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Chapter 5: Groups and Teamwork

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Title: Chapter 5: Groups and Teamwork


1
Chapter 5Groups and Teamwork
  • Amanda Tumbach
  • Gary McInenly
  • Raynard Enriquez
  • Adam Baker

2
Groups and Teams
  • Groups vs. Teams
  • 4 types of teams

3
Groups and Teams
  • used as a way to better utilize employee talents.
  • outperform individuals
  • potential for greater outputs without increasing
    inputs
  • more flexible responsive

4
Groups vs. Teams
  • Group 2 or more individuals, interacting and
    interdependent, who have a stable relationship,
    common goal and perceive themselves as a group
  • Team groups that work close together to a common
    objective, and are accountable to one another
  • not all groups are teams, but all teams are
    groups

5
Problem-Solving (or Process-Improvement)Teams
  • groups of 5-12 employees from the same department
    who meet for a few hours each week to discuss
    ways of improving quality, efficiency and the
    work environment.
  • ideas and suggestions are shared
  • it is found that the use of teamwork varies by
    organizational size

6
  • Quality Circles
  • most problem-solving teams use quality circles
  • a work group of employees (about 8-10) who meet
    regularly to discuss their quality problems,
    investigate causes, recommend solutions, and take
    corrective actions
  • employees participating in quality circles are
    required to learn further skills and methods to
    analyze and solve quality problems

7
Self-Managed (or Self-Directed) Work Teams
  • a group of 10-15 employees who take on
    responsibilities of their former managers
  • These responsibilities include
  • planning scheduling of work
  • assigning tasks to members
  • collectively controlling the pace of work
  • making operating decisions
  • taking action on problems
  • teams select their own members and make
    evaluations on each other

8
Cross-Functional (or Project) Teams
  • a team made up of employees from about the same
    hierarchical level, but from different work areas
    who come together to accomplish a task
  • an effective means of allowing individuals from
    diverse areas within an organization or between
    organizations to exchange info, develop new ideas
    and solve problems, and to coordinate complex
    projects
  • downfall occurs in developmental stages

9
  • Includes
  • Task forces temporary cross-functional teams
  • Committees groups composed of members from
    across departmental lines
  • Skunkworks cross-functional teams that develop
    spontaneously to create new products or work on
    complex problems
  • work in isolation

10
Virtual Teams
  • use of computer technology to tie together
    physically dispersed members in order to achieve
    a common goal
  • collaborate online using communication links
  • can do all things that other teams do, and can
    often be more efficient due to ease of sharing
    info
  • downfall in absence of paraverbal cues, nonverbal
    cues, and social contact

11
From Individual to Team Member
  • Roles
  • Norms
  • Status

12
  • In order for a team to function, individuals have
    to achieve some balance between their own needs
    and the needs of the team.
  • Individuals bring
  • Personality
  • Previous Experience

13
  • Possible pressures individual group members put
    on each other through expectations.
  • Roles
  • Norms
  • Status

14
Roles
  • A set of expected behaviour patterns attributed
    to someone occupying a given position in a social
    unit.
  • Role Identity
  • Role Perception
  • Role Expectation
  • Role Conflict

15
  • Psychological Contract
  • An unwritten agreement that sets out what
    management expects from the employee and vice
    versa.

16
Norms
  • acceptable standards of behaviour within a group
    that are shared by the groups members
  • means of influencing behaviour
  • differ among groups, communities and societies
  • but all entities have norms
  • formalized norms are written up in organizational
    manuals that set out rules and procedures
  • most norms in organizations are informal

17
  • Conformity
  • adjusting your behaviour to align with the norms
    of a group
  • Reference Groups

18
Status
  • a socially defined position or rank given to
    groups or group members by others
  • motivation
  • acquired, ascribed
  • significance?

19
Stages Of Group and Team Development
  • The Five-Stage Model
  • The Punctuated-Equilibrium Model

20
Five-Stage Model
  • 1. Forming
  • The first stage of development, Characterized
    form the saying testing the waters
  • 2. Storming
  • The second stage of development, know as the
    power struggle or intragroup conflict stage

21
  • 3. Norming
  • The third stage of development, Characterized by
    close relationships and cohesiveness
  • 4. Performing
  • The fourth stage of development, were the group
    of team is fully functional and accepted

22
  • 5. Adjourning
  • The final stage of development for temporary
    groups or teams, characterized by concern with
    wrapping up activities rather than task
    performance

23
The Punctuated-Equilibrium Model
  • Phase 1
  • The first meeting in which members of a team
    gather to set the direction of the group. These
    direction become written in stone , Known as
    the period of inertia
  • Phase 2
  • Team moves out of the inertia stage and
    recognizes that work needs to be completed

24
  • Transition
  • This stage is in between phase 1 and 2. The
    stage acts like a alarm clock, heightening
    members awareness to get thing done. This stage
    is characterized by a concentrated burst of
    changes. That revise the direction of the team
    for phase 2

25
Creating Effective Teams
  • Model of Team Effectiveness
  • - Work Design - Composition
  • - Process - Context

26
Model of Team Effectiveness
Work Design Autonomy Skill Variety Task
Identity Task significance
Composition Ability Personality Roles and
Diversity Size Flexibility Preference for teamwork
Team Effectiveness
Process Common Purpose Specific goals Team
efficacy Conflict
Context Adequate Resources Leadership Performance
Evaluation and Rewards
27
Work Design
  • Work together and collectively take
    responsibility for a goal or task.
  • This includes
  • Autonomy independence
  • Skill Variety using different skills and talents
  • Task Identity ability to complete a whole and
    identifiable task
  • Task Significance participation that has a
    substantial impact

28
Composition
  • Select members with their strengths in mind and
    supply task that fit.
  • This includes
  • Ability
  • Personality
  • Roles and Diversity
  • Size
  • Flexibility
  • Preference for teamwork

29
  • Ability
  • technical expertise
  • problem solving and decision making skills
  • interpersonal skills

30
  • Personality
  • Must be careful of team selection based on
    personality.
  • This includes
  • Extroversion
  • Agreeableness
  • Conscientiousness
  • Emotional Stability
  • Groups with these characteristics are most likely
    to be successful.

31
  • Roles
  • There are two types of roles
  • 1. Task oriented roles performed by group
    members to ensure that tasks are accomplished
  • Ex. initiators, Information seekers, information
    providers, elaborators, summarizers, consensus
    makers
  • 2. Maintenance roles carried out to ensure that
    group members maintain good relations
  • Ex. harmonizers, compromisers, gatekeepers,
    encouragers

32
  • Size
  • The smaller the group the faster the
    productivity. (groups consisting of 7
    individuals)
  • The larger the group the slower the productivity,
    but better for gaining diverse input.
  • (groups consisting of 12 or more individuals)

33
  • Flexibility
  • Individuals who can complete more then one task
    or another individuals task.

34
Context
  • Three factors that are most significant
  • 1. Presence of adequate resources
  • 2. Effective leadership
  • 3. Performance evaluation/Reward system

35
  • Adequate Resources
  • support from management and the organization
  • This includes
  • Technology
  • Staffing
  • Assistance
  • Encouragement
  • Information

36
  • Leadership
  • This includes looking after such things as
  • Scheduling
  • Workload
  • Skill Development
  • Conflict resolve
  • How to make/modify decisions
  • higher expectation/positive mood greater
    productivity, lower turnover, better performance

37
  • Performance Evaluation and Rewards
  • getting a member to be individually/jointly
    accountable
  • Some evaluations of performance
  • Team results
  • Effectiveness/Team functioning
  • Personal effectiveness

38
Process
  • Variables of the group include
  • Common purpose
  • Specific Goals
  • Efficacy
  • Accountability Conflict and Social Loafing

39
  • Common Purpose
  • provides direction, momentum, and commitment for
    members
  • broader then a goal
  • Specific Goals
  • facilitate clear communication
  • help maintain employees focus on achieving
    results
  • set milestones

40
  • Team Efficacy
  • Success breads success
  • Cohesiveness helps build team efficiency

Cohesiveness
Low High
Performance Norms
  • What can be done to increase team efficiency?
  • 1. helping the team to achieve small successes
    and skill training
  • 2. provide training to improve workers technical
    and
  • interpersonal skills

41
  • Conflict Levels
  • Relationship conflict can effect a teams
    performance both positively and negatively.
  • Task conflict can improve team effectiveness.
  • Social Loafing and Accountability
  • Social loafing is related to the size of the
    group.
  • Social loafing tendency for individuals to
    expend less effort when working collectively then
    when working individually
  • Successful teams make members individually and
    jointly accountable.

42
Teams and Workforce Diversity
  • Advantages Disadvantages

43
Teams and Work Force Diversity
  • Advantages
    Disadvantages
  • Multiple Perspectives Ambiguity
  • Greater openness to new ideas Complexity
  • Multiple interpretations
    Confusion
  • Increase creativity
    Miscommunication
  • Increase Flexibility
    Difficulty reaching agreements
  • Increase problem-solving skills Difficulty
    agreeing on

  • specific actions



44
Beware! Teams Arent Always the Answer
  • How do you know if teams are for you ?
  • Three tests can be applied
  • 1. Can the work be done better by more then
    one person.
  • 2. Does the work create a common purpose or
    set of goals for the people in the group that is
    more than aggregate of individual goals.
  • 3. Are members of the group interdependent.
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