Inflatable | Team Building Activities [exclusive]

Two people at a time sprint down an inflatable track, stretch the bungee cord as far as they can, place a Velcro dot at their farthest point, then get yoinked back. The goal: encourage each other to push past perceived limits.

When the team arrived, they saw three enormous inflatables: a , a bungee-run inflatable (where you sprint while harnessed to a giant elastic band), and a colossal inflatable tug-of-war pit with foam noodles instead of ropes . inflatable team building activities

Climbing walls, wobbly bridges, tunnels, and a giant slide. Each team of five had to complete it together — no one left behind. Two people at a time sprint down an

Back at the office the next week, something shifted. Tom from data walked over to Priya’s desk with a coffee. “Thanks for the cheerleading. That actually helped.” Leo put a tiny inflatable slide on his desk as a reminder. Cross-department emails started with “Remember the bungee run?” Climbing walls, wobbly bridges, tunnels, and a giant slide

The account team’s manager, Leo, had a fear of heights (even inflatable ones). The climb to the slide’s top was agony for him. But instead of mocking him, the copywriter, Jess, went up first, sat at the top, and said: “Leo, I’ll go down with you. We’ll count together: 1, 2, 3 — whee.” They slid down, Leo’s face pale but grinning. The team erupted in cheers.

That broke everything. People started falling on purpose just to get rescued by the “enemy.” By the end, no one remembered which team “won.” They remembered helping each other up.

Tom from data (quiet, analytical) was paired with Priya from sales (loud, energetic). Tom barely ran — he placed his dot just a few feet. Priya cheered: “You’ve got more than that, Tom! Remember when you found that data error that saved us $10k? That was a sprint! Do it again!” Tom smiled, ran harder, and doubled his distance. When the cord snapped him back, he laughed — genuinely — for the first time in weeks.