chapter 10 - understanding work teams Flashcards
work group
A work group interacts primarily to share information and make decisions to help each member perform within their respective area of responsibility.
There is no positive synergy that would create an overall level of performance greater than the sum of the inputs. A work group is a collection of individuals doing their work, albeit with some interaction and/or dependency.
work team
A work team, on the other hand, generates positive synergy through coordination.
The individual efforts result in a level of performance greater than the sum of the individual inputs. Teams are more likely to be constantly changing and adapting rather than static entities—seeing teams as dynamic systems in this way has led many to focus more on teaming as a verb (e.g., on the processes or actions involved in engaging as a team) rather than on the team itself.
similarities in work groups and teams
In both work groups and work teams, there are often behavioral expectations of members, collective normalization efforts, active group dynamics and some level of decision making.
Both may generate ideas, pool resources or coordinate logistics such as work schedules; for the work group. Effort is limited to information gathering for decision makers outside the group.
We think of a work team as a subset of a work group, the team is constructed to be purposeful (symbiotic) in its member interaction.
differences in work groups and teams
work groups
- share information
- neutral (sometimes negative)
- individual
- random and varied
work teams
- collective performance
- positive
- individual and mutual
- complementary
five types of teams in organizations
five common types of teams in organizations: problem-solving teams, self-managed work teams, cross-functional teams (two parts) , and virtual teams
problem solving teams
Problem-solving teams such as quality-control teams have been in use for many years. It is a team of employees from the same department who meet for a few hours each week to discuss ways of improving quality, efficiency and the work environment.
Originally seen most often in manufacturing plants, these were permanent teams that generally met at a regular time, sometimes weekly or daily, to address quality standards and any problems with the products made.
“rarely have the authority to implement their suggestions unilaterally, but if their recommendations are paired with implementation processes, some significant improvements can be realized”
self managed work teams
Self-managed teams are a team of employees who autonomously implement
solutions and take responsibility for the outcomes of the solutions (responsibilities
typically adopted by supervisors).
Self-managed work teams are composed of employees who perform highly related or interdependent jobs and who take on some supervisory responsibilities.
- These responsibilities include planning and scheduling work, assigning tasks to members, making operating decisions, taking action to solve problems and working with suppliers and customers.
- Fully self-managed work teams even select their own members who evaluate each other’s performance.
- When these teams are established, former supervisory positions take on decreased importance and are sometimes eliminated.
- With a lack of authority and accountability, teams may spend valuable time and resources aligning team member values and goals to get on the same page
- Often difficult for managers to give up this kind of control
cross-functional teams
cross-functional teams, teams made up of employees from about the same hierarchical level but from different work areas who come together to accomplish a task.
These teams are not simple to form and manage
- Expertise is needed because the members are at roughly the same level in the organization which creates leadership ambiguity
- Climate of trust needs to be developed before leadership emergence
- Early stages of development are often long because members need to learn to work with higher levels of diversity and complexity
- Takes time to build trust and teamwork especially among people with different experiences and perspectives
- Organizations characterized by flat structures with evenly dispersed power may derive the least benefit from cross functional-teams
strength of traditional cross-functional teams… and how to improve success rate (pgt)
The strength of traditional cross-functional teams is the collaborative effort of individuals with diverse skills from a variety of disciplines
One study of nearly one hundred cross-functional teams across twenty-five major corporations found that they had a success rate of only 25 percent
How to improve success rate?
develop a certain type of cross-functional team, a portfolio governance team (PGT), in which team leaders from different functions and who govern different teams work together to accomplish tasks.
2nd type of cross-functional team: portfolio governance team (pgt)
a portfolio governance team (PGT), in which team leaders from different functions and who govern different teams work together to accomplish tasks. Once these teams are up and running, they can accomplish the same aims as cross-functional teams, but with the power of the teams each leader oversees and with less opportunity for conflict. Outside PGTs, cross-functional teams can also be made more successful by:
- Establishing an accountable leader who is responsible from the team’s formation to its dissolution.
- Ensuring that each team has established goals, resources, and deadlines.
- Establishing a clear mission for the team that acts as their main objective.
- Continuously reevaluating the team and its progress toward success.
- Reconsidering the usefulness of the team if it is unsuccessful.”
virtual teams
“The teams described in the preceding section do their work face-to-face, whereas virtual teams use technology to unite physically dispersed members to achieve a common goal. Members collaborate online using networks (e.g., via the company intranet), corporate social media, videoconferencing, e-mail, and messenger applications”
They may suffer because there is less social rapport and direct interaction among
members.
Virtual teams should be managed differently than in-person teams
As such, for virtual teams to be effective, trust is very important. Management should ensure that
(1) trust is established among members (one inflammatory remark in an e-mail can severely undermine team trust),
(2) progress is monitored closely (so the team does not lose sight of its goals and no team member “disappears”), and
(3) the efforts and products of the team are publicized throughout the organization (so the team does not become invisible)
multiteam system
Multiteam system is a collection of two or more interdependent teams that share a superordinate goal; a team of teams
“Typically, a single team alone cannot fulfill an organization’s broad objectives. Often, it takes an entire system of teams collaborating with and among one another and who contribute in their own ways to realizing the organization’s objectives.”
boundary spanners
One study showed that multiteam systems performed better when they had “boundary spanners” whose jobs were to coordinate with all constituents. This reduced the need for some team member communication, which was helpful because it reduced coordination demands.
boundary spoilers
Conversely, some members may emerge as “boundary spoilers,” who can hinder effective coordination when they communicate inaccurate perspectives or practices to members of other teams
how to organize key concepts of effective teams?
into three general categories:
First are the resources and other contextual influences that make teams effective.
The second relates to the team’s composition.
Finally, process and state variables are events within the team that influence effectiveness