INTRODUCTION TO TEAM BUILDING COMMUNICATING
COMMUNICATING
Teams meet frequently to plan and carry out their work, and you want to use those face-to-face occasions to provide leadership and direction and not have to rely so much on e-mail messages. Keep in closer contact by being present at occasions like these
- Regular team meetings with your core group of team leaders who pass on information to the teams
- Periodic all-hands meetings at which you bring together all the team members
- Occasional drop-in visits with team meetings to stay in touch
- Regular MBWA, or Management By Walking Around
MBWA is an effective form of informal communications. You walk around to people’s work areas for a few minutes of social chatter. You have the rest of the day to handle business issues, so have a little fun. MBWA is a communication strategy that makes you a visible leader and enables you to gain a better knowledge of your team members as people and not just as employees
ESTABLISHING TRAINING AS A REGULAR BUSINESS PRACTICE
Stating your expectations about training and helping your team find the resources that it needs to meet those expectations is a vital part of your job. You can evaluate their success when you evaluate team performance.
EXPANDING TEAM RESPONSIBILITIES ONE STEP AT A TIME
Ultimately, a truly self-managed team handles all responsibilities that a work group supervisor would. But a team can’t assume all those responsibilities at once. Team members need time to discover and absorb various supervisory routines into their daily functions, especially administrative matters. When asking a self-directed team to take on new responsibilities, follow these steps to effectively delegate responsibilities:
- Spell out the results that you expect.
- Define the parameters that team members need to work within, especially limitations on time and authority.
- Provide the training and other forms of support that team members need to take on new duties.
- Set up checkpoints for reviewing progress.
- Evaluate the results.
- Set new goals.
DEVELOPING SYSTEMS TO FIT THE TEAM STRUCTURE
When venturing into self-directed teams, you often discover that the systems and policies of your organization don’t always make a good match with the new team structure. For example, when company policy says that only someone in supervisory authority can sign off on vacations, employee timesheets, and purchase requisitions, you need to work within your company structure to modify these systems. Administrative areas that may require change include quality assurance practices, vendor relations, compensation, staff administration, work schedules, employee recognition, and performance reviews. You don’t want your self-managed teams constantly colliding with internal obstacles when they are charged with managing those same functions. You need to serve as a barrier buster, helping your teams grow in managing their own performances.
CONTINUOUSLY ADDRESSING ISSUES AND MAKING IMPROVEMENTS
When observing how your self-managed teams are progressing — from what’s working well to what isn’t — you have an opportunity to help them get better at developing solutions.
As much as you possibly can, delegate the development of solutions and periodic review of progress as a means of helping them maintain their accountability. Whenever people don’t know what to do, show them and coach them, but seldom volunteer solutions yourself. Whenever you want a team to become self-managing, you want team members taking responsibility for addressing issues and making their solutions work.
CONCEPT OF TEAM
A team can be said to be a group of people working together to achieve a goal. It can also be seen "as a limited number of people who have shared objectives at work and who co-operate, on a permanent or temporary basis, to achieve those objectives in a way that allows each individual to make a distinctive contribution
following are the features of an effective team
1. Clear Understanding of the Goals/Objectives: Perfect understanding of what the goals of the team are, is very important. Every member of the team should be able to talk for the team on the progress of their project when called upon. However, this happens when every member of the team understands the team's goal and can tell if they are making progress or not.
2. Shared Values: Effective teams share desires to succeed at whatever they do. They have a common sense of purpose. The team must agree that the work they are doing is worthwhile and that their goals are worth making the effort to achieve. Members interact and work independently to achieve team objectives. They take collective responsibility for achieving shared aims and objectives.
3. Mutual Trust: Trust is important for open communication. Team members need to feel comfortable to make their opinions known and also to disagree with whatever has already been said by another. Every member should be willing to talk openly. This can only happen when they trust each other.
4. Mutual Respect: Mutual respect among team members is also essential, both as individuals and for the contribution each makes to the team's performance. Every member should be treated with respect particularly when he/she adds value to the team. This is because, if some team members are not respected, the motivation of the entire team can be jeopardised.
5. Effective Teams Want Team Success: They realise the need to focus on group goals and rise above personal ambitions. Team members are secure in their individual capabilities and understand the reason why the organisation constituted a team in the first place. They are able to work towards executing their role in line with the common goals of the team. They have well defined and differentiated roles within the team. They seem to realise that if they carry out their individual roles sincerely, personal recognition is bound to come their way. In other words, there is a good measure of team spirit within the team
6. Sustainable Conflict: An effective team encounters conflict. Conflicts or disagreements pertaining to task-related discussions are treated as a normal occurrence and the team members do not harbour any animosity towards one another once the team meeting ends However, in as much as it fosters creative thinking, too much disagreement is not healthy. Whenever people disagree it may damage relationships. An effective team therefore has to agree to a process to resolve issues constructively.
7. Support: Members support each other even when everything is going wrong. This can encourage them to work harder because they know that they have support of the whole team.
8. Team First Mentality: In whatever they do, team members put the team goals first. They never put themselves ahead of the team.
9. Willingness to share knowledge and expertise: Team members should always be ready and willing to share knowledge and skills with other members of the team.
10. Engagement: Team members should be carried along throughout every assignment. To remain interested, team members need to feel that they are making a strong contribution. They need to feel involved in making key team decisions.
11. Organizational Connection: An effective team needs feels that it is valued by the rest of the organization and closely connected to its overall success. It develops a known identity within the organization as a team with defined organizational function. This is because, a team that is marginalized or rejected by the broader organization cannot feel motivated.
12. Adequate Resources: For a team to be effective, it must have access to adequate resources to meet its goals and objectives. To however make use of these resources, team members must possess a variety of skills to deal effectively with all its tasks.
13. Open and Positive Communication: The effectiveness of a team depends on how much information circulates among the members. Team members need to be fully aware of sensitive developments in their work. It is also, very essential that team members do not embarrass, reject or mock someone for speaking up and sharing ideas.
14. Feeling of Belonging: The members of an effective team must be strongly knitted and the members of the team must believe they are a part of it. They must have a sense of belonging.
15. Having Fun: The members should enjoy working together. This would keep them motivated over a lengthy period of time. They find ways of having fun while working, through the way they interact on the job or by socializing outside of work. To have fun working together, people need to like each other and enjoy each other's company
BENEFITS OF TEAM WORK.
1. Time and Energy Saving: When organizations split their production between teams, the work would be done faster, thereby saving time and energy.
2. Creativity: Employees have different knowledge and personal attributes. By utilising all of these different aspects in a team, more ideas can be generated. As more ideas are generated, more creative solutions are generated, leading to better results. By utilizing all of these different aspects in a team, more ideas can be created/ generated.
3. It Increases employee motivation: When teams work together, it motivates team members (employees), thereby increasing productivity.
4. Enthusiasm: Individuals working together as a team are continually developing. As they interact, more energy and enthusiasm is created. When this energy is utilised, it produces results which positively impacts on motivation and leads to even more success.
5. Skills: Even the best qualified individual cannot have all the skills to do everything. Some people excel at coming up with ideas. There are others who can be counted on when it comes to implementing and follow through of a plan. The key point is that when a team works together, it has a huge range of skills available that it can utilise to deliver extraordinary results.
6. Speed: By splitting up projects between different teams, work can move faster and the ultimate goal achieved sooner than expected.
7. Increased Productivity: It is believed that the more people who work on a task, the more the products that would go into the market.
8. Improved Quality of Products or Services: When team works together, the quality of the products or services is improved.
9. Improves Customer Focus: Teamwork in an organization improves customer focus
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