Title: Organizational Behavior: An Experiential Approach 8/E
1Chapter 10 Group Dynamics and Work Teams
2Objectives
- List the benefits and liabilities of teams
- Identify what requirements must be in place to
set the stage for successful work teams - Describe two models of group development
3Objectives
- Distinguish between group content and group
process - Explain and diagnose group process behaviors that
either help or hinder group effectiveness - Describe and recognize task and maintenance
behaviors
4Benefits and Liabilities of Teams
- Benefits of Teams
- Faster decisions
- More accurate decisions
- Large tasks handled
- Greater understanding of decisions
- Greater commitment to decisions
- Liabilities of Teams
- Greater costs
- Slower decisions
- Less accurate decisions
- Damaged relationships
- More extreme decisions
5Defining Team Effectiveness
- Components of Team Effectiveness
- Output
- Quantity, quality and timeliness of the
productive output of the team - Social Processes
- Capability of members to work interdependently
- Learning
- Knowledge and well-being of members
6Managers Responsibilities in Creating Effective
Work Teams
Use of Team
Manager
Team Context
Team Members
Task
Process
7When Should Teams Be Used to Make Decisions?
- Task Characteristics
- Complex
- Large
- Requires inputs from multiple sources
- Uncertain
- Member Characteristics
- Task and interaction skills
- Motivated and willing to work on the task
- Trusted to work toward organizational goals
- Team Characteristics
- Resources to complete task
- Responsibility and authority to complete the task
8Managing the Team Context
- Secure resources
- Manage teams reputation
- Coordinate with other organizational units
9Managing the Team Context
- External Roles
- Ambassador
- Manage upward relationships
- Market the team
- Lobby for resources
- Scout
- Gather information
- Manage lateral and downward information searches
- Task Coordinator
- Manage interdependencies with other units
- Coordinate deadlines
- Obtain feedback on how team is doing
10Managing Team Members
- Three factors need to be managed
- Member Skills
- Member Motivation
- Member Composition and Diversity
11Managing Team Members Member Skills
- Members need the following skills
- Collaborative problem solving
- Conflict resolution
- Communication
- Goal setting and performance management
- Planning and coordination
12Managing Team Members - Motivation
- Member Motivation
- Minimize social loafing
- Establish the proper level and type of rewards
13Managing Team Members - Motivation
- Manage social loafing
- Social loafing the tendency for individuals to
exert less effort when working in a group - Minimize social loafing by
- Make contributions identifiable
- Design tasks so they are intrinsically motivating
- Assign responsibility and make it public
- Have the team set its own goals
- Reinforce the teams social identity
14Managing Team Members - Motivation
- Design effective reward systems
- Balance team and individual rewards
- Use individual rewards when the task requires
individual contributions - Use team rewards when a group output is needed
15Managing Team Members Composition and Diversity
- Groups that incorporate multiple viewpoints and
perspectives are more effective
- Establish a balance of heterogeneous
members who share group goals with - Task and interpersonal skill diversity
- Demographic diversity
16Managing the Team Process and Task
- Two factors need to be managed
- Stages of group development
- Task and interaction requirements of each stage
17Managing the Team Process and Task Group
Development
Adjourning
Tuckmans Model of Group Development
Performing
Norming
Storming
Forming
18Managing the Team Process and Task Group
Development
- Punctuated Equilibrium Model
- Periods of inertia or equilibrium punctuated by a
transitional period of radical change that occurs
at the midpoint of the groups calendar life,
regardless of variations in duration - Productivity accelerates again right before the
groups time is completed
19Punctuated Equilibrium Model
20Managing the Team Process and Task Content Vs.
Process
Refers to WHAT the group is working on
Refers to HOW the group is functioning
Process
Content
21How Can Groups Be Effective?
- Need both maintenance and task behaviors
- Groups that emphasize content and ignore their
- process are just as likely to fail as groups
that - emphasize process at the cost of task
22Managing the Team Process and Task Task Process
- Task process focuses on how groups accomplish
their work - Set agendas
- Figure out time frames
- Generate ideas
- Choose techniques for making decisions and
solving problems - Test agreement
23Managing the Team Process and Task Task
Behaviors
- Task behaviors contribute to accomplishing the
group task or goal - Initiating
- Seeking or giving information or opinions
- Clarifying and elaborating
- Summarizing
- Consensus testing
- Orienting
24Managing the Team Process and Task Making
Effective Decisions
- Goal is to lengthen the solution evaluation
phase of group decision making by using - Structured discussion principles
- Guidelines emphasize solution generation and
analysis - Second solutions
- Team must generate at least 2 solutions
- Procedures for generating multiple perspectives
- Adopt perspectives of other stakeholders
- Use the two-column method
- Appoint a devils advocate
25Managing the Team Process and Task Building
Cohesion
- Cohesion is the degree to which members want to
be a part of the group - Cohesive groups are better at achieving their
goals (positive or negative) than noncohesive
groups
26Managing the Team Process and Task Building
Cohesion
- Cohesion can be increased by
- Small group size
- Group success
- Common threat
- Exclusivity
- Perceived similarity among members
- Intergroup competition
27Managing the Team Process and Task Maintenance
Process
- How do groups function to meet members
psychological and relationship needs? - Leadership
- Membership
- Norms
- Communication
- Influence
- Conflict management
28Managing the Team Process and Task Maintenance
Behaviors
- Creating a good climate for work and
- relationships that permit maximum use of
- member resources
- Gate-keeping
- Encouraging
- Harmonizing and compromising
- Standard setting and testing
- Using humor
29Managing the Team Process and Task -
Self-Oriented Emotional Behavior
- Such behavior interferes with effective group
functioning - Issues that occur and reoccur at various points
in a groups development - Identity
- Control and power
- Goals
- Acceptance and intimacy
30Styles of Reducing Tension and Expressing Emotion
Pure Types
Friendly Helper (tender emotions)
Tough Battler (tough emotions)
Logical Thinker (denial of all emotions)
31Effectively Using Our Emotional Resources
- Accept our personal feelings
- Understand feelings in a group
- Identify what triggers emotion
- Express emotion differently and ask for feedback
32Group Norms - Defined
- A norm is an unwritten, often implicit, rule that
defines the - attitudes and behaviors characterize a good
versus a bad group member - OR
- group members acceptable behavior, attitudes,
and feelings
33Transition from Group to Team
Team
Practice and Effort
Group
34Teambuilding
- Teambuilding efforts encourage team members to
- Establish goals and priorities
- Define team member roles
- Examine and determine team task and
decision-making procedures - Examine and determine team interpersonal
relationships and norms
35Types 0f Organizational Teams
- Self-managed teams - Members determine how the
team will accomplish goals and work process(es) -
- Virtual teams - Geographically dispersed members
work across time, space and organizational
boundaries - Multicultural teams - Members of different ethnic
backgrounds who share same nationality - Multinational teams - Members of different
nationalities