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Leadership
& Team Management MGMT
623
VU
Lesson
25
GROUP
& TEAM CONCEPT
Groups
Dynamics:
Work
groups are the basic building
blocks of an organization. Work groups
use roles, rules, and norms
to
control their members' behavior,
and they use several
socialization tactics to turn
newcomers into
effective
group members. Groups
contribute to organizational effectiveness
when group goals are
aligned
with organizational goals.
Groups
and Teams: A group
is
defined as two or more individuals,
interacting and interdependent,
who
have come together to achieve particular
objectives.
A
group
is
a set of two or more people
who interact with each
other to achieve certain goals or
meet
certain
needs.
A
team
is
a formal work group in which
there is a high level of interaction
among group members
who
work
intensely together to achieve a common
goal. A group whose members
work intensely with
each
other
to achieve a specific, common goal or
objective is known as Team. All
teams are groups but
not
all
groups are teams.
Teams
often are difficult to
form.
It
takes time for members to
learn how to work
together.
A
group/team is effective
when
it satisfies three criteria:
Production
output: the product
of the group's work must
meet or exceed standards of
quality
o
and
quantity
Member
satisfaction: membership in the
group must provide people
with short-term
o
satisfaction
and facilitate their long-term
growth and development
Capacity
for continued cooperation: how the
group completes a task
should maintain or
o
enhance
the group's ability to work
together; groups that don't
cooperate cannot survive
Groups
versus Teams:
All
teams are groups
Some
groups are just people
assembled together
Teams
have task interdependence whereas some
groups do not..
Why
Do People Join Groups?
·
Security
·
Status
·
Social
needs
·
Power
·
Goal
Achievement
Types
of Groups: There
are many types of groups in
organizations, and each type
plays an important
role
in determining organizational
effectiveness.
a.
Managers establish formal
work groups to help the
organization achieve its goals. The goals
of a
formal
work group are determined by
the needs of the organization.
b.
Informal
work groups emerge
naturally in organizations because
organizational members
perceive
that membership in a group will
help them achieve their goals or meet
their needs.
Types
of Formal Work Groups. Types
include;
Command
group: a collection
of subordinates who report to the same
supervisor.
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& Team Management MGMT
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1.
Command groups are based on the basic
reporting relationships in organizations
and are frequently
represented
on organizational charts as
departments.
2.
These groups have a profound effect on
the extent to which an organization is
able to achieve its
goals.
A
task
force is a
collection of people who
come together to accomplish a specific
goal. Once the goal
has
been accomplished, the task force is
usually disbanded.
1.
A standing committee or task groups are
task forces that may be
enduring (though members
may
change)
or permanent in nature.
A
team
is
a formal work group in which
there is a high level of interaction
among group members
who
work
intensely together to achieve a common
group goal.
1.
A cross-functional team consists of
groups of people from different
departments such as
engineering,
marketing, and finance.
Types
of Informal Work Groups.
A
friendship
group is a
collection of organizational members
who enjoy each other's
company and
socialize
with each other (often
both on and off the
job).
Members
of an organization form interest
groups when
they have a common goal or objective
(related
to
their organizational membership) that
they are trying to achieve by
uniting their
efforts.
Group
Productivity:
Synergy
is
a biological term referring to an
action of two or more substances
that result in an
effect
that
is more than the mere summation of the
individual substances; the whole is more
than the sum
of
its parts (2 + 2 =
5).
Process
loss is the
difference between what is actually
produced by a group and what could
have
been
produced by the group when you consider
its inputs (2 + 2 =
3).
Characteristics
of a Well-Functioning, Effective
Group:
o
Relaxed,
comfortable, informal
atmosphere
o
Task
well understood & accepted
o
Members
listen well &
participate
o
People
express feelings &
ideas
o
Conflict
& disagreement center around ideas or
methods
o
Group
aware of its operation &
function
o
Consensus
decision making
o
Clear
assignments made &
accepted
Groups'
and Teams' Contributions to
Organizational Effectiveness:
Teams:
Teams
are groups with greater interdependence--shared
purpose and destiny. Can be
higher performing
than
groups, but may not
be...
Why
Have Teams Become So
Popular?
·
Teams typically outperform
individuals.
·
Teams use employee talents
better.
·
Teams are more flexible and responsive to
changes in the environment.
·
Teams facilitate employee
involvement.
·
Teams are an effective way to
increase motivation.
Twenty
years ago, it made news
because no one else was
doing it. Today, it is the
organization
that
does not use teams
that has become
newsworthy.
The
current popularity of teams
seems based on the evidence that
teams typically
outperform
individuals
when the tasks being done
require multiple skills,
judgment, and experience.
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As
organizations have restructured, they have
turned to teams to better
utilize employee talents.
The
motivational properties of teams =
significant factor. The role
of employee involvement as
a
motivator--teams facilitate employee
participation in operating
decisions.
"It's
easy to get players.
Gettin'
`em
to play together, that's the hard
part,."
Casey
Stengel
Deciding
When to Use a
Team:
Always
use a team when many
perspectives are needed and
acceptance of decision is critical and
you
need
more options to take the decision.
Use team when the problem is
complex and unstructured and
you
need to get advice and suggestions to
solve the problem. When
individuals judgments are
unreliable
and individuals are unwilling to
take necessary risks.
Be
Cautious About Using a Team
When:
The
issue is unimportant
o
Individuals
don't want to
participate
o
Individual
risk preferences are too
high
o
Time
is of the essence
o
Group
norms are unacceptable
o
Crucial
Activities for Team: An
employee's success is no longer
defined in terms of
individual
performance.
To perform well as team
members, individuals must be
able to communicate openly
and
honestly,
to confront differences and resolve
conflicts, and to sublimate personal goals
for the good of
the
team. The challenge of
creating team players will
be greatest where:
o
The
national culture is highly
individualistic.
o
The
teams are being introduced
into an established organization that
has historically
valued
individual
achievement.
On
the other hand, the challenge for
management is less demanding
when teams are introduced
where
employees
have strong collectivist values or in new
organizations that use teams
initially for
organizing
work.
o
Get
Organized
o
Maintain
Communications
o
Fix
Obvious Problems
o
Document
Progress, Problems, and Rationale
o
Have a
process in place for major
team decisions
Dealing
with Problem Behaviors: Unlike
written rules, which are
formal descriptions of actions and
behaviors
required by a group or Organization,
group norms are informal
rules of conduct for behaviors
that
are considered important by most
group members; often, they
are not put in writing.
Groups
enforce
their norms by rewarding
members who conform to the
norm by behaving in the
specified
manner
and punishing members who
deviate from the
norm.
o
When
members share a common idea of
acceptable behavior, they
can monitor each
other's
behavior
to make sure they are
following the group's
norms.
o
When
norms exist, group members
do not have to waste time
thinking about what to do in
a
particular
situation; norms guide their
actions and specify how they
should behave.
o
When
people share common norms,
they can predict how
others will behave in certain
situations
and
thus anticipate one another's
actions.
Choose
team members
carefully.
o
Offer
training.
o
Provide
clear goals.
o
Clearly
define member
responsibilities.
o
Use
peer evaluations.
o
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& Team Management MGMT
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o
Reward
superior performance.
o
Don't
let social considerations overwhelm
concern with the task.
o
Remove
problem team members as a last
resort.
Is
it true that
everyone's
responsibility
is, in
reality,
nobody's
responsibility?
--
Anonymous
Developing
Effective Teams: Team
always plays a dynamic role
in the organizational development.
It
is
a responsibility of a leader to develop an
effective team for achievement of
organization goals.
Introduction
o
Two
caveats:
First,
teams differ in form and
structure--be careful not to
rigidly apply the model's
predictions to all
teams.
Second, the model assumes
that it is already been
determined that teamwork is
preferable over
individual
work. Four key
components:
o
Contextual
influences
o
Team's
composition
o
Work
design
o
Process
variables
Context
1.
Adequate
Resources
·
All
work teams rely on resources
outside the group to sustain
it.
·
A scarcity
of resources directly reduces the
ability of the team to perform
its job effectively.
·
As
one set of researchers concluded,
"perhaps one of the most important
characteristics of an
effective
work group is the support the group
receives from the
organization.''
2.
Leadership
and Structure
o
Agreeing
on the specifics of work and how they
fit together to integrate
individual skills
requires
team leadership and structure.
o
Leadership
is not always needed. Self-managed
work teams often perform
better than
teams
with formally appointed
leaders.
o
Influence
team performance:
o
The
leader's expectations and his or her
mood.
o
Leaders
who expect good things from
their team are more likely
to get them!
3.
Performance
Evaluation and Reward
Systems
o
How do
you get team members to be
both individually and
jointly accountable? The
traditional,
individually oriented evaluation and
reward system must be
modified to reflect
team
performance.
o
Individual
performance evaluations, fixed hourly
wages, individual incentives
are not
consistent
with the development of high-performance
teams.
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& Team Management MGMT
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o
Management
should consider group-based appraisals, profit
sharing, gain sharing,
small-
group
incentives, and other system
modifications that will
reinforce team effort
and
commitment.
Composition
1.
Abilities
of Members
·
Teams
require three different types of
skills:
Technical
expertise
o
Problem-solving
and decision-making skills
o
Good
listening, feedback, conflict resolution,
and other interpersonal
skills
o
·
The
right mix is crucial. It is
not uncommon for one or more
members to take responsibility
to
learn
the skills in which the group is
deficient, thereby allowing the
team to reach its
full
potential.
2.
Personality
·
Many
of the dimensions identified in the Big
Five personality model have shown to be
relevant to
team
effectiveness.
Teams
that rate higher in
mean levels of
extraversion,
agreeableness,
o
conscientiousness,
and emotional stability tend to receive
higher managerial ratings
for
team
performance.
The
variance in personality characteristics
may be more important than the
mean. A
o
single
team member who lacks a
minimal level of, say,
agreeableness can
negatively
affect
the whole team's performance.
3.
Allocating
Roles
·
Teams
have different needs, and people
should be selected for a
team to ensure that there
is
diversity
and that all various roles
are filled.
Managers
need to understand the individual
strengths that each person
can bring to a
o
team,
select members with their
strengths in mind, and
allocate work
assignments
accordingly.
4.
Diversity
o
Diversity
in terms of personality, gender,
age, educational, functional
specialization, and
experience
increase the probability that the
team will complete its tasks
effectively.
o
Racial
and national differences
interfere with team
processes in the short term.
o
Over
time, however, culturally
diverse teams function
effectively over
time.
o
The
degree to which members of a
group share common characteristics
such as age, sex,
race
educational level, or length of service,
is termed group demography.
o
Cohorts
are defined as individual
who hold a common
attribute.
5.
Size
of Teams
o
The
most effective teams are
neither very small (under
four or five) nor very
large (over a
dozen).
Effective teams--managers should keep them
under 10 people.
o
Very
small teams are likely to
lack for diversity of
views.
o
Large
teams have difficulty getting
much done.
6.
Member
Flexibility
o
This
is an obvious plus because it
greatly improves its
adaptability and makes it less
reliant
on
any single member.
7.
Member
Preferences
o
Not
every employee is a team
player.
o
Given
the option, many employees will
select themselves out of
team participation.
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& Team Management MGMT
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o
High
performing teams are likely
to be composed of people who
prefer working as part of
a
group.
Work
Design
o
Includes
variables like freedom and
autonomy, the opportunity to use
different skills and
talents,
the ability to complete a whole
task.
Process
1.
Common
Purpose
o
Effective
teams have a common and meaningful
purpose that provides
direction,
momentum,
and commitment for
members.
o
This
purpose is a vision. It is broader than
specific goals.
2.
Specific
Goals
o
Successful
teams translate their common purpose
into specific, measurable,
and realistic
performance
goals. They energize the team.
o
Specific
goals facilitate clear communication and
help teams maintain their
focus on
results.
Team goals should be
challenging.
3.
Team
Efficacy
o
Effective
teams have confidence in themselves
and believe they can
succeed--this is team
efficacy.
Success breeds
success.
o
Management
can increase team efficacy
by helping the team to achieve small
successes and
skill
training.
Small
successes build team
confidence.
The
greater the abilities of team members,
the greater the likelihood that
the
team will develop confidence
and the capability to deliver
that
confidence.
4.
Conflict
Levels
o
Conflict
on a team is not necessarily bad. Teams
that are completely void of
conflict are
likely
to become apathetic and
stagnant.
o
Relationship
conflicts--those based on interpersonal
incompatibilities, tension, and
animosity
toward others--are almost always
dysfunctional.
o
On
teams performing non routine
activities, disagreements among members
about task
content
(called task conflicts) are
not detrimental. It is often
beneficial because it
lessens
the
likelihood of groupthink.
5.
Social
Loafing
o
Individuals
can hide inside a group.
Effective teams undermine
this tendency by holding
themselves
accountable at both the individual and
team level.
For
the effectiveness of a
team
Training
o
Empowerment
o
Communication
o
Reward
o
Building
Trust: Members of
effective teams trust each
other and exhibit trust in their
leaders. When
members
trust each other they are
more willing to take risks. When
members trust their leadership
they
are
more willing to commit to their
leader's goals and decisions.
Work
for others' interests as
well as own
o
Be
a team player.
o
Practice
openness.
o
Be
fair.
o
Speak
your feelings.
o
Show
consistency in basic values.
o
Maintain
confidence.
o
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Demonstrate
competence.
o
Teamwork
Do's
o
Articulate
a goal everyone can identify
with
o
Provide
a plan or job for each
member
o
Provide
a mechanism for
communication
o
Create
an environment conducive to
teamwork
o
Provide
effective feedback
o
Provide
Motivation
Teamwork
Don'ts
Don't
Micromanage
o
Don't
withhold information, or work
around members
o
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