Title: Perception Versus Reality:
1Perception Versus Reality Using Self-Reports to
Predict Factors Leading to High Performance in
Project Teams
Tony Ammeter Department of Engineering
Management University of Missouri-Rolla Janet M.
Dukerich Graduate School of Business University
of Texas at Austin
2High Performance Teams
-
- Research Question
- What characteristics of teams and team leaders
lead to high performance? - One definition of high performance
- Achieves breakthrough performance on relevant
metrics - E.g., dramatic reductions in the project cycle
time and/or reductions in overall project cost
3Why Study Project Teams?
- Project teams are important in today's
workplace - Increasing usage of short-term project teams to
solve a variety of tasks (e.g., Cohen Bailey,
1997) - Often the only way of organizing for technical
expertise, speed, and innovation - Challenges of project teams
- Complex tasks (uncertainty, multidisciplinary,
etc.) - Need to quickly develop good working
relationships (e.g., Bryman et. al, 1987
McGrath, 1984) - Project teams exhibit wide variation in quality
of output
4Research Plan
- Interview selected high performance teams in
multiple industries - Develop survey for construction industry teams
- Use survey results to determine what makes a team
achieve cost and schedule performance - Compare perception with reality
- Build a toolkit to help teams achieve high
performance
5Structured Interview Process
- Step 1 Developing the interview guide
- Focus group and literature review used to develop
general categories of interest (prior
instrumentation Miles Huberman, 1984) - Open-ended interview questions, e.g.
- How do you know if a team is a high performance
team? - What was done during the life of the project that
contributed to team performance? - Step 2 Developing a theme list
- Subset of interviews used to determine recurrent
topics of discussion (broad categories of
themes Bjorkegen, 1989) - Step 3 Coding the interview data onto the themes
- Step 4 Reducing the theme list through frequency
counts
6Interviews with Project Teams
- Project teams interviewed
- 8 high performance projects, 1 less-than-high
performance - 51 team members interviewed
- Team size ranged from 5 to 10 members
- Engineering Design, Construction, Software,
Military - Project cost 10 M to 1.4 B
- Range 10 under budget to 15 over
- Schedule 6 months to 3 years
- Range 18 ahead of schedule to on-time
7Themes From Interviews
-
- Team orientation sense of belonging
- Critical project leader behaviors
- Good team communication
- Ownership of project success
- Co-location / physical isolation of team members
- Formal and informal team building
- Sense of competition with other or previous
projects - Team perks
- High level support for project
- Project team survey questions were generated from
these themes
8Themes From Interviews
-
- Team orientation sense of belonging
- You are part of a team, so you cant let others
down - Things dont fall through the cracks because
people are working together - Critical project leader behaviors
- Forces tremendous work ethicand collegiality
and communication among members - Works to keep members informed of the status of
the project - Good team communication
- Frequent useful team meetings and status reports
9Themes From Interviews
-
- Ownership of project success
- Tenure on project tied to sense of consistency
of the intent - Co-location / physical isolation of team members
- Camaraderie, cooperation, and an accomodating
team spirit - Formal and informal team building
- Team building (formal, informal) was recognized
as impacting team performance - However, members not participating in team
building also mentioned sense of team
orientation
10Themes From Interviews
-
- Sense of competition with other or previous
projects - Provides practical checks as to how they are
doing relative to benchmark - Reaffirms that they are distinctive and really
high performance - Team perks and rewards
- Rewards usually given for performance at critical
junctures - Sometimes rules were bent to give awards
- High level support for project
- Greater access to resources
- Team members work harder, plan and execute
better, give more attention because of high
visibility
11Project Team Survey
- Surveys were sent to core or leadership team
within construction projects -
- Respondents rated their project on specific
questions about - Team member characteristics, leader behaviors,
team processes - Perceptions of project performance
- Respondents also provided data on
- Project budget and schedule (planned and actual)
- Definition of high performance
12Survey Responses
- 278 respondents (25 response rate)
- Project Managers, Project Engineers, Construction
Managers, Lead Engineers, Project Control
Managers - 151 projects represented
- Project cost .01 M to 745 M (median 62 M)
- 37 under budget to 57 over
- Schedule 1 month to 7 years (median 1.6 years)
- 43 ahead of schedule to 83 behind
- Project Teams
- Size 12 members (range of 3 to 40)
13Data Analysis Factor Analyses
- What combination of survey questions best
represents the underlying themes in our
qualitative data? - Team Member Characteristics
- Team Identification (18 items, ? 0.96)
- We had a sense of belonging to the team
- We felt enriched and enjoyed working together
- We had a sense of ownership of the project
- Team Building (5 items, ? 0.86)
- Our team participated in formal / informal
team building - Our team recognized and celebrated successes
14Data Analysis Factor Analyses
- Leader Characteristics
- Leader Behaviors (19 items, ? 0.97)
- Our leader communicated the projects goals
- Our leader communicated the teams values
- Our leader aligned team members goals with
the projects goals - Measures from previous research
- Identification (6 items, ? 0.77 Mael
Ashforth, 1992) - When someone praised this project, it felt like
a personal compliment - Project Image (4 items, ? 0.77 Luhtanen
Crocker, 1992) - In general, others respected this project
15Dependent Variables
- Perceptual measures of project performance
- Perceptions of Project High Performance
- To what extent do you think your project,
overall, was a high performance project? - Perceptions of Team High Performance
- To what extent do you think your project team,
overall, was a high performance project team? - Objective measures of project performance
- Cost Growth (Actual Total Cost - Initial
Predicted Cost) - Initial Predicted Cost
- Schedule Growth (Actual Total Duration -
Initial Predicted Duration ) - Initial Predicted Duration
16Results of Regression Analyses
Significance Tests p lt .01 p lt .001
17Discussion What predicts high performance in
project teams?
- Qualitative interviews of team members
- Team / Member Characteristics, Leader Behaviors
- Surveys - perceptual measures of outcomes
- Team Identification
- Leader Behaviors
- Image
- Surveys - actual cost growth
- Leader Behaviors
- Image
- Surveys - actual schedule growth
- Team Identification
-
-
Qualitative
Outcomes
Objective
18Study Limitations
- Limitations of research methodology
- We have identified cross-sectional associations
- We cannot prove causality
- We have conducted surveys of naturally-occurring
teams - We cannot control for many threats to internal
validity - Limitations of research sample
- Interviews were primarily of members high
performance teams - We may have restriction in the number of themes
- Surveys were exclusively of members construction
industry core teams - We may have limited external validity
19Summary
- Predicting High Performance in Project Teams
- Team Identification, Leader Behaviors and Image
impact perceptual measures of project team
performance - Leader Behaviors and Image impact cost
performance - Team Identification impacts schedule performance
- Contributions to Practice
- Based on these results, a toolkit for the
selection and training of project team leaders
has been developed - Contributions to Theory
- We have a grounded (field) study to support
further theoretical investigation - We have evidence for some discrepancies between
anecdotal beliefs and actual predictors of team
performance