, or hobby you recommend?
For remote teams, Confetti’s virtual team building collection can help teams find hosted activities that work well across locations.
Agenda Template 14: Leadership Team-Building Session
Best for: Manager groups, leadership teams, executive offsites
Recommended length: 60 to 90 minutes
Leadership team building should focus on trust, alignment, communication, decision-making, and shared expectations.
Sample agenda
0-10 minutes: Welcome and purpose
Name the leadership behavior or challenge being explored.
10-25 minutes: Reflection
Ask leaders to reflect individually on team dynamics.
25-45 minutes: Discussion
Discuss alignment, communication, and decision-making norms.
45-65 minutes: Scenario practice
Use realistic leadership scenarios.
65-80 minutes: Commitments
Choose leadership agreements or behaviors.
80-90 minutes: Close
Summarize decisions and next steps.
Prompt ideas
- What does this leadership team need to model?
- Where do we need clearer decision-making?
- What do our teams need from us right now?
- How should we handle disagreement?
- What leadership habit do we want to strengthen?
- What should we communicate more consistently?
For teams focused on leadership, Confetti’s respect and leadership collection can support related development moments.
Agenda Template 15: End-of-Year Team Reflection
Best for: Year-end meetings, holiday gatherings, annual reviews, team retrospectives
Recommended length: 60 to 90 minutes
An end-of-year agenda should help teams reflect, celebrate, appreciate, and look ahead.
Sample agenda
0-10 minutes: Welcome and year recap
Share the purpose and highlight major themes from the year.
10-25 minutes: Milestone reflection
Review key wins, launches, changes, and lessons.
25-40 minutes: Team memory activity
Invite employees to share favorite moments.
40-55 minutes: Appreciation round
Recognize people, projects, and behind-the-scenes contributions.
55-70 minutes: Looking ahead
Ask what the team wants to carry into the next year.
70-90 minutes: Celebration activity
End with a game, toast, slideshow, or social moment.
Prompt ideas
- What is one moment from this year you do not want us to forget?
- What is one team win worth celebrating?
- Who helped make your year easier?
- What did we learn this year?
- What should we carry into next year?
- What should we leave behind?
How to choose the right agenda
The right team-building agenda depends on your goal.
Use a quick icebreaker when you want light connection before a meeting.
Use a new hire welcome when someone needs context and belonging.
Use a game session when the team needs energy and fun.
Use a values discussion when the team needs shared language.
Use a wellness session when employees need support and recovery.
Use a retreat agenda when the team needs reflection and planning.
Use a milestone celebration when the team needs to pause and appreciate progress.
Before choosing an agenda, ask:
- What is the purpose of this gathering?
- How much time do we have?
- How well do participants know each other?
- Is this remote, hybrid, or in-person?
- Do we need energy, reflection, alignment, or celebration?
- What should employees leave feeling or knowing?
- Does this need a facilitator?
- What would make participation easier?
Tips for facilitating any team-building agenda
Send the agenda ahead of time
Employees are more comfortable when they know what to expect.
Keep the purpose clear
Do not make team building feel random. Explain why the activity matters.
Make participation optional where possible
People connect differently. Give employees multiple ways to participate.
Build in transitions
Do not jump abruptly from one activity to another. Explain what is happening next.
Watch the time
A good agenda respects employees’ calendars.
Include reflection
Even a fun activity becomes more meaningful when employees have a chance to name what they noticed.
End clearly
Thank participants, summarize takeaways, and share next steps.
Adapt for remote and hybrid teams
Make sure everyone can participate equally, regardless of location.
Final thoughts
A strong team-building agenda gives structure to connection.
It helps employees understand why they are gathering, how they will participate, and what the experience is meant to create. Whether you are welcoming a new hire, celebrating a milestone, running a remote social, hosting a wellness session, or planning a leadership retreat, the right agenda can make the difference between a forgettable activity and a meaningful team moment.
The best agendas are clear, flexible, inclusive, and tied to a real purpose. They do not overcomplicate the experience. They simply create enough structure for people to connect, reflect, celebrate, and work better together.





