# Teamwork Examples: What Great Collaboration Actually Looks Like

Canonical URL: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/teamwork/teamwork-examples/
Markdown URL: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/teamwork/teamwork-examples.md
Entity type: Article
Last updated: 2026-07-07
Language: en
Primary audience: professionals improving teamwork at work
Owner: Headway Skills
Contact: https://headwayskills.com/contact/

## Short answer

From the Chilean miners' rescue to everyday office wins, see the main types of teamwork examples and the behaviors that make each one count.

## Key facts

- Title: Teamwork Examples: What Great Collaboration Actually Looks Like
- Category: Teamwork
- Primary skill: Teamwork
- Related skills: Communication, Professional Behaviors
- Primary keyword: teamwork examples
- Source page: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/teamwork/teamwork-examples/

## What this page covers

- From the Chilean miners' rescue to everyday office wins, see the main types of teamwork examples and the behaviors that make each one count.
- Practical guidance for teamwork examples
- How this topic connects to Teamwork

## Detailed explanation

Good teamwork examples fall into a handful of recognizable kinds: people from [different departments](/knowledge/teamwork/cross-functional-collaboration/) combining their expertise on one problem, a team rallying to hit a deadline or handle a crisis, colleagues sharing knowledge and covering for one another, teammates disagreeing well and then committing, and individuals putting the shared result ahead of personal credit. Whether you are trying to describe teamwork in an interview or simply get better at it, the useful move is the same: look past the label and notice the behavior underneath. That is what separates a story that lands from one that sounds like a cliché.

## The main types of teamwork examples

Across career sites and case studies, the same "elements" show up in every strong example: a clear shared goal, honest communication, mutual respect, defined and complementary roles, and a willingness to support one another. What changes from example to example is the situation that pulls those elements to the surface. Here are the five situations that account for most teamwork examples worth telling — and the specific behavior each one reveals.

### Cross-functional collaboration

The most quoted teamwork examples are the ones where very different specialists point their expertise at a single goal. The 2010 rescue of the 33 trapped Chilean miners is the classic case: a unified command center brought engineers, geologists, medical staff, and rescue workers together to weigh competing rescue methods and make fast joint decisions, and all 33 came out alive. NASA's 1969 moon landing is the same idea at scale — commonly cited as roughly 400,000 engineers, technicians, and scientists aligned on one outcome. What makes these count as teamwork is not the drama; it is that the team's strength came from difference, and success depended on respecting and coordinating roles no single person could fill.

### Rallying under pressure to hit a deadline or crisis

A more everyday example is the week a deadline threatens to slip and the team reorganizes itself around it. Instead of everyone staying in their lane, people redistribute tasks, align on priorities, name clear owners, and pitch in wherever the work is heaviest. The behavior on display here is flexibility in service of the group — asking "where does the team need me right now?" rather than "what is my job description?" It is one of the most reusable teamwork examples precisely because almost everyone has lived a version of it.

### Sharing knowledge and supporting teammates

Some of the strongest examples never look dramatic at all. When two internal-communications teams at Comcast that had been working in silos merged into a single shared intake process, they cut duplicated effort and made progress easy to track. The teamwork was in the sharing: opening up information, standardizing how work moves, and covering for one another instead of guarding turf. The flip side shows why this matters — the Mars Climate Orbiter was lost in 1999 because one team worked in imperial units and another in metric, a coordination failure rather than a lack of effort. Sharing what you know, in a form others can actually use, is teamwork even when no crisis forces it.

### Disagreeing constructively

Teams that never disagree are rarely working well; they are usually avoiding the hard conversation. A strong teamwork example often turns on a moment of friction handled well — two people surface a real difference, [argue it on the merits](/knowledge/teamwork/disagree-and-commit/) without making it personal, and then commit to the decision even if it was not their first choice. This is why interview guides such as Indeed's advise that at least one of your prepared teamwork examples include a conflict you helped resolve: it shows you can keep [trust intact](/knowledge/teamwork/build-trust-at-work/) while disagreement is on the table, which is harder and more valuable than simply "getting along."

### Putting the team's result ahead of personal credit

The most memorable examples often involve someone stepping back. At the Olympics, a sprinter nursing an injury withdrew from a relay so a healthier, prepared teammate could run — and the team took gold with a season-best time. The behavior is the willingness to subordinate personal spotlight to the collective outcome: sharing credit, celebrating together, and [holding each other to commitments](/knowledge/teamwork/accountability-workplace/) rather than competing for individual shine. In an ordinary workplace this looks like giving a teammate public credit for a shared win, or quietly picking up a task so the team hits its target.

Reading through these, you may already be picking out moments from your own month that fit — and quietly wondering which ones you actually do well. That is worth [checking your own collaboration habits](https://assessment.headwayskills.com/) before your next interview or big project.

## The skills that turn examples into everyday teamwork

Notice what the five situations have in common. None of them rewards a fixed personality type, and none depends on a once-in-a-career emergency. Strip away the setting and the same few habits keep appearing — and habits, unlike traits, can be built. Three of them do most of the work.

**Teamwork** itself is the throughline: putting the common purpose ahead of your own agenda, playing your role well while respecting others', building trust by being reliable, and holding teammates accountable without making it personal. Naming this pattern is what turns a pile of anecdotes into something you can repeat on purpose. It is not about leading or managing a group — it is about being the kind of contributor a group comes to rely on.

**Communication** sits inside every example above. The command center coordinating a rescue, the teammate who surfaces an objection cleanly, the colleague who shares knowledge in a usable form — each is really a communication moment: listening fully, stating the main point clearly, and voicing disagreement without heat. The strongest teamwork examples are, underneath, stories about how information and honesty moved through a group.

**Professional Behaviors** are the quiet conduct that makes people want to work with you: showing respect and genuine interest, expressing appreciation, and giving credit rather than grabbing it. Their absence is exactly what turns a story sour — the teammate who complains, takes sole credit, or talks over others. These small, repeatable behaviors are the difference between "technically cooperated" and "genuinely a good teammate."

None of these is something you either have or you don't. A free Work Skills Test [scores where you stand](https://assessment.headwayskills.com/) on all three — part of twelve work skills it measures in total — so you can see which one would sharpen your next teamwork example the fastest, and it is a straightforward place to start.

## From reading examples to recognizing your own

You may notice some of these behaviors in how you already work — the time you covered for a colleague under a deadline, or talked two teammates back onto the same page. That recognition matters more than any single anecdote, because it means teamwork is not a talent you were handed or missed; it is a set of habits you can keep growing while still being entirely yourself. And it tends to count for more, not less, as your responsibilities grow and more of your results depend on people you do not manage. By reading this far and looking past the stories to the behavior underneath, you have already done the part most people skip when they think about teamwork — which makes the next step a small one rather than a leap.

## See where your own teamwork skills stand

So the only thing left is to find out where you actually stand today. The **free** Work Skills Test is a quick self-assessment of your work skills — about 7 minutes — that shows you how you rate across all twelve, including teamwork and the communication and everyday professional habits that carry it. Instead of guessing which teamwork example you could tell most convincingly, you will know which skills to lean on and which one would repay a little attention first.

**[Take the skills test](https://assessment.headwayskills.com/)**

*Free to take, about 7 minutes, and the results are yours to keep.*

## Who this is for

- Professionals building practical workplace skills
- Readers looking for specific, usable work advice
- Managers, educators, and coaches supporting career readiness

## Common questions

### What is this guide about?

From the Chilean miners' rescue to everyday office wins, see the main types of teamwork examples and the behaviors that make each one count.

### Which Headway skill does this connect to?

This guide connects primarily to Teamwork. It also relates to Communication, Professional Behaviors.

### What is the recommended next step?

Use the free Work Skills Test to reflect on which work skill to improve next.

## Related pages

- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge.md
- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/teamwork.md
- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/communication.md
- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/professional-behaviors.md
- https://headwayskills.com/work-skills-test.md

## Citation guidance

Use the canonical page when citing this content:
https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/teamwork/teamwork-examples/

Preferred summary:
"From the Chilean miners' rescue to everyday office wins, see the main types of teamwork examples and the behaviors that make each one count."

## Change log

- 2026-07-07: Content collection version published.
