Title: PPG: Developing a SelfDirected Work Force
1PPG Developing a Self-Directed Work Force
- Case Facilitators
- Tim Caldwell
- Brian Esquivel
- Michael Hannebaum
- Anish Joshi
- Joey Prebynski
- Karey Schreck
2Contributions of Teams
- Act as a building block for organizational
structure. - Increase productivity, improve quality, and
reduce costs. - Enhance speed and be powerful forces for
innovation and change. - Provide benefits for their members. As a useful
learning mechanism, the team can teach members
about the company and about themselves as they
acquire new skills and performance strategies.
3The New Team Environment
4Team vs. Work Group
- A team is made up of people (usually small in
number) with complementary skills who trust one
another and are committed to - common purpose
- common performance goals
- common approach for which they hold themselves
mutually accountable. - A work group is a collection of people who work
in the same area or have been drawn together to
undertake a task. - Do not necessarily come together as a unit and
achieve significant performance improvements.
5Types of Teams
6Types of Teams
- What is a self-directed work force and how does
it function? - Is self-directed different in any way from
self-managed?
7Team Autonomy Continuum
8Group Activities
- Forming group members attempt to lay the ground
rules for what types of behavior are acceptable. - Storming hostilities and conflict arise, and
people jockey for positions of power and status. - Norming group members agree on their shared
goals, and norms and closer relationships
develop. - Performing the group channels its energies into
performing the tasks.
9PPG Developing a Self-Directed Work Force
- What does management gain (and lose) with a
self-directed work force?
10Building Effective Teams
- The productive output of the team must meet or
exceed the standards of quality and quantity set
by customers inside and outside the company. - Team members must realize satisfaction of their
personal needs. - Team members must remain committed to working
together. - Must avoid social loafing working less hard and
being less productive when in a group. - Must increase social facilitation effect
working harder when in a group than when working
alone.
11Motivating Teamwork
- Important Aspects in Motivating Teamwork
- Meaningful tasks that motivate people
- Accountability-mutual commitment and trust
- Tie rewards to team performance
12Team Cohesiveness
- Cohesiveness refers to the attractiveness of a
team to its members, motivation levels of members
to remain in the team, and the degree to which
team members influence one another. - Cohesiveness is important to both member
satisfaction and performance
13Building Team Cohesiveness
- Recruit members with similar attitudes, values,
and backgrounds - Maintain high entrance and socialization
standards - Keep the team small
- Help the team succeed and publicize its success
- Be a participative leader
- Present a challenge from outside the team
- Tie rewards to team performance
14Whole Foods
- Store divided into individual teams
- Meat, Produce, Grocery, Front End, Bakery,
Specialty, Whole Bodies - Hierarchy (or lack thereof)
15Whole Foods (contd)
- Hiring Process
- Submit application at local store
- Preliminary interviews with store team leader
(STL) - Day 1 and Day 2 training with teamwork activities
- 1 month probationary period working on team
- Teams votes to add or reject new team member
- As a team member
- Participate in the regular Team Builds
activities (they normally go hang out together
afterwards) - Participate in buying decisions
- Receive social and financial rewards (Store
Outstanding Team Member)
16Whole Foods (contd.)
- I like being on a team
- If you miss a shift, then you feel like you let
your team down. - I love the team concept
- Pay is a lot better too, you start off at 10/hr
17Selecting Team Members
- What type of employee does this arrangement
require? - How do you make sure you get these people?
188 Dimensions of Employee Performance
- Communication Skills-the ability to speak and
write clearly, understandably, and concisely,
listen attentively to others, and inform others
of important information. - Judgment-the ability to develop alternative
courses of action and make decisions that are
based on logical assumptions and that reflect
factual information. - Problem Solving-the ability to seek and use
information, understand and develop unique
solutions to problems, learn new information, and
anticipate and identify problems. - Organizing Skills-the ability to develop
efficient strategies and procedures for
accomplishing tasks, sequence tasks according to
priority, and make efficient use of own time. - Thoroughness and Accuracy-the ability to follow
tasks through completion, check work for errors
and ensure accuracy, keep track of important
details, and not take short cuts. - Initiative-the ability to come up with ideas for
improvement, show consistent energy, start work
quickly, stay busy, take initiative to correct
problems without being told, show pride in high
quality work, and work well without direction. - Performance Reliability and Adaptability-the
ability to maintain a good attendance record,
come to work on time, consistently complete
assigned tasks, easily adapt to changes in
policies, procedures, or directions, and handle
constructive criticism non-defensively. - Interpersonal Skills-the ability to get along
with others, work together and help others when
needed, and work through problems and
disagreements with co-workers.
19Hiring Process Simulation
- Simulation 1 Individual
- Simulation 2 Teaching
- Simulation 3 Group
20PPG Developing a Self-Directed Work Force
- Is the PPG situation appropriate for a
self-directed work force?
21Utilizing a Self-Directed Team
- Self-directed teams are most frequently found in
manufacturing, but are utilized in many other
industries - Approximately 68 of all fortune 1000 companies
utilize some form of self-directed work teams - Ford
- Proctor Gamble
- Federal Express
- Lockheed Martin
22Utilizing a Self-Directed Team
- Self-directed teams are
- More productive
- Have better safety records
- Provide better quality products
- More satisfying for team members
- Even with these benefits, a team environment is
often resisted. Why?
23Resisting a Team Environment
- Typically a team environment is resisted due to
- Members not wanting to take on additional
responsibility - Change from being an individual contributor to a
team member can be difficult - Unwillingness to perform HR functions if part of
team responsibilities
24Why Groups Sometimes Fail
- Teams is a word used by management to describe
putting people into groups - There may not be any team chemistry
- Teams are often launched with little or no
training or support systems - Giving up control is difficult for managers from
traditional systems - Managers may not know what it takes to make a
team successful
25Controlling the Direction of Teams
- How can PPG exercise control in a self-directed
work situation?
26Controlling the Direction of Teams
- Management must provide a common purpose to
achieve the organizations goals - Performance measures should be tied into these
goals - Team members should participate in the goal
creation and performance measurement process
27PPG Povliks Goal
- Develop a fully self-directed work force that
fostered innovation, cut costs, and adapted
quickly to adversity. - Transformation of the corporate structure was
achieved over several decades -
28Union Free Plants
- Crestline, Ohio (1958)
- Unions created an adversarial working environment
- Work assignments were divided by seniority and
job classification which afforded plant managers
little discretion in assigning work
29Flexibility Cooperative Labor Relations
- Tipton Meadville Pennsylvania (1966-1968)
- Eliminated time clocks
- Placed workers on salary
- Reduced number of job levels (14 v. 67)
30Company Restructuring
- Chehalis, Washington (1986)
- Whatever you do dont try to implement new
technology and a new approach to managing people
at the same time - Goal State of the art manufacturing facility
based around six semi-autonomous work teams.
31HR Challenge
- Perry, Georgia (1989)
- Employee selection became difficult because of
the changing roles of the workers. - 8 Dimensions of Employee Performance
32Growing Pains
- Berea, Kentucky (1988)
- Initially semi-autonomous teams
- Few models to mimic
- Lacked a endpoint (moving target)
33Adjustments
- Addition of Situational Leadership
34PPG Self-directed work teams
- Did PPG create effective self-directed teams?
35PPG Self-directed work teams
- Creating self-directed work team is a long term
goal. - System Engineer programmed a new robot.
- Technicians and support workers solved day-to-day
problems. - Technicians were qualified to play in 2 to 3
areas. - Support workers worked on a rotation basis.
36PPG Self-directed work teams
- What type of work (tasks) and task environment
would seem to benefit from a self-directed
approach to work force management?
37PPG Production tasks
- Material movement and supply.
- Checking production schedule.
- Juggle production schedule.
- Arrange to have replacement silkscreen shipped
quickly to the plant.
38PPG Production tasks (contd.)
- Workers ordered rolls of vinyl.
- Workers followed up with vinyl suppliers whenever
they experienced quality problems. - Phoned in requests for slight modifications in
boxes used to ship products. - Design new tool racks and tables.
- Improve productivity and safety.
39PPG Unresolved HR tasks / decisions
- Support workers felt they lacked status when
compared with technicians. - Subtle distinction had crept in plant culture.
- Support workers saw technicians as obstacle to
their own chances of promotion. - Team coordinators opined they were training
people to take over their own jobs. - Recognition and rewards were not satisfactory.
40PPG Unresolved HR tasks / decisions (contd.)
- Disagreements about overtime and vacation policy.
- Workers demanded use of voting system in handling
of day-to-day issues. - Management and employees had different views as
regards conducting peer review.
41Moving Along the Continuum
- Can PPG make the leap from self-directing work
groups to a self-designing team?
42PPG Vision for Future
- Video presentation June 6, 2007 Forbes
interview with CEO Charles Bunch
43PPG Comparison Chart 1991 vs. 2007
- GEOGRAPHIC
- SEGMENTS 1991
- Net Sales (Millions)
- U.S. 3,624
- Europe 1,497
- Canada 408
- Other 144
- Total 5,673
- GEOGRAPHIC
- SEGMENTS 2006
- Net sales (Millions)
- The Americas
- U.S. 6,878
- Other Americas 983
- Europe 2,347
- Asia 829
- Total 11,037
44PPG Comparison Chart 1991 vs. 2007
- INDUSTRY SEGMENTS -
- Net Sales (Millions) 1991
- Coatings and Resins 2,185
- Glass 2,186
- Chemicals 1,100
- Other 202
- Total 5,673
- INDUSTRY SEGMENTS -
- Net sales (Millions) 2006
- Industrial Coatings 3,236
- Performance and Applied
- Coatings 3,088
- Optical and Specialty
- Materials 1,001
- Commodity Chemicals 1,483
- Glass 2,229
- Total 11,037
45References
- Bateman, Thomas S. and Scott A. Snell.
Management Leading Collaborating in a
Competitive World 7th Edition McGraw-Hill/Irwin,
2007. pgs 460479 - PPG Corporate Website http//corporateportal.ppg.c
om/ppg/ - Interview with CEO Charles Bunch
http//www.forbes.com/video/?videofvn/business/ja
l_ppgceo060607 - Tata, Jasmine. Team Self-management,
Organizational Structure, and Judgments of Team
Effectiveness. Journal of Managerial Issues. Vol.
XVI Number 2 Summer 2004 248-265 - PPG 10K information http//www.secinfo.com/dsvRr.b
1q.c.htm