Management Chapter 12.
Group
Collection of people who interact to undertake a task but do not necessarily perform as a unit or achieve significant performance improvements
Traditional work groups
no managerial responsibility
Quality circles
voluntary groups of people drawn from various production teams who make suggestions about quality
Transnational teams
work groups composed of multinational members whose activities span multiple countries
Social facilitation effect
working harder when in a group than when working alone
Team
A group whose members have complementary skills and are committed to a common purpose or set of performance goals for which they hold themselves mutually accountable.
Avoidance
A method of dealing with risk by deliberately keeping away from it (e.g. if a person wanted to avoid the risk of being killed in an airplane crash, he/she might choose never to fly in a plane).
Storming
A phase of team development that is marked by conflict. Stress: The pressure or tension exerted on a material object. Subassembly: An assembled part that is a part of a larger assembly.
Norming
A process of arriving at mutually acceptable rules, regulations, and standards of behavior.
Collaboration
A style of dealing with conflict emphasizing both cooperation and assertiveness to maximize both parties' satisfaction.
Accommodation
A style of dealing with conflict involving cooperation on behalf of the other party but not being assertive about one's own interests.
Competing
A style of dealing with conflict involving strong focus on one's own goals and little or no concern for the other person's goals
Informing
A team strategy that entails making decisions with the team and then informing outsiders of its intentions.
Parading
A team strategy that entails simultaneously emphasizing internal team building and achieving external visibility.
Probing
A team strategy that requires team members to interact frequently with outsiders, diagnose their needs, and experiment with solutions
Mediator
A third party who intervenes to help others manage their conflict.
Advisory relationships
Are created when teams with problems call on centralized sources of expert knowledge.
supervisory
At the _____ leadership level, the team leader handles most (if not all) of the leadership duties, including assigning tasks, making and explaining decisions, training team members, and managing members one-on-one.
Stages of development
Forming, storming, norming, performing, and adjourning
Forming
Characterized by a great deal of uncertainty about the group's purpose, structure, and leadership. Complete when members have begun to think of themselves as a group.
Social Loafing
Decrease in effort and productivity that occurs when an individual works in a group instead of alone.
Cohesiveness
Degree to which group members are attracted to each other and are motivated to stay in the group
audit relationships
Develop when people not directly in the chain of command evaluate the methods and performances of other teams
Roles
Different sets of expectations for how different individuals should behave
Work-flow relationships
Emerges as materials are passed from one group to another.
Service relationships
Exist when top management centralizes an activity to which a large number of other units must gain access
social facilitation
Group members believe that their efforts matter and that others will not take advantage of them.
Autonomous work group
Groups that control decisions about and execution of a complete range of tasks.
Superordinate goals
Higher-level goals taking priority over specific individual or group goals
Adjourning
In Tuckman's Stages of development; Step five: The process of "unforming" the group, that is, letting go of the group structure and moving on.
Team maintenance specialist
Individual who develops and maintains team harmony
Liaison relationships
Involve intermediaries between teams.
Semi autonomous work group
Make decisions about managing and carrying out major production activities with outside support for quality control and maintence
Team effectiveness
Productive output, satisfaction, and committed members define?
Management teams
Teams that coordinate and provide direction to the subunits under their jurisdiction and integrate work among subunits.
virtual teams
Teams that use computer technology to tie together physically dispersed members in order to achieve a common goal while working online. Absence of paraverbal and nonverbal cues; limited social context; and ability to overcome time and space constraints--differ from face-to-face.
Self-designing teams
Teams with the responsibilities of autonomous work groups, plus control over hiring, firing and deciding what tasks members perform
Clear performance goals exist.
Under which of the following conditions can social loafing be avoided?
Training for nonmanagers focuses on technical skills
Which of following is true of a traditional work environment?
They do not necessarily perform as a unit.
Which of the following differentiates a group from a team?
Most information is "management property.
Which of the following holds true for a traditional work environment?
Increased productivity
Which of the following is a potential contribution of teams?
Compromise
Which style of conflict involves moderate attention to both parties' concerns
self-managed teams
autonomous work groups in which workers are trained to do all or most of the jobs in a unit, have no immediate supervisor, and make decisions previously made by first-line supervisors
Project and development teams
Work on long term projects but disband once the project is over
Work Teams
a small number of people with complementary skills who hold themselves mutually accountable for pursuing a common purpose, achieving performance goals, and improving interdependent work processes
Gate keeper
a team member who keeps abreast of current developments and provides the team with relevant info
Task specialist
an individual who has more advanced job-related skills and abilities than other group members possess
Parallel teams
composed of members from various jobs who provide recommendations to manager about important issuse that run parallell to the teams production process. they are sometimes temporary depending on there aims.
Relating
exhibiting social and political awareness, caring for team members, and building trust.
Performing
group channels its energies into performing its task
Conflict
process in which one party perceives that its interests are being opposed or negatively affected by another party
scouting
seeking information from managers, peers, and specialists, and investigating problems systematically
Norms
shared beliefs about how people should think and behave, can be positive or negative
stabilization relationships
this working relationship involve auditing before the fact.