If your employees roll their eyes when you mention team-building, it may be time for a new approach. Unconventional team-building retreats can be surprisingly effective if you tie them to real business goals, such as resilience, creativity and collaboration. Here are some ideas for retreat destinations and themed activities.
Find Lasting Lessons in Unusual Themed Destinations
A destination itself can become a powerful teaching tool, providing a unique backdrop for learning and team growth. These location-based retreats work best as multiday experiences where your team can fully immerse themselves in the environment and absorb lessons that would be impossible to replicate in a conference room.
Embrace New Skills at a Dude Ranch
The physical tasks and collaborative effort required to work on a ranch build trust in ways that office-based activities cannot replicate. A working dude ranch in Montana, Wyoming or Arizona offers the perfect setting.
The vibe is rugged, unplugged and ego-leveling. Titles don’t matter when you’re learning to saddle a horse, and spotty cell service becomes a feature rather than a bug. Potential activities include:
- Group horseback riding lessons: Everyone learns together at the same skill level through hands-on instruction.
- Team cattle drive: Moving livestock requires communication, patience and coordinated effort.
- Trail maintenance and fence mending: Physical work produces visible results and requires collaboration.
- Fly fishing: Teaches patience and focus while offering time for conversation.
- Evening gatherings: Time around a campfire or in the main lodge builds connection.
Shared physical challenges are proven methods for building group cohesion. Research shows these activities have positive effects on interpersonal skills, both short- and long-term. Overcoming tangible obstacles as a team directly translates into tackling complex business problems in the workplace.
Create a Learning Mindset on a University Campus
A local university campus during summer or winter break offers stimulating environments, a culture built around learning, and access to unique workshops or lectures. The setting naturally encourages continuous learning. It can also work well for tighter budgets since universities often rent facilities during breaks at reasonable rates.
The atmosphere feels intellectual, creative and forward-looking. The nostalgia of being “back at school” creates a unique bonding experience. Here are activities to consider:
- Brainstorming: Use the academic setting of empty lecture halls for strategic planning.
- Guest lectures: Invite a professor to speak on artificial intelligence, behavioral economics or other relevant topics.
- Hackathons or innovation challenges: Run competitive problem-solving sessions, such as designing a new customer onboarding process in four hours or pitching solutions to a real business problem the company faces.
- Campus sports facilities: Organize field day activities using athletic resources.
- Dorm stays: For a truly unconventional experience, stay in the residence halls.
Draw Strategic Insights from a Historic Site
History offers high-stakes examples of strategic success and failure that stick in memory better than business textbooks. Visiting a historic battlefield can provide tangible lessons in leadership, strategy and resilience.
For example, if your team were to visit Gettysburg, then the 50% casualties in Pickett’s Charge serve as a powerful lead-in to activities about pivoting from a flawed strategy. The physical space makes the lessons real in ways that reading about them never could.
Historical destinations encourage teams to think about decision-making under pressure and the human element in strategic choices. Activities might include:
- Strategic debrief session: After a tour, hold a workshop to analyze key moments in the location’s history and how they apply to your current business challenges.
- Leadership case study: Assign teams to study different leaders from the site’s past. Have them present their assigned leader’s decision-making style and its consequences.
- Problem-solving session: Present teams with a historical dilemma linked to the site and have them brainstorm their own solutions.
- Resilience workshop: Use the site narrative to frame a discussion about overcoming setbacks and building team resilience.
Build Stronger Bonds Through Offbeat Shared Activities
For the following retreats, the activity itself takes center stage and can happen in any city or location. The flexibility makes these approaches practical for teams of different sizes, schedules and budgets. Combine several activities for a multiday retreat or pick one for a focused single-day event.
Encourage Collaboration with a Culinary Challenge
Team cooking contests can build business communication, division of labor and grace under pressure in a fun and low-stakes environment. Consider these activities:
- Mocktail or cocktail crafting competition: A mixologist teaches basics, then teams create a company-themed drink. Voting covers taste, presentation and story.
- Food truck face-off: Teams work with food truck staff to prep, cook and serve a dish. It requires clear communication under pressure.
- Ugly cake decorating: Teams get premade cakes and wild decorations. The goal is the most creative or funny creation, such as a cake with 47 plastic flamingos stuck in the frosting and a chocolate drizzle that spells “organized chaos.”
Unlock Group Potential in a Creative Studio
Creative activities level the playing field and move teams from analytical thinking into a collaborative space where there are no wrong answers. Potential activities include:
- Pottery class: Tangible, hands-on and often hilarious as people discover making a bowl is harder than it looks.
- Short film or mockumentary festival: Small groups get a theme, a prop and a line of dialogue for a two- to three-minute phone video. A screening party with awards for categories like “Most Creative Use of Prop,” “Best Unexpected Plot Twist” or “Performance Most Likely to Go Viral” celebrates creativity.
- Improv comedy workshop: Improvised performances encourage active listening, spontaneity and supporting each other’s ideas while breaking down barriers.
Discover a New Perspective with an Urban Adventure
Urban activities help teams see their surroundings differently while creating shared memories. Charitable work adds another dimension. Research shows that prosocial actions increase workplace innovation and creativity, so making a positive impact can further boost mindsets back at the office. Here are several activity options to explore:
- Citywide photo scavenger hunt: Teams navigate the area using clues, riddles and absurd photo challenges. Examples include taking a picture of your team recreating a famous statue or finding a menu item that perfectly describes your last quarter.
- Volunteer at an urban farm: Gardening, cleaning enclosures or helping with tasks allows for natural conversation and teamwork.
- Collaborative mural painting: Partner with a local organization to design and paint a mural. It creates a lasting artifact while contributing to the community.
Start Planning Your Team’s Next Adventure
Unconventional team-building retreats can deliver results beyond typical trust falls and ropes courses. When you connect unique experiences to genuine business objectives, they become memorable and effective tools for building stronger teams. Consider which approach fits your goals and budget, talk to your team about which challenges or experiences would resonate with them, and then take the leap into something different.

