Week 8 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Week 8

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... concept of work team Compare work groups with work teams ... values The Groupthink ... Process Types of Groups Work Teams Work Groups vs. Work ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Week 8


1
Week 8 Groups and Teamwork
  • MGT 30525 - ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR
  • Dr. K. A. S. P. Kaluarachchi
  • Senior Lecturer
  • Department of Management and Organization Studies
  • Faculty of Management and Finance
  • University of Colombo

2
Learning Outcomes
  • At the end of this lesson, you will be able to
  • Define the concept of group in an organization
  • Identify a theory of group formation
  • Describe the process of group development
  • Identify types of groups
  • Define the concept of work team
  • Compare work groups with work teams
  • Identify types of work teams
  • Know how to develop self-managed teams
  • Recognize quality circles
  • Know how build successful teams
  • Identify dyfunctions of work groups and teams

3
Define the Concept of Group
  • If a group exists in an organization, its
    members
  • (1) Are motivated to join
  • (2) Perceive the group as a unified unit of
    interacting
  • (3) Contribute in various amounts/ways to the
    group process
  • (4) Reach agreements and have disagreements
    through various forms of interactions

4
Group Formation
5
Group Development Process
6
Types of Groups
  • Primary and secondary groups
  • Small and large groups
  • Coalitions (interacting group of individuals,
    for a specific purpose, independence from formal
    structure, mutual perception, issue-oriented,
    external form)
  • Membership and reference groups
  • In- and out-groups
  • Formal and informal groups

7
Work Teams
  • The teams go beyond traditional formal work
    groups by having a collective, synergistic effect
    (the whole is greater than the sum of its parts)
  • Katzenbach and Smith (1993) note
  • A working groups performance is a function of
    what its members do as individuals. A teams
    performance includes both individual results and
    what we call collective work- products. A
    collective work-product is what two or more
    members must work on togetherit reflects the
    joint, real contribution of team members

8
Work Groups vs. Work Teams
9
Types of Teams
  • Cross-functional teams are made up of
    individuals from various departments or
    functional areas. Overall functional breadth and
    cross-training of team members enhances
    information sharing, team interaction, and team
    performance
  • Virtual teams advanced IT, increasing
    globalization, and the need for speed made
    face-to-face interaction of team members less
    important. Members performing knowledge-based
    tasks in remote locations are called virtual
    teams

10
Types of Teams..
  • Self-managed teams this is as part of the
    empowerment movement and the more egalitarian
    cultural values in an increasing number of
    organizations. A self-managed work team is a
    group of employees who are responsible for
    managing and performing technical tasks that
    result in a product or service being delivered to
    an internal or external customer

11
Developing Self Managed Work Groups
  • Specific goals are set for the group but members
    decide the best means by which these goals are to
    be achieved
  • Group members have greater freedom and choice and
    wider discretion over the planning, execution and
    control of their work
  • Collectively members of the group have the
    necessary variety of expertise and skills to
    undertake the tasks of the group successfully
  • The level of external supervision is reduced and
    the role of supervisor becomes more one of giving
    advice and support to the group
  • Feedback and evaluation are related to the
    performance of the group as a whole

12
Quality Circles
  • Membership is voluntary the group usually
    numbers between five and ten members
  • Membership is normally drawn from people
    undertaking similar work or from the same work
    station
  • The group selects the problems to be tackled and
    the methods of operation
  • A leader can be chosen from within the group but
    is usually the immediate supervisor
  • The group members receive training in
    communication and problem-solving skills, quality
    control techniques and group processes
  • The group recommends solutions to management and,
    where possible, has authority to implement agreed
    solutions

13
Building Successful Teams
  • Clarification of objectives and available
    resources
  • Organizational processes and the clarification of
    roles
  • Empowerment, decision-making and channels of
    communication
  • Patterns of interaction, and attention to both
    task and maintenance functions
  • Social processes and the informal organization
  • Management systems and style of leadership
  • Training and development

14
Dyfunctions of Groups and Teams
  • Norm violation and role ambiguity/conflict
    Group norms that are violated can result in
    anti-social behaviors. e.g. sexual harassment and
    theft, lying, spading rumors, withholding effort,
    absenteeism, etc. Role ambiguity occurs when the
    individual worker is unclear about the task to be
    completed in a given situation. Role conflict
    occurs when the employee is asked to do
    conflicting tasks with his/her values
  • The Groupthink/Conformity Problem Too much of
    adherence to the group norms can hinder
    creativity and innovation of the group
  • Social Loafing Tendency of members to reduce
    their individual effort to the group

15
Questions and Answers ??//
  • Thank you very much!
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