Team Building Needs Important Involvement
From Management
About Team-Building-The Manager's Role by Robert Bacal
There has been much made of the importance of teams in
the workplace. Whether you are implementing TQM, or
just want to increase effectiveness or employee morale,
developing effective cohesive teams is a good tactic.
But teams ain't simple. We are going to devote the PSM supplement
to examining some principles related to team-building with
particular emphasis on the role of the manager or supervisor.
What Is A Team?
Mark Sanborn, an expert on teams, outlines a few characteristics
of a team.
First, Sanborn defines a team as being composed of a highly
communicative group of people. Poor communication means
no team.
Second, Sanborn suggests that a team must have members
with different backgrounds, skills and abilities, so that
the team can pool these things to be effective. In other
words a team with no diversity in it will be unlikely to
work in an innovative fashion.
Third, and perhaps most importantly, a team must have a
shared sense of mission. Whether we are talking about
a temporary work improvement team, or a branch, all members
must share the sense of mission.
Fourth, a team must have clearly identified goals.
A team must be able to gauge its success, and know what
it is trying to accomplish.
How Does A Team Differ From A Work Group?
Sanborn suggests the following differences:
On Competition:
Work groups tend to compete inwardly, with members competing
against each other for favour, recognition, etc. High
performing teams compete, but with those outside the organization.
On Focus:
Work groups tend to be task-oriented and characterized
by members who follow their own personal agendas.
High-performing teams are goal-oriented. Members work
towards the achievement of the team goals and agenda, rather
than pulling in different directions.
On Style:
Work groups tend to be autocratic and hierarchical in nature.
Teams, on the other hand, tend to be participative and self-steering
within the goals of the team.
On Tolerance:
Work groups tend to tolerate each other, while teams tend
to enjoy each other. Differences in teams are welcome
and encouraged, while in work groups, differences and disagreements
are suppressed.
On Risk:
Work groups tend to avoid risk and maintain the status
quo. High performing teams tend to accept risk.
The Manager's Role
It is unfortunate that many managers want to stimulate
the development of high-performance teams, but do not see
themselves as active players in the process. Sometimes,
this comes from a mistaken idea that a team should be self-contained
and owned by the team members. In fact, teams should
be owned by its members, but the manager or supervisor plays
THE KEY ROLE in setting the climate for the development
of teams.
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We can't overstate this point. If you want
to encourage team functioning, it is very likely that
you, yourself will have to change. If you don't,
any team approach is doomed to failure. If you
look at teams in other contexts, you will quickly
realize that leadership determines success.
A sports team has a coach, a symphony orchestra has
a conductor. These teams don't spontaneously develop
without effective leadership, but develop and grow
with the help and guidance of a leader whose job is
not to control, but to teach, encourage, and organize
when necessary. A good way to describe the role
of the manager is a catalyst, a force that causes
things to happen for other people, and the team.
Not only is the manager's role critical, but it changes
over the lifespan of the team-building process. In
the beginning of the process of team-building, the team
members may need a good deal of help developing their mission
and purpose, identifying what they want to accomplish, and,
more importantly, with the development of interpersonal
and group skills such as conflict resolution, meeting management,
etc. They may also need constant reminder that the
manager is serious about the team, meaning that its activities
and decisions or recommendations will be implemented wherever
humanly possible. The manager may even be called upon
to act as a mediator, when conflict cannot be resolved by
the team members.
As a team grows and matures, the manager might become an
equal team member, or may find that the team doesn't require
ongoing involvement. Or not.
Some Critical Leadership Factors
We can describe some important leadership factors that
will affect the team building process, and its success.
While these are particularly applicable to the formal work
unit leader (ie. the manager), they apply also to
team members who are performing in a leadership capacity.
. Highly developed inter-personal skills and understanding
of some basic psychology regarding what makes people
commit to, and perform.
. Must recognize the importance of balancing between tasks
(getting the job done) and people (ensuring that
team members are satisfied with the process of getting the
work done).
. Willingness to listen and ability to communicate.
Leaders must have a preference to listening and
understanding rather than controlling and talking.
. Show Constancy of Purpose. Leaders must commit
themselves to the team, and not give up when the going
gets rough, or success is slow to come.
. Show Consistency In Behaviour. Leaders must behave
in a consistent manner regarding team work.
Leaders who sometimes encourage team process and sometimes
bypass the team confuse the hell out of everyone.
When this happens, nobody takes teams seriously.
. Model Desireable Team Behaviour. The team will
take its cues from its leader, or the manager. You
cannot break inter-personal rules, not listen, and use autocratic
prerogatives, and expect members of your team
to believe that you REALLY value working together.
. Be Able To Deal With Problem Team Members. Sometimes
a team does not have the internal resources to deal
with a member that is uncooperative or so unskilled in group
behaviour that he or she becomes a barrier.
A manager must be able to coach when necessary, problem-solve,
establish consensus and mediate.
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Conclusion
In this month's supplement we have outlined a few of the
basic elements of a team, and have suggested that the manager
must be able to contribute to the establishment and maintenance
of the team. We have only scratched the surface, and
will return to the issue in future editions of The Public
Sector Manager.
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