Understand how people contribute at work

The Nine Belbin Team Roles

Belbin Team Roles help individuals understand their strengths and help teams see the different contributions needed for effective collaboration.

Team Roles describe how people contribute to team success.

What is a Team Role?

A Team Role is a cluster of behavioral attributes that people bring to a team. Belbin identifies nine roles that are critical for effective teamwork, grouped into three broad types of contribution.

Social Roles

How people connect, coordinate, support others, and explore opportunities.

Coordinator Teamworker Resource Investigator

Thinking Roles

How people generate ideas, evaluate options, and bring specialist expertise.

Plant Monitor Evaluator Specialist

Action Roles

How people create momentum, organize work, drive progress, and finish well.

Shaper Implementer Completer Finisher
Belbin Team Roles
Explore the roles

Meet the nine Belbin Team Roles

Each role represents a different way of contributing to team performance.

Coordinator

Social Role
+

Needed to focus on the team’s objectives, draw out team members and delegate work appropriately.

Strengths: Mature, confident, identifies talent. Clarifies goals.

Allowable weaknesses: Can be seen as manipulative and might offload their own share of the work.

Teamworker

Social Role
+

Helps the team to gel, using their versatility to identify the work required and complete it on behalf of the team.

Strengths: Co-operative, perceptive and diplomatic. Listens and averts friction.

Allowable weaknesses: Can be indecisive in crunch situations and tends to avoid confrontation.

Resource Investigator

Social Role
+

Uses their inquisitive nature to find ideas to bring back to the team.

Strengths: Outgoing, enthusiastic. Explores opportunities and develops contacts.

Allowable weaknesses: Might be over-optimistic, and can lose interest once the initial enthusiasm has passed.

Plant

Thinking Role
+

Tends to be highly creative and good at solving problems in unconventional ways.

Strengths: Creative, imaginative, free-thinking, generates ideas and solves difficult problems.

Allowable weaknesses: Might ignore incidentals, and may be too preoccupied to communicate effectively.

Monitor Evaluator

Thinking Role
+

Provides a logical eye, making impartial judgements where required and weighs up the team’s options in a dispassionate way.

Strengths: Sober, strategic and discerning. Sees all options and judges accurately.

Allowable weaknesses: Sometimes lacks the drive and ability to inspire others and can be overly critical.

Specialist

Thinking Role
+

Brings in-depth knowledge of a key area to the team.

Strengths: Single-minded, self-starting and dedicated. They provide specialist knowledge and skills.

Allowable weaknesses: Tends to contribute on a narrow front and can dwell on the technicalities.

Shaper

Action Role
+

Provides the necessary drive to ensure that the team keeps moving and does not lose focus or momentum.

Strengths: Challenging, dynamic, thrives on pressure. Has the drive and courage to overcome obstacles.

Allowable weaknesses: Can be prone to provocation, and may sometimes offend people’s feelings.

Implementer

Action Role
+

Needed to plan a workable strategy and carry it out as efficiently as possible.

Strengths: Practical, reliable, efficient. Turns ideas into actions and organizes work that needs to be done.

Allowable weaknesses: Can be a bit inflexible and slow to respond to new possibilities.

Completer Finisher

Action Role
+

Most effectively used at the end of tasks to polish and scrutinize the work for errors, subjecting it to the highest standards of quality control.

Strengths: Painstaking, conscientious, detail-oriented. Searches out errors. Polishes and perfects.

Allowable weaknesses: Can be inclined to worry unduly, and reluctant to delegate.

Belbin Reports

Turn Team Role insight into practical guidance.

Belbin Reports help individuals and teams understand how people contribute, where strengths may be underused, and how to work together more effectively.

Individual Reports help one person understand their preferred, manageable, and least-preferred Team Roles.
Team Reports combine individual results to show the team’s overall strengths, gaps, overlaps, and potential risks.
Use report insights for debriefs, workshops, team development, and collaboration planning.
Individual Belbin Report preview

Understand how one person contributes to a team and how others experience those contributions.

  • Preferred, manageable, and least-preferred roles
  • Observer feedback for a fuller view
  • Practical guidance for working with others
Explore Individual Reports →
Team Belbin Report preview

Combine individual results to see the team’s overall strengths, gaps, and potential risks.

  • Team Role balance and distribution
  • Overlapping strengths and missing roles
  • Insight for workshops and team development
Explore Team Reports →
How to find out your roles

Start with a report, then apply the insight.

Belbin Reports help individuals and teams understand preferred, manageable, and least-preferred roles, then use those insights in everyday teamwork.

1

Choose your report

Select an Individual or Team Report based on what you need now.

2

Complete the assessment

Complete the Self-Perception questionnaire and invite Observer feedback.

3

Receive your report

Get a practical report showing how you contribute at work.

4

Apply the insights

Use the results through debriefs, workshops, or team development.

Proven and Trusted Worldwide

Belbin has been trusted by thousands of organizations in over 70 countries to unlock the full potential of their teams. Rooted in decades of research and validated through real-world application, the Belbin framework helps teams communicate more effectively, align behavioral strengths, and deliver measurable improvements in collaboration and performance.

Organizations that integrate Belbin report stronger trust, clearer accountability, and more balanced teams that sustain high performance under pressure.

Read Case Studies →

See the Team You Have. Build the Team You Need.

Curious how your team would map out? Let’s walk you through it.

In just one session, we’ll show you how a Belbin Survey works, what your Team Collaboration Map could look like, and how we help close the Interaction Gap—without personality labels, fluff, or guesswork.

Let’s start with a conversation.







Lindsay Lalla

Lindsay Lalla is the VP of Marketing and Client Support for Belbin North America. Most recently, she has been spearheading the introduction of the Belbin Team Role methodology into North America. Lindsay is a skilled facilitator, and also runs the Belbin Accreditation classes where she certifies others in the Belbin method.
Lindsay’s formal education is in instruction and performance. Combined with her 17 years of adult education experience, she brings a depth of understanding in how to deliver the highly experiential workshops that are a hallmark of the Belbin North America approach to education and organizational development.

Patrick Ballin

Patrick offers more than 25 years of experience with some of the most successful businesses in Europe as a consultant, change manager and executive coach.

He has helped many well-known organisations to get their ideas and projects off the ground by working with business leaders and their teams to optimise interaction, strategy and execution.
Patrick was Global Head of Supply Chain and Logistics Development for The Body Shop, an international retailer of ethical health and beauty products, and managed its change programme across 52 countries. In 2009, he set up the national redundancy coaching service, Rework, for the UK industry charity, Retail Trust. Patrick spent his earlier career with ACWL Group, one of the pioneering UK Apple Centres, where he was a divisional Director.
He holds an MA in Natural Sciences from the University of Cambridge, is a Visiting Lecturer for Brighton Business School, a Fellow of the RSA and coach for social enterprise incubator On Purpose.

Max Isaac

Max is the CEO of 3Circle Partners. He brings a depth of knowledge and experience from his career in general management and consulting in North America, England, Europe and Asia.
Max has assisted CEOs and senior leaders within client organizations with the design and implementation of Interaction Planning processes, team based organizational development programs and Lean Six Sigma initiatives.
Prior to moving into the field of organizational development, Max was the CFO for the Retail Division within The Molson’s Organization, where he took a lead role in growing the business to over $1 billion in revenues, doubling its size in four years through acquisitions and internal growth.
Max is co-author of Close The Interaction Gap, The Third Circle – Interactions That Drive Results, Setting Teams Up for Success and A Guide to Team Roles. He is also the contributing author of the Organizational Change sections of Mike George’s books Lean Six Sigma published in May 2002 and Lean Six Sigma for Service published in June 2003. Max is a registered CPA, CA in Canada. His undergraduate degree was earned at Witwatersrand University, South Africa.