BreakBread Work helps companies build stronger teams through shared meals and deep conversations. Teams of 6 to 1,000 people can participate in person or online. Groups share food while talking about company values and personal experiences. This helps coworkers trust each other more and feel closer as a team. The program usually lasts 9 months but starts with one session for company leaders. It works well for remote teams who want to connect better. Companies see better communication and stronger workplace culture.
Who can use this
Organizations and companies wanting to build stronger team culture
Cost
Contact for pricing
Houston, TX
Shared meals bring together people from different backgrounds to build stronger communities. Neighbors meet, share food, and have real conversations that create lasting connections.
Learn how to have better conversations and bring people together through two different workshops. The Art of BreakBread is a 1.5-day workshop that teaches you how to create healing community gatherings around shared meals. Conversation Alchemy teaches skills for leading meaningful conversations that help people connect deeply. Both workshops help you learn to design your own community events that bring people together and heal divisions. You can email them to find out when the next workshops are happening.
Join BreakBread World as a founding member to learn conversation skills that can change hearts and minds. Members get access to quarterly events, local circles, and leadership training. There are three membership levels: Spark Members (for supporters), Alchemist Members (for learners and leaders), and Oxygen Members (for sustaining supporters). Members practice conversation skills through courses and tools while helping build a movement focused on meaningful connections.
Perhaps all the dragons in our lives are princesses who are only waiting to see us act, just once, with beauty and courage. Perhaps everything that frightens us is, in its deepest essence, something helpless that wants our love.
Rainer Maria Rilke