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DESCRIPTION: In this volume, the initial chapter sets the stage for a context focus by describing the critical success factors that impact team environments and how to address those factors. The second chapter focuses on effective change practices for transforming organizations into effective collaborative systems. The third chapter examines the fit of support systems with teams, including management systems and culture. Chapter four ties these system pieces together in a model that translates the value of team process improvements into financial terms for strategic decision making. Other chapters focus on team level task analysis and organizational citizenship behavior, including the complex flow of leadership in emergency room teams. As a whole, this volume presents a perspective on team practice and theory that will benefit a wide range of readers. TABLE OF CONTENTS: Introduction by the editors; Acknowledgements; Navigating the team-based organizing journey; Change management competencies for creating collaborative organizations; Assessing organizational contexts in team-based organizations; Managing team-based organizations: proposed strategic model (F. Kennedy); The importance of team task analysis for team Human Resource management; Group personality composition and work team effectiveness: key factor in staffing the team-based organization?; Corporate citizenship in team-based organizations: an essential ingredient for sustained success.
The chapters in this volume are drawn from the Center for Study of
Work Teams most recent conference, one which brings practitioners
and researchers together to share knowledge and experience. The
chapters cover a diversity of issues and variables that contribute
to successful teaming. They also cover a variety of types of teams
and remind us that different factors apply to different team
requirements. Collectively these chapters expand our knowledge base
in the field.
This second volume in the series covers such topics as cross-functional teamwork, working in public and learning-in-action, organizing knowledge work systems and varieties of knowledge work experience.
This volume of the annual series on work teams focuses on leadership. A number of experts in academia and in business agree that leadership is the key to effective work teams. However, they do not necessarily agree on what is meant by "leadership," how leadership should be enacted, or what constitutes a "team." The world of work is changing, and with it, the nature of leadership or our understanding of it is changing. There has been some evolution of leadership concepts and practices toward a more empowering approach focusing on the employees as human resources, but the older command and control approach is only slowly being replaced in research literature and business practices. The authors of the papers in this volume are at the cutting edge with their thinking, writing, and validation work on new approaches to understanding leadership. Subjects addressed in these papers include: team citizenship behavior; self-leadership, self-managed teams and shared leadership; transformational leadership; organizational culture as expressed in the behavior of team members; and decision making in top management teams. The final chapter emphasizes the training of leaders and teams. These papers each contribute valuable insights and perspectives to both the researcher planning further study of team leadership and the practitioner who must produce performance enhancing change with work teams.
Innovation has become one of the primary core competencies of
effective organizations. It leads to changes in products, services,
organizational design, processes, strategies, and the systems that
support them. It occurs when someone has an idea, shares it with
others, and all find ways to turn the idea into action. The sharing
is a critical step. Creative ideas blossom in a collaborative
environment. Implementation depends on collaboration. The chapters
in this volume explore a variety of methods and settings that show
how collaboration can be utilized to enable and enhance innovation.
The innovation may be incremental or breakthrough and evident at
any level of organization: team, community of practice, project or
program, company, joint venture, alliance, partnership, or supply
chain.
Complex collaboration refers to situations where working together
effectively across boundaries is critical for complex projects and
problems. Complex collaboration refers to knowledge-intensive
business processes that require highly interactive communication,
coordination, negotiation, research and/or development. This work
often involves projects of large scope and long duration. Such projects may cross disciplinary, organizational, national,
and/or cultural boundaries. The challenges of managing such
situations include ambitious schedules, conflict of cultures and
practices, massive amounts of information, multiple languages, and
ambiguity of roles and responsibilities. Complex collaboration
represents a capability that is essential to effective execution in
such situations as new product development, mergers and
acquisitions, joint ventures, and supply chain management, as well
as large government projects. A number of issues emerge in
examining complex collaboration, including: unit of analysis,
critical relationships, resource development, virtual teaming, key
skills, and improvement processes. The chapters in this volume address these issues and share examples, including: the Joint Strike Fighter program at Lockheed-Martin, Solectrons integrated supply chain, and IMDs partnership with MIT. Models of collaborative capability and capacity provide the facets of a framework for understanding these complex alliances and partnerships.
Effective knowledge work depends on bringing people together to form a team with the right mix of expertise for the project or problem on hand. Increasingly, that mix can only be created by finding people who are geographically dispersed across sites of the company or across several companies. These virtual teams typically work by linking through electronic tools, such as the telephone, fax, email, NetMeeting, Lotus Notes, and other web-based communication systems. Recent research suggests that these teams have all of the challenges of face-to-face teams in addition to others, such as the limitations of technology, cultural differences, and multiple supervisors. The papers included in this volume identify some of the problems and some of the solutions to these kinds of problems, but most importantly, in a dynamic field such as virtual teams, the papers provide a framework for thinking about such problems and a collection of ideas that can form a foundation for advancing both research and practice in the field. Much of the literature on virtual teams focuses on the technology. The technology is an enabler, but it does not seem to have advanced far enough to make electronic communications as effective as face-to-face meetings. Like other teams, virtual teams consist of human beings and they have interpersonal and identity needs that must be met to optimize their ability to work and to collaborate. So, issues such as member solidarity, cooperation and unity of actions and values become special concerns. Such issues are addressed in this volume with the hope that this work will provide a foundation for moving ahead in this field toward more effective virtual teams.
Hardbound. Work teams have been in use for many years, yet research-based knowledge of the keys to high performance still has questions to answer. The development or maturity of a team is assumed to be closely related to the level of performance, but few studies have examined the maturation process thoroughly. Models of that process have emerged over the past half century, but their value seems limited. The chapters in this volume provide ideas, examples, and frameworks for improving our understanding of team development and the models we follow in fostering that development. As ideas like these become incorporated in research and practice, our ability to effectively move a team toward advanced levels of maturity will improve, and with that will come more frequent successes where teams outperform expectations.
Intangible forms of capital are being recognized in both research
and practice as essential resources for fueling company growth.
Forms of intangible capital include: intellectual, organizational,
human, relationship, social, political, innovation, and
collaborative. This volume consists of papers that focus on
collaborative capital -- broadly defined as the organizational
assets that enable people to work together well. It is manifested
in such outcomes as increased innovation and creativity, commitment
and involvement, flexibility and adaptability, leveraging of
knowledge, and enhanced learning. Collaborative capital represents a core competency or strategic
resource essential for building competitive advantage by enabling
the creation of networks of conversations and relationships.
However, it is seldom developed in a deliberate and systematic way,
but rather as an incidental outcome of formal and informal
organizational change. It may be deliberately increased by change
in organizational systems, practices, design, learning, and
culture. The term collaborative capital has seldom been used in research literature dealing with how people work together. Consequently, the meaning, measurement, and impact of collaborative capital in practice have not been explored to any significant extent. The papers in this volume launch that process with teaming contexts ranging from alliances and partnerships, to cross-national teams and cross-disciplinary teams.
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