1102-Week 7 PDF
1102-Week 7 PDF
1102-Week 7 PDF
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
The Challenge of Managing
Virtual Teams
Take baby steps and manage by results
State expectations
Write it down
Communicate, but be considerate
Be aware of cultural differences
Meet regularly
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Why Teamwork is Important
Table 13.1
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Groups & Teams
Group
two or more freely
acting individuals
who share collective
norms, collective
goals, and have a
common identity
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Groups & Teams
Team
small group of people with complementary skills
who are committed to a common purpose,
performance goals, and approach for which they
hold themselves mutually accountable
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Various Types of Teams
Table 13.2
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Formal versus Informal Groups
Formal group
established to do something productive for the
organization
headed by a leader
Informal group
formed by people seeking friendship
has no officially appointed leader, although a
leader may emerge
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Example: Informal Groups &
Informal Learning
Siemens employees gathered often in the
lunchroom
More work than chit-chat
Siemens managers placed overhead
projectors and notepads in the lunchroom to
facilitate the exchange of information
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Work Teams for Four Purposes
Advice teams
created to broaden the information base for
managerial decisions
Committees, review panels
Production teams
responsible for performing day-to-day operations
Assembly teams, maintenance crews
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Work Teams for Four Purposes
Project teams
work to do creative problem solving, often by
applying the specialized knowledge of members
of a cross-functional team
Task forces, research groups
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Work Teams for Four Purposes
Action teams
work to accomplish tasks that require people
with specialized training and a high degree of
coordination
Hospital surgery teams, airline cockpit crews,
police SWAT teams
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Self-Managed Teams
Self-Managed teams
groups of workers who are given administrative
oversight for their task domains
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Table 13.3Ways to Empower
Self-Managed Teams
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Five Stages of Group and Team
Development
Figure 13.1
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Stage I: Forming
Forming
process of getting oriented and getting
acquainted
Leaders should allow time for people to
become acquainted and socialize
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Stage 2: Storming
Storming
characterized by the emergence of individual
personalities and roles and conflicts within the
group
Leaders should encourage members to
suggest ideas, voice disagreements, and work
through their conflicts about tasks and goals
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Stage 3: Norming
Norming
conflicts are resolved, close relationships
develop, and unity and harmony emerge
Group cohesiveness
Leaders should emphasize unity and help
identify team goals and values`
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Stage 4: Performing
Performing
members concentrate on solving problems and
completing the assigned tasks
Leaders should allow members the
empowerment they need to work on tasks
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Stage 5: Adjourning
Adjourning
members prepare for disbandment
Leaders can help ease the transition by rituals
celebrating the end and new beginnings
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Building Effective Teams
Performance Motivation
goals and through mutual Size
feedback accountability
Awareness of
Roles Norms
groupthink
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Building Effective teams
Cooperating
efforts are systematically integrated to achieve a
collective objective.
Trust
reciprocal faith in others intentions and
behaviors
Cohesiveness
tendency of a group or team to stick together
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How to Enhance
Cohesiveness in Teams
Table 13.5
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Size: Small Teams or Large Teams?
Small teams: 2-9 members
better interaction
better morale
Disadvantages
Fewer resources
Possibly less innovation
Unfair work distribution
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Size: Small Teams or Large Teams?
Large Teams: 10-16 members
More resources
Division of labor
Disadvantages
Less interaction
Lower morale
Social loafing
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Example: Team Size
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Roles & Norms
Roles
a socially determined expectation of how an
individual should behave in a specific position
Task roles, maintenance roles
Norms
general guidelines that most group or team
members follow
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Why Norms are Enforced
To help the group survive
To clarify role expectations
To help individuals avoid embarrassing
situations
To emphasize the groups important values
and identity
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Cohesiveness & Groupthink
Groupthink
a cohesive groups blind unwillingness to
consider
alternatives
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Symptoms of Groupthink
Invulnerability, inherent morality, and
stereotyping of opposition
Rationalization and self-censorship
Illusion of unanimity, peer pressure, and
mindguards
Groupthink versus the wisdom of the
crowds
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Results of Groupthink
Reduction in alternative ideas
Limiting of other information
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Preventing Groupthink
Allow criticism
Allow other perspectives
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The Nature of Conflict
Conflict
process in which one party perceives that its
interests are being opposed or negatively
affected by another party
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The Nature of Conflict
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Relationship Between Level of
Conflict and Level of Performance
Figure 13.2
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Three Kinds of Conflict
Personality conflict
interpersonal opposition based on personal
dislike, disagreement, or differing styles
Personality clashes, competition for scarce
resources, time pressure, communication failures
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Three Kinds of Conflict
Intergroup conflicts
Inconsistent goals or reward systems, ambiguous
jurisdictions, status differences
Multicultural conflicts
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Five Conflict-Handling Styles
Avoiding - Maybe the problem will go away
Accommodating Lets do it your way
Forcing You have to do it my way
Compromising Lets split the difference
Collaborating Lets cooperate to reach a win-win
solution that benefits both of us
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Devices to Stimulate Constructive
Conflict
1. Spur competition among employees
2. Change the organizations culture &
procedures
3. Bring in outsiders for new perspectives
4. Use programmed conflict
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Programmed Conflict
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THANK YOU AND HAVE A GREAT
WEEK AHEAD!
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