The Radical Agreement Project (RA) is a recognized leader in corporate team building and soft skill development.
PROMO VIDEO
Get a sense for the fun and feel of an improv based workshop by watching our corporate training promo video!

Our Services In Salt Lake City
Improv can be used to advance the development of any soft skill, common workshop focuses include:
Team Building / Communication / Creativity / Presentation Skills / Sales / Storytelling / Agility (In The Face Of The Unexpected) / Working with Difficult People / Collaboration / Listening / Staying In The Moment & Much More
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IN PERSON WORKSHOPS
Our 90-120 minute interactive workshops are perfect for teams of 6-20. For larger groups, multiple instructors can be provided to run concurrent workshops.
Engagements can include pre & post workshop exercises and materials. All workshops include extensive consultation with the workshop instructor.
Available anywhere in the continental US and Canada.
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INTERACTIVE LECTURES
Looking for a learning event that can address groups as large as 100 to 300 professionals? Our 60-90 minute interactive improv lectures engage large groups while sharing valuable workplace strategies.
Available anywhere in the continental US and Canada.
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LIVE COMEDY
ENTERTAINMENT
Looking to make the next quarterly meeting just a bit more bearable?
Whether you are in the market for an emcee, a stand up, sketch comedy or a live improv comedy show, we can get you the absolute best up and coming comedians for your event!
Available anywhere in the continental US and Canada.
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VIRTUAL WORKSHOPS
Our 60 minute online workshops work well for smaller groups of 6-12 participants and can be run on any video conferencing software.
Virtual workshops can include pre-workshop exercises, post workshop materials, and consultation with the workshop instructor.
Available anywhere a good internet connection is accessible.
Rebecca Turcotte,
HR Director
"The Radical Agreement Project provides activities that allow a group to learn collaboration skills, by supporting their team members in a positive and uplifting way. It is also, therefore, a useful way of building team communication and cohesion, by helping people communicate in an open, honest and constructive way."
Dennis DiMaggio,
Chief Learning Officer
"Terry brings great insights to applying Improv principles to leadership, communication, and teamwork challenges."
Eran Arbel,
Asst Director Talent Management & Development
"Terry is absolutely fantastic! He gets people to participate, has great feedback, and fun exercises to move things along."
Michelle Fischer,
Director of Strategic Communications & HR
"Terry is great! He takes a very creative approach to solving common work place challenges. He has the ability to engage and bring a team together in a positive fashion with the objective of helping them to realize their full potential. He is fun to work with!"
Improv@Work


A forward-thinking software and outdoor-gear company (that exists!) in downtown Salt Lake City wanted a workshop for 20 team members. The client described why this way, "They’re stuck in email purgatory,” which I thought was pretty funny. What they meant was that this team was trapped in rigid silos and workflows that prevented free flowing collaboration and a sense of trust.
We arranged for two improv workshops to be run concurrently, sometimes bringing the larger group together and other times breaking into smaller groups. The goal was to inspire creativity and to use that creativity to build relationships, have some laughs and begin a team wide transformation.
We started with partner trust drills (with a tailor made “yes–and” exercise that featured a hiking boot prop). Then we leapt into spontaneous storytelling (“Yes, and—your camping tent becomes a digital startup headquarters in the forest!”). From there a more standard improv workshop unfolded, but that in and of itself is dynamic, fun and eye opening.
Throughout we were careful to mix and match participants in breakouts and to prioritize fun and group support over "being correct".
By the end you could tell the event had been a success. It yielded great feedback and scores from the company's internal evaluation and two participants ended taking online improv classes with The Radical Agreement Project for an extended period.
Recommended Salt Lake City Venues
THE GRAND AMERICAN
555 South Main Street,
Salt Lake City, UT 84111
Okay, okay—deep breath—listen. You step inside The Grand America and BAM! The air just shifts. It’s not oxygen anymore, it’s champagne mist. You feel taller. Smarter. Maybe even British. The chandeliers aren’t just lights, they’re celestial fireworks frozen mid-boom. The marble floors? So smooth you could moonwalk across them in socks and the staff would still politely applaud.
This place isn’t a hotel; it’s an event waiting to happen. 100,000 square feet of meeting space that screams, “Yes, you will achieve synergy today!” The ballrooms are so big they have their own weather systems. The acoustics? You could yell “Teamwork!” and hear the echo say “Amen!”
You don’t host a workshop here—you stage it. You produce it. It’s Broadway meets Fortune 500 meets a very classy fever dream. Choose The Grand America if you want your event to feel like the grand finale of civilization—bold, extravagant, and just one standing ovation away from legend.
KIMPTON HOTEL MONACO
15 West 200 South,
Salt Lake City, UT 84101
The walls? They’re vibing. The furniture? Probably judging you, but in a very encouraging way. It’s got that boutique confidence that says, “Yes, I meditate, but I also close deals before brunch.”
The event rooms? Oh, buddy. 3,100 square feet of pure creative combustion. They’ve got names like “Tokyo” and “Paris” because apparently “Your Idea’s About to Explode” was too long to fit on the door. You don’t just brainstorm here—you debut. The carpet practically hums “let’s do something amazing, you beautiful genius.”
So yeah—if your team wants to feel like they’re starring in a startup movie directed by Wes Anderson and scored by jazz horns, the Monaco is it. Sophisticated? Absolutely. Controlled chaos? You bet. It’s where creative lightning checks in, orders room service, and never leaves.
MARRIOTT DOWNTOWN AT CITY CREEK
75 South West Temple Street,
Salt Lake City, UT 84101
You walk in and instantly feel like you should be holding an important folder and saying things like “synergy” while nodding meaningfully.
And the location—oh boy—it’s right by the city’s heartbeat. You step outside and it’s restaurants, culture, art, all whispering, “You’re doing great, champ.” Inside, it’s elegance without ego, comfort without the couch nap temptation. You feel productive just by existing in the lobby.
So if you want “corporate meets creativity” but also “please, I’m holding it together, I swear,” this is the spot. It’s classic, capable, and just unpredictable enough that every meeting feels one heartbeat away from something truly remarkable—or at least a standing ovation at the quarterly review.
A Sample Improv Exercise!
“Secret Thoughts”
Ready to flip your team into spontaneous, connected, totally on-their-feet mode? Here is a good improv agility game.
Setup
Pick two players (A and B) who will have a “normal office-ish conversation” (performance review, marketing briefing, IT request—something real-worldish).
Choose two other players: one is the Secret Thought for A, the other for B.
The conversation starts. A and B talk seriously. Meanwhile, the secret-thought players intermittently announce their player's secret thoughts. Their assigned player has to act on it (subtly) as the conversation continues. So if the announced secret thought is "My foot is itchy, very itchy!" then the player might scratch their foot, glance passionately at their foot, try to excuse themselves for the bathroom, whatever the thought triggers. As the conversation unfolds, more secret thoughts pile up, challenging players to adjust faster and faster.
Why it’s gold
You’re forcing thinking on your feet. The person must stay in conversation while dealing with weird impulses.
It builds self-awareness and team awareness. How did the hidden thought affect your reaction? What did your partner do?


