1 / 23

Management and Organisational Behaviour 7th Edition

Management and Organisational Behaviour 7th Edition. CHAPTER 14 Working in Groups and Teams. Belbin’s team roles. The most consistently successful groups comprise a range of roles undertaken by various members The constitution of the group itself is an important variable in its success.

darmenta
Télécharger la présentation

Management and Organisational Behaviour 7th Edition

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Management and Organisational Behaviour 7th Edition CHAPTER 14 Working in Groups and Teams

  2. Belbin’s team roles • The most consistently successful groups comprise a range of roles undertaken by various members • The constitution of the group itself is an important variable in its success

  3. Plant Resource investigator Co-ordinator Shaper Monitor–evaluator Team worker Implementer Completer Specialist Belbin Different team roles

  4. Team-role contribution Creative Imaginative Unorthodox Solves difficult problems Allowable weaknesses Ignores details Too preoccupied to communicate effectively Belbin’s evolved roles:Plant

  5. Team-role contribution Extrovert Enthusiastic Communicative Explores opportunities Develops contacts Allowable weaknesses Over-optimistic Loses interest once enthusiasm has passed Belbin’s evolved roles:Resource investigator

  6. Team-role contribution Mature Confident A good chairperson Clarifies goals Promotes decision- making Delegates well Allowable weaknesses Can be seen as manipulative Delegates personal work Belbin’s evolved roles:Co-ordinator

  7. Team-role contribution Challenging Dynamic Thrives on pressure Has the drive & courage to overcome obstacles Allowable weaknesses Can provoke others Hurts other’s feelings Belbin’s evolved roles:Shaper

  8. Team-role contribution Sober, strategic & discerning Sees all options Judges accurately Allowable weaknesses Lacks drive & ability to inspire others Overly critical Belbin’s evolved roles:Monitor-evaluator

  9. Team-role contribution Co-operative Mild Perceptive & diplomatic Listens Builds Averts friction Calms the waters Allowable weaknesses Indecisive in crunch situations Can be easily influenced Belbin’s evolved roles:Team worker

  10. Team-role contribution Disciplined Reliable Conservative & efficient Turns ideas into practical actions Allowable weaknesses Somewhat inflexible Slow to respond to new possibilities Belbin’s evolved roles:Implementor

  11. Team-role contribution Painstaking Conscientious Anxious Searches out errors & omissions Delivers on time Allowable weaknesses Inclined to worry unduly Reluctant to delegate Can be a nit-picker Belbin’s evolved roles:Completer

  12. Team-role contribution Single-minded Self-sharing Dedicated Provides knowledge & skills in rare supply Allowable weaknesses Contributes on only a narrow front Dwells on technicalities Overlooks the ‘big picture’ Belbin’s evolved roles:Specialist

  13. Constructing the perfect team • The group work in such a way that adds up to a sum greater than the individual parts (synergy) • If business people are happy to accept that group effort is always better than individuals working in isolation, then Belbin’s research may help in constructing the perfect team White

  14. Figure 14.2 Communication networks

  15. Figure 14.3 Communication networks & simple task complexity Source: Baron/Greenberg, Behaviour in Organisations: Understanding Managing, Third edition, Prentice-Hall Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ.

  16. Figure 14.3 Communication networks & complex task complexity Source: Baron/Greenberg, Behaviour in Organisations: Understanding Managing, Third edition, Prentice-Hall Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ.

  17. Sociometry A method of indicating the feelings of acceptance or rejection among group members Sociograms – • Depict the choices, preferences, likes or dislikes, & interactions between individual members • Display the structure of the group & record the observed frequency & / or duration of contacts among members

  18. Figure 14.4 Sociograms

  19. Task functions within groups Functions within a group that are directed towards – • Problem solving • The accomplishment of the tasks of the group • The achievement of its goals • Production activities

  20. Maintenance functions within groups • Concerned with the emotional life of the group • Directed towards building & maintaining the group as an effective working unit • Concerned with relationships among members, giving encouragement & support, maintaining cohesiveness & the resolution of conflict

  21. Individual compared with group performance • Social loafing - the tendency for individuals to expend less effort when working as a member of a group than as an individual (Ringelmann) • Teams can be elevated into a ‘silver bullet’ – a magic solution to all business problems. ‘Teams are not always the answer to a problem.’ (Hall) • The collective power of a group can outshine individual performance (Guirdham)

  22. The risky-shift phenomenon • Instead of taking fewer risks & making safer or more conservative decisions, the reverse is often the case • Preferences for conformity means that there is a tendency for groups to make more risky decisions than the individual members would

  23. Illusion of invulnerability Rationalisation Inherent morality of the group Negative stereotyping Pressure on individual members to conform & reach consensus Self-censorship Illusion of unanimity Emergence of ‘mind guards’ Symptoms of ‘groupthink’

More Related