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The Five Dysfunctions of a Team By Patrick Lencioni

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Title: The Five Dysfunctions of a Team By Patrick Lencioni


1
The Five Dysfunctions of a Team By Patrick
Lencioni
  • Leadership Team Book Review

2
Overview
  • The author uses a leadership fable to address the
    complexity of teams.
  • The fable reveals the five dysfunctions that may
    cause teams to struggle.
  • Review of the Fable
  • Analysis of the Model
  • Application of the Model

3
The Fable Setup
  • Decision Tech had
  • Executive team talent
  • More resources
  • Better core technology
  • yet underperformed its competition due to team
    dysfunction.
  • The fable is told from the perspective of
    Kathryn, the CEO that is hired to turn the
    company around.
  • Stereotype team members expose the human flaws
    and dynamics that undermine teams.

4
Symptoms of Problems at Decision Tech
  • Critical deadlines slipped
  • Turnover of key employees
  • Low morale
  • Political environment
  • Dull, ineffective meetings tense, no arguments
    or hostility, no decisions were made, things did
    not get done.

5
Katheryn New CEO
  • Industry outsider with no high tech experience.
  • Non stellar pedigree
  • Earned a 3 year business school diploma
  • Performed stints in military, teaching, and
    manufacturing.
  • Blueish collar executive
  • Old (57 years)
  • Katheryn did not fit the Silicon Valley executive
    stereotype.
  • Disciplined, tenacious, had a winning spirit
  • If she can build teams, then anyone can apply
    these team building principles.

6
The Model
Inattention to Results
Avoidance of Accountability
Lack of Commitment
Fear of Conflict
Absence of Trust
7
Absence of Trust
  • Stems from unwillingness to be vulnerable about
    weaknesses or mistakes.
  • Invulnerability make it impossible to build a
    foundation of trust.
  • Employees must get comfortable being vulnerable
    around each other.
  • No retribution
  • Minimizes politics
  • Requires turning off competitive instincts
  • Morale on distrusting teams is low turnover is
    high.

8
Teams with Absence of Trust
  • Conceal weaknesses
  • Hesitate to ask for help, or to give help
  • Dread meetings and avoid spending time together
  • Jump to conclusions about intentions.
  • Fail to tap into others skills and experiences.

9
Suggestions for Improving Trust
  • Normally earned slowly through shared
    experiences.
  • Jump start by
  • Personal Histories Exercise
  • Team Effectiveness Exercise
  • Personality and Behavioral Preferences Exercise
    (Meyers Briggs Type Indicator)
  • 360 Feedback (Divorce from compensation.)
  • Experiential Team Exercises

10
Fear of Conflict
  • Artificial Harmony
  • Teams that lack trust are incapable of engaging
    in unfiltered and passionate debate of ideas.
  • Resort to veiled discussions, guarded comments,
    and politics.
  • Constructive conflict clarifies issues.
  • Lack of healthy conflict, leads to the third
    dysfunction.

11
Teams that Fear Conflict
  • Have boring meetings
  • Create environments where back channel politics
    and personal attacks thrive
  • Ignore controversial topics that are critical to
    team success.
  • Fail to tap into all the opinions and
    perspectives of the team members.
  • Waste time and energy with posturing and
    interpersonal risk management.

12
Suggestions for Improving Fear of Conflict
  • Recognize the need for constructive conflict.
  • Mining for conflict
  • Dig and extract buried disagreements.
  • Real Time Permission
  • Recognize when the level of discord is
    uncomfortable interrupt and ask if them if it is
    necessary.
  • Leader should avoid premature termination of
    conflict and allow natural resolution.

13
Lack of Commitment
  • Ambiguity
  • Without having aired opinions, team members
    rarely buy in and commit to decisions.
  • Agreement may be feigned.
  • Avoid consensus. Instead disagree and commit.

14
A Team that Fails to Commit
  • Creates ambiguity among the team about direction
    and priorities
  • Watches windows of opportunity close due to
    excessive analysis and unnecessary delay
  • Breeds lack of confidence and fear of failure
  • Revisits discussions and decisions again and
    again
  • Encourage second-guessing among team members

15
Suggestions for Improving Commitment
  • Cascading Messaging
  • Review what key decisions need to be communicated
    to employees.
  • During this review decisions and actions are
    clarified, and leaders are aligned.
  • Deadlines (intermediate and final)
  • Contingency and Worst Case Scenario Analysis
  • Low-Risk Exposure Therapy
  • Practice making team low-risk decisions after
    through discussions but little analysis. Then
    evaluate decision.

16
Avoidance of Accountability
  • Low Standards
  • Without committing to a clear plan of
    action/objective, people hesitate to call peers
    on actions and behaviors that are counter
    productive to the good of the team.

17
A Team that Avoids Accountability
  • Creates resentment among team members who have
    different standards of performance.
  • Encourages mediocrity
  • Misses deadlines and key deliverables
  • Places undue burdens on the team leader as the
    sole source of discipline.

18
Suggestions for Improving Accountability
  • Publication of Goals and Standards
  • Creation of clear measurable objectives
    (Ambiguity is the enemy.)
  • Hold Simple and Regular Progress Reviews
  • Adds structure
  • Teammates should communicate regarding peers
    progress.
  • Use Team Rewards Instead of Individual Rewards
  • Peers would be more likely to hold another
    accountable.

19
Inattention to Results
  • Placing self before team
  • Ego
  • Career Development
  • Recognition
  • Placing ones divisions needs ahead of the
    collective goals of the team.
  • Need to do what is necessary to achieve the
    objective.

20
Teams Not Focused on Results
  • Stagnates/fails to grow
  • Rarely defeats competitors
  • Loses achievement-oriented employees
  • Encourages team members to focus on their own
    careers and individual goals
  • Is easily distracted

21
Suggestions for Improving Results
  • Public Declaration of Results
  • Announce expectations of success
  • Well do our best prepares one for failure.
  • Results-Based Rewards
  • Tie compensation to achievement of specific
    outcomes.

22
Building the Team
  • Annual planning meeting (3 day, off-site)
  • Strategic planning, succession planning,
    cascading messaging,
  • Quarterly staff meeting (2 day, off-site)
  • Financial, strategic, employee performance, key
    issue resolution, tactical issues, and cascading
    messaging
  • Weekly staff meeting (2 hours, on-site)
  • Goal progress, key activity review, cascading
    messaging
  • Ad hoc topical meeting (2 hours, on-site)

23
ConclusionCohesive Teams
  • Trust one another
  • Engage in unfiltered conflict around ideas
  • Commit to decisions and plans of action
  • Hold one another accountable for delivering
    against those plans.
  • Focus on the achievements of collective results.

24
Questions?
  • The Five Dysfunctions of a Team
  • Patrick Lencioni
  • President of the Table Group
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