Management Study Guide: Effective Teamwork
Trust
A psychological state comprising the intention to accept vulnerability based on positive expectations of the intent or behavior of another person
Team Identity
All members know one another, clarified team vision, defined team procedures, help everyone become comfortable with one another. This helps everyone support one another and achieve the singular team goal
Task Interdependence
Allows teams to complete difficult tasks by working together and collaborating
Conflict
An emotional or cognitive response that occurs when interests, perspectives, and behaviors of one individual or groups explicitly differ from those of another individual or groups
Identification-Based Trust
Based on common mental models and values; increases with person's social identity with the team; high level of trust
Calculus-Based Trust
Based on deterrence; fragile and limited potential because dependent on punishment; low level of trust
Work Groups
Clearly focused leader, individual accountability, group's purpose is same as organization's mission, characterized by straightforward and independent tasks, individual work products, predetermined work structure
Vertical Teams
Composed of a manager and his or her subordinates in the formal chain or command, usually in one functional department (finance or human resources, for instance); also known as functional teams
Horizontal Teams
Composed of employees from about the same hierarchical level but from several different departments in the organization. This allows for a multi-perspective approach to be utilized for problem solving purposes; also known as cross-functional teams
Cohesive Teams
Conflict may be suppressed within these types of teams
Accommodating
Conflict response style that should be used when an issue is more important to the other party, when a person seeks to build some social capital for the future, or when it is important to preserve friendly relationships
Team Goals
Desired and valued future towards which team members are working; become the foundation of the team's vision thus motivating the team while providing a common purpose and direction
Task Conflict
Differences in ideas, opinions, and viewpoints about task content; can be constructive if well managed; especially important when making important decision, solving complex problems; also known as substantive conflict
Process Conflict
Disagreement on how to work together as a team or approach a task; often associated with who is doing what, punctuality issues, timing; can be minimized by agreeing to rules ahead of time (planning)
Enhance Ability of Team Members to Work Together in the Future
Done by building a shared sense of purpose and a strong level of mutual trust; teams help to expand an individual's personal network of relationships in the organization
Pooled Interdependence
Each organization department or business unit performs completely separate functions. While departments may not directly interact and do not directly depend on each other in the polled interdependence model, each does contribute individual pieces to the same overall puzzle
Self-Directed Teams
Empower workers by giving every team member authority and responsibility for team building and team progress. Team-building and decision-making roles have been assigned to different team members, with each responsible for participating in processes that help the team progress; teams must encourage individual responsibility, clarity of roles, and teamwork among team members to be effective
Avoidance
Evading conflict because disagreements are perceived to create tension. Interpersonal problems do not get resolved, which causes long-term frustration; should be utilized when the issue is trivial or when a delay will enable the individual to gather more information or will enable both sides to cool down
Team Norms
Expected team behaviors
Avoidance, Accommodating, Compromising, Forcing, Collaborating
Five different conflict response styles
Meeting, Working, Communication, Leadership, Consideration
Five groups of team norms
Contribute to Team Members' Satisfaction
Individuals are more likely to feel connected to the team and to contribute to its mission if they believe that the experience will enhance their personal development and support the overall mission of the organization
Departmental Teams
Members have similar or complimentary skills and are located in the same unit of functional structure; minimal task interdependence
Virtual Teams
Members operate across space, time, and organizational boundaries, similar to geographically distributed teams
Skunkworks
Multi-skilled entities usually located away from the organization and are relatively free of its hierarchy; often initiated by an entrepreneurial team leader who borrows people and resources to create a product or develop a service
Sequential Interdependence
Occurs when one unit in the overall process produces an output necessary for the performance by the next unit; an assembly line and leads to efficient operations
Social Loafing
Occurs when team members disengage from the team process and fail to contribute to the team's recommendation or other deliverable; occurs when people exert less effort when working in groups than when working alone
Emotional/Interpersonal/Relational Conflict
Often based on accusation targeted personality ("you are..."); often due to people taking task related comments personally and feeling threatened/attacked; dynamics of blame, disrespect, offense; tends to be very destructive as coworkers experiencing interpersonal tension tend to be less satisfied with the group in which they are working and tend to feel more negative about their group when they dislike or are disliked by others in the group
Reciprocal Interdependence
Output of one department becomes the input of another, and is cyclical; at highest level of interaction these models are the most complex to manage as one unit can change the rules and affect everyone at any time
Compromising
Reach an agreement quickly because prolonged conflicts can distract people from their work and cause bitter feelings. Using this approach can result in less-effective solutions; should be used when goals of both sides are equally important or when a temporary, expedient solution is needed
Forcing
Reach an agreement that satisfies your needs rather than the needs of the other person because staying committed to an issue is more important than upsetting someone else; should be used when faced with a crisis or a need to enact an unpopular decision
Functional Roles
Rely on the skills and experiences that we bring to the project or problem in hand
Team
Shared leadership roles, individual and mutual accountability, purpose is specific to the team, characterized by complex and independent tasks, collective work products, open-ended discussions and problem solving are encouraged; A group of two or more people with complementary skills who are committed to working together to achieve a specific objective
Collaborating
Solve a problem together because the positions of both individuals involved are perceived as equally important. Often this approach is the only approach that will resolve a problem because both parties are committed to the solution and are satisfied that they have been treated fairly; should be used when both parties' views are too important to compromise and when commitment from both sides is needed
Working Norms
Standards, deadlines, distribution of work, work review process, and accountability (addressing those who do not follow through on their commitments
Tuckman's Model of Team Development
States that teams often undergo a five-stage process of group development that includes forming, storming, norming, performing, and adjourning. These stages tend to correspond with the five steps involved in a team's decision-making process
Faultlines
Subgroups or coalitions that emerge naturally within teams, typically along various demographic lines; split the teams into subgroups based on shared demographic characteristics; when these emerge, subgroups rarely collaborate with other subgroups, instead tending to share knowledge only within their subgroup
Manager-Led Teams
Teams in which the manager acts as the team leader. The manager is responsible for monitoring and managing performance processes and reporting the team's progress to the rest of the organization. These may be either functional (vertical) teams or cross-functional (horizontal) teams; Massachusetts General Hospital Example
Geographically Distributed Teams
Teams that are made up of geographically or organizationally dispersed members who rely heavily on electronic tools such as e-mail, fax, voicemail, telephone, and videoconferencing to interact with one another. Team members may also have different cultural backgrounds and styles of work that impeded open communication
Project Teams/Task Force
Teams that may be manager-led or self directed but can be differentiated from other teams in that they are designed to undertake special projects that are outside the scope of normal business activity; short duration; task oriented and operationally focused; Motorola RAZR example
Collocated Teams
Teams that use a significant amount of face-to-face communication to make operating decisions. They operate in close proximity to one another, have a good deal of social interaction, and give one another quick feedback on the team's progress. This closeness allows team members feel more connected to each other (can view other team members' facial expressions, physical appearances, and body language); Whole Foods Example
Team Roles
Tend to be based on our personality or preferred style of action
Specific, Difficult, and Shared
The characteristics of effective team goals
Team Cohesiveness
The degree of attraction people feel toward a team and their motivation to remain members; influenced by member similarity, team size, member interaction, somewhat difficult entry, team success, external competition and challenges
Superordinate Goals
The overlying goals that are achieved by the entire team
Adjourning
The stage that occurs when a team has completed its task and the team is disbanded
Performing
The stage that occurs when team members adopt and play roles that enhance the activities of the group; team members have bridged their differences in support of completing the task
Forming
The stage that occurs when team members define the task that is to be done and how that task is to be accomplished, setting the ground rules for the team
Storming
The stage that occurs when team members experience conflicts about interpersonal issues and differences in perspective; team members can become polarized around interpersonal issues, which are heightened by high levels of personal conflict
Norming
The stage that occurs when team members uncover ways to create new standards that encourage more collaborative behavior; team members begin to figure out ways to create new standards that encourage more collaborative behavior; opinions are shared, and as a result, team members accept the differences of fellow group members and group cohesion and harmony are established
Produce Meaningful Results
The team's output should meet or exceed the standards of quantity, quality, and timeliness expected by the team's clients; every member's personal agenda is subservient to the collective goal
Supportive Team Norms
These can hold relationship conflict at bay during constructive debates
Creative Teams
To create something new, to innovate
Tactical Teams
To execute and operationalize well-defined plans
Problem-Solving Teams
To resolve problems on an ongoing basis
Consideration Norms
Treating others with mutual respect and being considerate of members' needs
Production/Service/Leadership Teams
Typically multi-skilled members collectively produce a common product or service or making ongoing decisions; usually an assembly-line type of interdependence (leadership teams tend to have tight interactive interdependence)
Leadership Norms
What leadership structure should be used and how leadership should be exercised
Communication Norms
When communication should take place, who is responsible, how it should be done, and how to discuss feelings about the team or members especially in regard to issues of conflict
Meeting Norms
When, where, and how often to have gatherings; includes expectations for attendance, timelines, and preparation
Groupthink
"Everyone agrees so i don't want to be the one to disagree"
Conflict
A process in which one party perceives that its interests are being opposed or negatively affected by another party
Knowledge-Based Trust
Based on predictability and competence; fairly robust; medium level of trust
Advisory Teams
E.g., committees, advisory councils, work councils, review panels; provide recommendations to decision makers
Process Losses
Resources extended toward team development and maintenance rather than tasks