
Ignite your team's potential and bring world-class operational energy to the heart of the Canadian Prairies. Traveling regularly to Manitoba, Hall of Fame motivational speaker and workplace culture designer Tyler Hayden has been transforming corporate cultures, driving employee retention, and energizing corporate events across Winnipeg since 1996.
Winnipeg is a massive economic driver and a premier destination for national conferences, AGM events, and executive leadership retreats. Whether you are hosting an event in the bustling downtown core or a scenic venue near the rivers, Tyler delivers tailored, data-backed keynotes and interactive team-building programs engineered to turn strategic corporate goals into immediate workplace habits.

One Adventure I took was up to Churchill MB to see the Polar Bears - I love sharing this story on stage, each person gets a washer and string ... and a learning that lasts a lifetime.
With three decades of experience on major corporate stages, Tyler is the corporate speaker Winnipeg organizations trust to tackle complex workforce friction. He has delivered custom, high-impact programs for major federal operations, regional financial institutions, safety associations, and community pillars, including:
DASCH (Direct Action in Support of Community Housing)
Leading Manitoba Credit Unions
Check out some of Hall of Fame Motivational Speaker Tyler Hayden's Sizzle Reels
Winnipeg is famously known as one of Canada's friendliest cities, and that community-first mindset carries directly into its corporate spaces. Tyler’s specialized corporate frameworks are built to honor this collaborative spirit—giving your staff the tools to break down departmental silos, build psychological safety, and align individual strengths behind a unified company vision.

Modern event organizers need concrete solutions to systemic workplace issues like employee burnout, culture shock, and hybrid team isolation. Tyler’s core keynotes provide immediate, executive-level ROI.

The Strategic Focus: Workforce Performance, Cultural Mapping, and Modern Agility.
The Framework: Discover how to integrate Tyler’s proprietary platform, RubberChicken.ai, into your everyday management toolkit. By diagnosing team friction in real-time and leveraging the distinct behavioral strengths of the "6 Rubber Chickens," managers leave with a data-driven blueprint to spark immediate psychological safety and team connection.

The Strategic Focus: Burnout Prevention, Employee Lifetime Value (ELV), and Compassionate Leadership.
The Framework: Based on the core philosophies of The Business That Cared About People, this session reframes operational empathy into a high-yield business strategy, giving leaders the practical tools required to eliminate costly turnover.

The Strategic Focus: Sustainable Performance, Corporate Wellness, Human Centred Leadership and Talent Retention.
The Framework: High-performing organizations require sustainable human energy. This flagship keynote delivers data-backed, actionable habits to combat workplace burnout, elevate mental fitness, and keep corporate teams performing at their peak under pressure.
Move past passive lectures. Tyler designs high-stakes behavioral simulators engineered to break down institutional silos, test communication under pressure, and force cross-functional execution.

An intense, hands-on physical team simulation where groups collaborate to design, build, and race custom vehicles. This workshop forces teams to optimize limited resources, communicate flawlessly across departments, and execute a collective strategy under a strict timeline.

An experiential workshop tailored for organizations navigating change, corporate restructuring, or strategic resets. This program provides an actionable framework for getting the right people in the right seats and aligning your entire workforce toward a unified corporate mission.

Best in class competitive team based challenge that showcases learning objectives thought memorable activity and content. Your team will engage in a series of events that will showcase your most relevant and important steps forward based on industry research and pre-event intake.
Whenever I facilitate executive debrief sessions in Winnipeg, I am routinely humbled by the depth of caring and genuine interest coworkers have for one another. They truly know their neighbours. For me, that distinct Manitoba warmth starts the exact second you step off the plane at the Winnipeg Richardson International Airport.
As you descend the escalator toward arrivals, you see a massive, 15-foot circular mat on the floor. Loved ones gather around it, and one by one, people step onto the center of the mat to share an intense embrace. In bold letters across the center, the mat reads: 'HUG RUG.' It is a literal hug rug.
That mat defines Winnipeg for me—a warm embrace where you are instantly treated like family. In corporate team building, my goal is to recreate that exact level of safety. When a company invests in its culture to the point where teams can drop their corporate armor, communicate with radical candor, and support one another like family, their operational capacity skyrockets.”
Winnipeg is a culturally rich, highly accessible city packed with legendary history, iconic landmarks, and fantastic hidden gems.
If you are an out-of-province meeting planner coordinating a national event in Manitoba, Tyler loves helping you infuse local flavor into your itinerary. From feeling the legendary, historic winds at Portage and Main to sending your attendees down to The Forks for world-class food, markets, and entertainment, Winnipeg never fails to impress.
Tyler always recommends taking teams to be awe-struck by the architecture and profound stories housed within the Canadian Museum for Human Rights. And for a fun, uniquely local afternoon breakout, you can send your group to see the iconic Winnie the Bear Statue in the Nature Playground inside Assiniboine Park—and finish the trip by checking out the incredible cheesecake restaurant just across the street! Tyler ensures your attendees experience the absolute best the city has to offer.
Ensure your next Winnipeg conference or corporate retreat creates a deep impact. Book a Hall of Fame speaker who understands the local corporate culture and delivers elite conference and retreat results.
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By Tyler Hayden CSP, HoF — Hall of Fame Motivational Speaker & Team Building Expert
Let me be straight with you: most blog posts about remote team building are written by people who Googled "fun Zoom activities" and repackaged the results.
This one isn't that.
What follows is 30 years of hard-won experience — from running team building for the PGA Tour, healthcare systems, financial institutions, and remote-first startups — distilled into a practical guide for managers who want their virtual meetings toactually do something.
Let's go.
First, Stop Picking Activities at Random
Before I recommend a single activity, I ask one question:Who's in the room?
Not their job titles. Not how many people are on the call. I mean:how do they learn?
Every recommendation I make starts with MIQ — Multiple Intelligence Quotient. It's the lens I use to understand a team's learning preferences before I design anything. Are they kinesthetic learners who need todosomething? Mathematical-logical types who love structure and metrics? Interpersonal learners who just want to connect?
Get that wrong, and the best activity in the world will still land like a wet towel.
Real example:I was brought in to work with the PGA. My initial instinct was to lean heavily into interpersonal learning — lots of discussion, sharing, connection. These were leaders and managers, after all.
Then I looked closer. The majority of people in the room were golf pros. Kinesthetic learners through and through. They learn with their hands, through movement, throughdoing.
So we scrapped the talk-heavy approach and rebuilt the program around hands-on, activity-based experiences. The result? Full engagement. And it combined both kinestheticandinterpersonal in a way that served everyone.
The lesson: don't assume. Diagnose first.
The #1 Mistake Managers Make with Remote Team Building
You heard about a team building activity thatcrushed itfor another manager. You think: perfect, I'll run that.
Stop right there.
What works for their team may completely flop with yours.Not because the activity is bad — but because it wasn't designed foryourpeople.
My Team Learning Model says that for any activity to stick, it has to haveunique, relative contextto the work your team actually does. It can't be fluffy. It can't feel disconnected. There has to be a logical, natural bridge between the activity and what your team does Monday through Friday.
That means if your team works in sales, the activity should connect to how they communicate, how they handle objections, how they support each other in the process. If they're in healthcare, it connects to how they engage under pressure, how they support colleagues, how they decompress.
This is why I builtRubber Chicken AI— to help managers identify therightactivity for their specific team makeup and learning outcomes, without having to start from scratch every time.
What Most Facilitators Get Wrong (The Dreaded Icebreaker)
Everyone knows the feeling. The manager launches a "fun" icebreaker on Zoom. It's awkward. It runs way too long. The energy in the room slowly deflates like a balloon three days after a birthday party.
Here's the problem:they let it go too long.
The best team building activities — especially icebreakers — should end at theirhigh point. Not when the rules say it's done. Not when everyone has had a turn. At the peak of energy, excitement, and engagement.
End it while people are still leaning in. Leave them wanting more.
That principle alone will change how your virtual meetings feel.
The Waterfall Technique (Try This This Week)
One of the most consistently effective activities I run remotely is something I callCoffee Talk— an open-ended statement or question that the whole team answers.
Here's hownotto run it: ask the question, then go around the room one by one. What happens? Some people give one-word answers. Others ramble for three minutes. The energy yo-yos. You lose control.
Here's theWaterfall Technique:
Pose the open-ended question or prompt
Ask everyone to type their answer into the chat — butdon't hit send yet
Count down: 3… 2… 1…send
Everyone's answers populate at the same time — cascading down the screen like a waterfall. The whole room gets to read them all, simultaneously, in real time.
It's fast. It's visual. It's surprisingly exciting. And it gives every single person a voice without anyone dominating the conversation or tanking the energy.
The reason open verbal participation fails isn't because people don't have good things to say — it's becauseyou can't always control how engaging those answers are going to be. The Waterfall Technique solves that.
How to Scale Remote Team Building: Small vs. Large Teams
Here's where most one-size-fits-all guides fall apart. A 10-person startup and a 500-person enterprise need completely different approaches.
For Small Teams (10–50 people):
Run it live. Everyone on screen at the same time. Keep it synchronous so the energy builds collectively. You can track metrics in real time, respond on the fly, and create genuine shared moments.
For Large Organizations (100–500+ people):
Thinkasynchronous + aggregate.
Run the same activity in multiple smaller groups at different times — maybe across different time zones or departments. Set up aleaderboardthat accumulates results from all groups over time. People may not all be in the same session, but they're connected through the shared challenge and the growing scoreboard.
The competitive element keeps people engaged even when they're not together. And the final reveal — seeing how the whole organization performed — creates a collective moment that lands even if it's delivered asynchronously.
Competition: Friend or Foe?
Some facilitators avoid competition entirely. I understand the instinct — you don't want anyone left behind or demoralized.
But here's the nuanced truth:the problem isn't competition. It's not understanding your audience.
Through the MIQ lens:
Mathematical-logical learnerslove leaderboards. They want to know who's first, second, and third. Competitionenergizesthem.
Naturalistic learnerslike to categorize and compare. They engage with structured wins.
Interpersonal learnerscare less about winning and more about whether everyone is included. You can still use competition — just make sure no one gets left out.
Intrapersonal learnerscan get stressed by competitive pressure. They want clarity and intention behind the metrics.
The question isn't "should I use competition?" The question is"how do I deliver competition in a way that aligns with how my specific team sees winning?"
Get MIQ right, and competition becomes a tool. Get it wrong, and it becomes a liability.
Team Building Is Not a One-Time Event
This might be the most important thing in this entire post.
Team building is what you dowithpeople — nottopeople.
It's cumulative. It's built incrementally over time. A 60-minute Zoom activity is a capstone, not a solution.
The real magic happens in thefive-minute wins— the quick, intentional moments woven into your regular meetings and routines that reinforce the same message, over and over, until it becomes culture.
Think of it like fitness. One epic workout doesn't make you fit. Showing up consistently does.
One team building event won't transform your team. Astrategyof small, well-placed, work-relevant activities — week over week — will.
The Icebreaker Is a Door, Not a Destination
Here's the final reframe I want to leave you with.
The icebreaker isn't the point of your meeting. It's theopening act.
A great remote team building activity — whether it's Coffee Talk, a competitive challenge, or a collaborative exercise — should function as aspringboardinto the rest of your agenda. It warms up the room. It sets the tone. It signals:this is a space where we're engaged, present, and working together.
When you design it that way — when the activity ties naturally into the conversation you're about to have, the skills you're about to practice, or the culture you're trying to build — that's when it stops feeling like an obligation and starts feeling like the best part of the meeting.
Your Action Items for Monday Morning
Before your next activity:Ask yourself what you know about your team's learning preferences. If you don't know — find out.
Try the Waterfall Techniquein your next team meeting. One question. Countdown. Watch what happens.
Set a high-point exit.End your next icebreakerearly— while energy is still high.
Connect the activity to the work.Every single time. No fluffy standalone events.
Think long-term.What's your team building strategy for the next 90 days — not just the next meeting?
Fun is the delivery. Better teams and energy on Monday is the point.
If you want to know what activities are right foryour specific team, tryRubber Chicken www.rubberchicken.ai — it's built to help managers find the right fit based on real team makeup and real learning outcomes.
Or, if you want to bring a fully customized remote team building experience to your organization,book a discovery calland let's figure out exactly what your team needs.
Tyler Hayden CSP, HoF is Canada's Hall of Fame Motivational Speaker and the founder of Team Building School and Rubber Chicken AI. He has delivered team building experiences to audiences of 8 to 8,000 across Canada and beyond.

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