Title: Management 11e John Schermerhorn
1Management 11e John Schermerhorn
- Chapter 16
- Teams and Teamwork
2Planning Ahead Chapter 16 Study Questions
- How do teams contribute to organizations?
- What are the current trends in the use of teams?
- How do teams work?
- How do teams make decisions?
3Study Question 1 How do teams contribute to
organizations?
- Team
- A small group of people with complementary
skills, who work together to achieve a shared
purpose and hold themselves mutually accountable
for performance results - Teamwork
- The process of people actively working together
to accomplish common goals - Team and teamwork roles for managers
- Supervisor serving as the appointed head of a
formal work unit - Network facilitator serving as a peer leader an
network hub for a special task force - Participant serving as a helpful contributing
member of a project team - External coach serving as the external convenor
or sponsor of a problem-solving team staffed by
others
4Figure 16.1 Team and teamwork roles for managers
5Study Question 1 How do teams contribute to
organizations?
- Synergy
- The creation of a whole that is greater than the
sum of its parts - A team uses its membership resources to the
fullest and thereby achieves through collective
action far more than could be achieved otherwise - Usefulness of teams
- More resources for problem solving
- Improved creativity and innovation
- Improved quality of decision making
- Greater commitments to tasks
- Higher motivation through collective action
- Better control and work discipline
- More individual need satisfaction
6Study Question 1 How do teams contribute to
organizations?
- Common problems in teams
- Personality conflicts
- Individual differences in work styles
- Ambiguous agendas
- Ill-defined problems
- Poor readiness to work
- Lack of motivation
- Conflicts with other deadlines or priorities
- Lack of team organization or progress
- Meetings that lack purpose or structure
- Members coming to meetings unprepared
7Study Question 1 How do teams contribute to
organizations?
8Study Question 1 How do teams contribute to
organizations?
- Formal teams
- Officially recognized and supported by the
organization - Specifically created to perform essential tasks
- Managers and leaders serve linking pin roles
- Informal groups
- Not recognized on organization charts
- Not officially created for an organizational
purpose - Emerge as part of the informal structure and from
natural or spontaneous relationships among people
- Include interest, friendship, and support groups
- Can have positive performance impact
- Can help satisfy social needs
9Study Question 2 What are the current trends in
the use of teams?
- Committees, project teams, and task forces
- Committees
- People outside their daily job assignments work
together in a small team for a specific purpose - Task agenda is narrow, focused, and ongoing
- Projects teams or task forces
- People from various parts of an organization work
together on common problems, but on a temporary
basis - Official tasks are very specific and time defined
- Disbands after task is completed
10Study Question 2 What are the current trends in
the use of teams?
11Study Question 2 What are the current trends in
the use of teams?
- Cross-functional teams
- Members come from different functional units of
an organization - Team works on a specific problem or task with the
needs of the whole organization in mind - Teams are created to knock down walls
separating departments - Employee involvement teams
- Groups of workers who meet on a regular basis
outside of their formal assignments - Have the goal of applying their expertise and
attention to continuous improvement - Quality circles represent a common form of
employee involvement teams
12Study Question 2 What are the current trends in
the use of teams?
Virtual teams Teams of people who work together
and solve problems through largely
computer-mediated rather than face-to-face
interactions
13Study Question 2 What are the current trends in
the use of teams?
14Study Question 2 What are the current trends in
the use of teams?
- Self-managing work teams
- Teams of workers whose jobs have been redesigned
to create a high degree of task interdependence
and who have been given authority to make many
decisions about how to do the required work - Also known as autonomous work groups
15Study Question 2 What are the current trends in
the use of teams?
- Typical self-management responsibilities
- Planning and scheduling work
- Training members in various tasks
- Sharing tasks
- Meeting performance goals
- Ensuring high quality
- Solving day-to-day operating problems
- In some cases, hiring and firing team members
16Study Question 2 What are the current trends in
the use of teams?
17Figure 16.2 Organizational and management
implications of self-managing work teams
18Study Question 2 What are the current trends in
the use of teams?
- Team Building
- Activities that analyze teams and make changes to
improve performance - May include meetings, games and outdoor
activities - Effective Teams
- Perform tasks
- Satisfy members
- Transform resource inputs into product outputs
- Pride in performance and accomplishments
- Members are willing to work together in the
future
19Study Question 3 How do teams work?
- Resource input factors that influence group
process in the pursuit of team effectiveness - Resources and setting
- Nature of the task
- Team size
- Membership characteristics
- Group process
- The way the members of any team work together as
they transform inputs into outputs - Also known as group dynamics
- Includes communications, decision making, norms,
cohesion, and conflict, among others
20Study Question 3 How do teams work?
- Team effectiveness may be summarized as
21Figure 16.3 An open-systems model of work team
effectiveness
22Study Question 3 How do teams work?
- Team diversity
- A variety of values, personalities, experiences,
demographics, and cultures among members - Greater variety of available ideas, perspectives,
and experiences - As team diversity increases, complexity of
interpersonal relationships also increases
23Study Question 3 How do teams work?
- Stages of team development
- Forming
- initial orientation and interpersonal testing
- Storming
- conflict over tasks and ways of working as a team
- Norming
- consolidation around task and operating agendas
- Performing
- teamwork and focused task performance
- Adjourning
- task accomplishment and eventual disengagement
24Figure 16.4 Criteria for assessing the maturity
of a team
25Study Question 3 How do teams work?
- Norms
- Behavior expected of team members
- Rules or standards that guide behavior
- May result in team sanctions
- Cohesiveness
- Degree that members are attracted to and
motivated to remain part of the team - Desire to conform to norms
26Study Question 3 How do teams work?
27Figure 16.5 How cohesiveness and norms influence
team performance
28Study Question 3 How do teams work?
- Guidelines for increasing team cohesion
- Build agreement on team goals
- Increase membership homogeneity
- Increase interaction among members
- Decrease team size
- Introduce competition with other teams
- Reward team rather than individual results
- Provide physical isolation from other teams
29Study Question 3 How do teams work?
- Task activities
- Actions by team members that contribute directly
to teams performance purpose - Include
- Initiating
- Information sharing
- Summarizing
- Elaborating
- Opinion giving
30Study Question 3 How do teams work?
- Maintenance activities
- Support emotional life of a team as an ongoing
social system - Include
- Gatekeeping
- Encouraging
- Following
- Harmonizing
- Reducing tension
31Study Question 3 How do teams work?
- Distributed leadership roles
- Make every member responsible for recognizing
when task and/or maintenance activities are
needed and taking actions to provide them - Leading through task activities focuses on
solving problems and achieving performance
results - Leading through maintenance activities helps
strengthen and perpetuate the team as a social
system
32Figure 16.6 Distributed leadership helps teams
meet task and maintenance needs
33Study Question 3 How do teams work?
- Dysfunctional activities that detract from team
effectiveness - Being aggressive
- Blocking
- Self-confessing
- Seeking sympathy
- Competing
- Withdrawal
- Horsing around
- Seeking recognition
34Study Question 3 How do teams work?
- Communication networks
- Decentralized
- All members communicate directly with one another
- Centralized
- Activities are coordinated and results pooled by
central point of control - Restricted
- Polarized subgroups contest one another
- Subgroups may engage in antagonistic relations
35Figure 16.7 Interaction patterns and
communication networks in teams
Source John R Schermerhorn, Jr , James G Hunt,
and Richard N Osborn, Organizational Behavior,
8th ed (New York Wiley, 2003), p 347 Used by
permission
36Study Question 4 How do teams make decisions?
- Methods of team decision making
- Lack of response
- Authority rule
- Minority rule
- Majority rule
- Consensus
- Unanimity
37Study Question 4 How do teams make decisions?
38Study Question 4 How do teams make decisions?
- Symptoms of groupthink
- Illusions of group invulnerability
- Rationalizing unpleasant and disconfirming data
- Belief in inherent group morality
- Negative stereotypes of competitors
- Pressure to conform
- Self-censorship of members
- Illusions of unanimity
- Mind guarding
39Study Question 4 How do teams make decisions?
- Methods for dealing with groupthink
- Have each group member be a critical evaluator
- Dont appear to favor one course of action
- Create subteams to work on the same problems
- Have team members discuss issues with outsiders
- Have outside experts observe and provide feedback
on team activities - Assign a member to the devils advocate role
- Hold a second-chance meeting
40Study Question 4 How do teams make decisions?
- Creativity in team decision making
- Brainstorming
- Open and spontaneous discussion of problems and
ideas - Guidelines
- Go for quantity of ideas
- Dont criticize each other
- Welcome freewheeling
- Build on the ideas of others
- Nominal Group technique
- Meeting agenda structured to allow participation
of all group members - Individual contributions are brought to the group
for discussion
41Chapter 16 Case
- NASCAR Fast cars, passion and teamwork create
wins