Icebreaker Template — Questions, Activities & Ideas for Any Meeting

Icebreaker Template — Questions, Activities & Ideas for Any Meeting

Energise any meeting, onboarding session, or workshop with structured icebreakers that actually start conversations. Preview the template below or use the interactive version in FigJam.

Updated

July 2026

Ready to Use

Available in FigJam

What is an icebreaker?

An icebreaker is a short, structured activity or set of questions used at the start of a meeting, workshop, or onboarding session to help people feel comfortable, get to know each other, and engage with what's ahead. The name comes from the idea of breaking through the awkward silence or social distance that exists before people feel at ease in a group.

Good icebreakers are quick, inclusive, and low-stakes — they ask questions or set up activities that anyone can answer regardless of their role, tenure, or personality type. The best ones also serve a secondary purpose: they surface things about people that don't come up in the normal course of work, which creates the kind of human connection that makes teams more cohesive and more willing to recognise each other's contributions.

A team that knows each other as people — not just as job titles — gives more genuine recognition, collaborates more naturally, and builds the psychological safety that makes peer appreciation feel normal rather than awkward.

See the Template in Action

Explore the template below to see how it's structured. To use the fully editable version, open it in FigJam, where you can copy, customise, and collaborate with your team.

How to run an icebreaker that actually works

Pick the right format for the context

Not every meeting needs the same icebreaker. A five-minute check-in question works for a weekly team standup. A structured activity works better for a workshop where the group needs to form before the real work begins. New employee onboarding calls for questions that surface personality and interests, not just professional background. Match the format to the occasion — an elaborate activity in a 30-minute meeting leaves people feeling like time was wasted.

Keep it short and time-boxed

The most common icebreaker failure is letting it run too long. Five minutes is enough for a regular meeting. Ten to fifteen minutes for a longer session or a new group. Set a timer if needed. An icebreaker that eats into the actual agenda frustrates people — the goal is to open the conversation, not replace it.

Make it genuinely optional to go deep

The question should have an easy surface answer and a deeper one available. "What's something you're looking forward to this week?" can be answered with "finishing the Q3 report" or with something genuinely personal. Both are valid. The format should never pressure anyone to share more than they're comfortable with — which is especially important for remote teams where people may be joining from personal spaces.

Follow through with recognition

The best outcome of an icebreaker is that people learn something about a colleague they didn't know before. The best outcome of that is that they use it — a follow-up message later, a kudos that references something shared, a conversation that continues. Icebreakers that lead to recognition of the person behind the work — not just the work itself — are the ones that build lasting team cohesion. When your team uses Karma, the connection between an icebreaker and a peer kudos is natural: someone shares that they spent the weekend volunteering, and a colleague gives them a public kudos for it in the team channel. The icebreaker opens the door; recognition walks through it.

50 icebreaker questions for every team situation

Use these to supplement the template when you want a wider range of options to choose from, or to rotate questions across sessions so the same people aren't answering the same prompts.

For new employees and onboarding

What's something that isn't on your CV that you're proud of?
What's the most useful piece of career advice you've ever received?
What's one thing you were nervous about before starting here that turned out to be fine?
If you could shadow anyone in this company for a day, who would it be and why?
What's the one tool, process, or habit from a previous job that you're hoping to bring here?
What's something you're hoping to learn or develop in this role?
What would your previous team say is your greatest strength?

For regular team meetings

What's one thing you're working on this week that you're actually excited about?
What's the best thing that happened to you in the last seven days — work or personal?
If you had an extra hour today with no obligations, how would you spend it?
What's something small that made your week better so far?
What's a skill you've been quietly developing that most people here don't know about?
What's one thing you'd want more of at work right now — more time, more clarity, more feedback, more autonomy?
What's a recent win you haven't talked about yet?

For remote and hybrid teams

Where are you joining from today, and what's the view like?
What's the best and worst thing about your current working setup?
What's something in your home workspace that tells people something about who you are?
What's a ritual or habit that makes working from home work better for you?
What's something you miss about working in person — or something you don't miss at all?
If your home office had a name, what would it be?
What's the most unusual thing that's happened during a video call this year?

For workshops and new groups

What's one thing you're hoping to take away from today?
What's a project or piece of work you've done that you're most proud of, and why?
What's your instinct when you're stuck on a hard problem — do you sit with it, talk it through, or step away?
What's a working style preference you'd want a new collaborator to know about you?
What's something you've changed your mind about professionally in the last year?
If you had to describe your working style in three words, what would they be?
What's the best team you've ever been part of, and what made it work?

For team building and culture

What's something you believe about work that most people would disagree with?
What's a book, podcast, or idea that's influenced how you think about your work?
If you could design your ideal team culture from scratch, what's the one norm you'd make non-negotiable?
What's one thing this team does really well that you'd want to make sure we never lose?
What's something you think is underrated at work — a skill, a practice, or a quality in a colleague?
What does meaningful recognition look like to you personally — public or private, specific or general, immediate or considered?
Who on this team has done something recently that deserves to be called out?

For performance reviews and retrospectives

What's one thing you're genuinely proud of from the last quarter?
What's something you tried that didn't work — and what did you learn from it?
What's one thing you'd do differently if you were starting this quarter again?
What's something a colleague did this period that you think deserves more recognition than it got?
What's the one question you'd most want to be asked in today's review?

For all-hands and large group settings

Coffee or tea — and how do you take it?
What's a show, film, or book you've recommended to more people than anything else recently?
What's an unexpected skill you have that has nothing to do with work?
What's something on your bucket list that most people would find surprising?
What was your first job, and what did it teach you?
Desert island — you can bring one tool or app for work. What is it?

Icebreakers and employee engagement — the connection most managers miss

Icebreakers are often treated as a warm-up formality — something to do before the real meeting starts. The teams that get the most value from them understand that they're actually doing something more significant: they're building the human relationships that make recognition feel natural rather than performative.

Peer recognition works best when people know each other. A kudos from a colleague who understands your working style, knows what you've been dealing with, and genuinely noticed something specific carries significantly more weight than an automated appreciation message or a manager's quarterly praise. The difference is relationship — and icebreakers are one of the most efficient ways to build it.

The question "who on this team has done something recently that deserves to be called out?" is both an icebreaker and a recognition prompt. It surfaces appreciation that might not have found another outlet. It tells the person being named that their contribution was visible. And it normalises the idea that recognition is something the whole team participates in — not something that only flows top-down. Teams that build icebreakers into their regular meeting rhythm — and use them to ask genuinely interesting questions rather than repeating "what did you do this weekend?" — consistently report higher team cohesion and more active peer recognition cultures. The two habits reinforce each other.

How Karma fits into this

If your team uses Karma for peer recognition in Slack or MS Teams, icebreakers and kudos work together naturally. An icebreaker question at the start of a meeting might surface that a colleague completed a course, finished a difficult project, or helped someone on another team. The natural response is a public shoutout in the team channel — and with Karma, that shoutout awards points, ties to a company value, and is visible to everyone.

The icebreaker opens the conversation. Karma makes the recognition stick.

Frequently asked questions

What is an icebreaker?

An icebreaker is a short activity or question used at the start of a meeting or group session to help people feel comfortable and get to know each other. The best icebreakers are inclusive, quick, and low-pressure — they surface something genuine about the people in the room without requiring anyone to share more than they're comfortable with.

What are good icebreaker questions for work?

The best work icebreakers are specific enough to be interesting but open enough that anyone can answer them. Good examples: "What's a skill you've been quietly developing that most people here don't know about?", "What's one thing you'd want a new collaborator to know about how you work?", "Who on this team has done something recently that deserves to be called out?" — that last one doubles as a peer recognition prompt and a conversation starter.

What are good icebreaker questions to ask new employees?

For new employee onboarding, the best icebreaker questions surface personality and values rather than professional background — the CV already covers that. Questions like "What's something that isn't on your CV that you're proud of?", "What would your previous team say is your greatest strength?", and "What's something you were nervous about before starting here that turned out to be fine?" give existing team members a genuine entry point for getting to know the new joiner as a person.

How long should an icebreaker take?

Five minutes for a regular team meeting. Ten to fifteen minutes for a workshop or a new group that hasn't worked together before. The timer matters — an icebreaker that expands into the agenda frustrates people. Set a clear time limit, pick a prompt that suits the time available, and move on cleanly.

What makes an icebreaker inclusive for remote teams?

The most inclusive remote icebreakers are ones that anyone can answer from wherever they are, without requiring physical presence or shared context. They should also be optional to go deep — "what's something in your workspace that tells people something about you?" allows for a one-line answer or a more personal one, depending on what the person is comfortable sharing. Avoid prompts that assume everyone is in the same time zone, city, or cultural context.

How do icebreakers connect to employee engagement?

Icebreakers build the human relationships that make peer recognition feel genuine rather than performative. When team members know each other beyond their job titles, they give more specific and meaningful kudos, collaborate more naturally, and are more likely to notice and name each other's contributions. Teams with regular icebreaker habits consistently report higher psychological safety and more active peer recognition cultures.

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Ready to get started?

If you're ready to get started with Karma, sign up now and explore the benefits of the recognition for your team. You can also reach out for a free demo.

Карма бот политика конфиденциальности

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