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Groups and Teams - Organizational Behaviour - Lecture Slides, Slides of Organization Behaviour

Main topics of Organizational Behavior course are: Communications, Conflict, Creativity, Cross Cultural, Decision Making, Diversity, Groups and Teams, Organization Learning, Leadership, Motivation, Organization Culture. Key points of this lecture are: Groups and Teams, Synergy, Cross-Disciplinary Activities, Kinds of Groups and Teams, Functional Groups, Informal Groups, Team Performance, Organizational Outcomes, Sources of Group Effectiveness, Task

Typology: Slides

2012/2013

Uploaded on 08/31/2013

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Download Groups and Teams - Organizational Behaviour - Lecture Slides and more Slides Organization Behaviour in PDF only on Docsity!

Groups and Teams

What are Groups and Teams

  • Group:
    • Two or more people working together
  • Team:
    • “... intact social system complete with boundaries and differentiated roles among members...[with] one or more tasks to perform, resulting in discernable and potentially measurable group products...within an organizational context”
    • “A group of individuals within a larger organization, that has a common goal, whose tasks and outcomes are interdependent, and whose members view themselves and are viewed by others as a team.”

Why do Teams Matter to Organizations

  • Teams are “the fashion”
  • Why?
    • Synergy
    • Need for coordinated cross-disciplinary activities
    • Self-management

Kinds of Groups and Teams

  • Functional groups
    • The boxes we see on organizational charts
    • May or may not be a team or include teams
  • Informal groups
    • Task groups / teams
      • Temporary vs. standing
      • Managed vs. self-managed
      • Purpose
        • Management
        • Work tasks
        • New products
        • Organizational change
      • Single-function vs. cross- functional
      • Virtual teams

Sources of Group Effectiveness

• Organizational context

  • Goals
  • Resources

• Group resources

  • Knowledge
  • Motivation
  • Leadership

• Group structure

  • Formal structure
  • Group roles

• The task

  • Extent of

interdependence

  • Complexity

What Is An Effective Team?

  • All group members understand group roles and expectations.
  • Group members have developed a good working relationship.
  • Group members are attracted to the group and are loyal to

the leader.

  • Group members have a high degree of trust and confidence in

one another.

  • Group activities such as decision making and problem solving

occur in a supportive atmosphere.

More On an Effective Team

• The process for selecting a group leader should be

based on the qualities that the individual brings to

the group that encourage a supportive and open

atmosphere.

• Communication among members and the leader

should be encouraged. If problems exist, free and

open communication will bring problems to the

surface.

Stages in Group Development

1. Forming - Members begin to become acquainted and try out behaviors; basic norms are establishes - Slow evolution to….. 2. Storming - Members struggle to set group goals, patterns of behavior and there is a competition for leadership - Rapid transformation to….. 3. Norming - Members develop sense of cohesion and settle into their roles - Slow evolution to…. 4. Performing - Now, the work gets done, tasks are accomplished 5. Adjourning - This stage occurs only if the group will dissolve or disband

Group Roles: Task-Oriented Behavior

(II)

  • Elaborating
    • Offering further clarification of points; trying to "spell out" what other members have already said, or trying to help the group imagine how a proposal would work if adopted.
  • Summarizing
    • Pulling together related ideas or suggestions, restating suggestions after the group has discussed them; or trying to organize the ideas so the group will know what has been said.
  • Testing Workability
    • Making application of suggestions to real situations, examining practicality and workability of ideas; trying to help the group test a proposed decision for workability.

Group Roles: Group-Oriented Behavior

(I)

  • Encouraging
    • Being friendly, warm and responsible to others; accepting others and their contributions; regarding others by giving them an opportunity or recognition.
  • Expressing Group Feelings
    • Sensing feeling, mood, relationships within the group; sharing his/her feelings or affect with other members. This starts the group toward action.
  • Harmonizing
    • Attempting to reconcile disagreement; reducing tension through "pouring oil on troubled waters"; getting people to explore their differences.

How Roles Develop

Expected Role

Perceived Role

Sent Role

Enacted Role

Feedback

More About Learning Norms

• Norm generalization

  • Can you take norms from one setting and apply them to

another setting?

• Norm variation

  • Who can deviate from the norms?
  • How much deviation is acceptable?

• Norm conformity

  • How much pressure is there to conform to norms?

(groupthink…)

  • Socialization

Group Cohesion

• Definition

• Types of cohesion

• Antecedents and consequences

What is Cohesion?

• “…The ‘cement’ binding together group

members and maintaining their relationships

to one another”

• “The resultant of all the forces acting on the

members to remain in the group”

• The attraction of individuals to the team or

group itself, where the individual defines

herself as a member of a group, rather than as

an individual