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I love teamwork - advantages of creating a great team... Christopher Barnett
What's it all about?
What is teamwork? Why is it that a team of people
can achieve greater success than an individual
working alone? I'd like to try and answer those
questions with reference to my own personal
experience.
Teamwork is obviously a subject about which many
people seek to know more. If you search the Internet
for teamwork related resources and a plethora of
information turns up for free. Team building
activities, teamwork games, team work articles and
motivational teamwork quotes being just a few of
the resources readily available to the reseacher.
To gather my own thoughts I've looked back over my
own experiences and thought about the best team I've
ever worked with, I've contemplated what made that
team great and asked myself the questions: Why did
we we all work so well together? Why were we able to
achieve greater than the sum of our individual
achievements?
It's made me think about what stops teams from
working well too, what prevents them from being a
team?
What is it that make a team great?
Here's a few dictionary definitions:
Team - "two or more persons working together"
Teamwork - "combined action of a team, especially
when effective and efficient".
In my analysis the key words are "working together"
and "when effective and efficient".
You see those two short phrases describe to me
exactly what a great team is all about. I'll give
another dictionary definition before I go on:
Team-spirit - the spirit of a group that makes the
members want the group to succeed
I agree wholeheartedly with that definition,
there's nothing quite like being a member of a great
team, where everyone is working together in harmony,
their individual abilities all harnessed into a
single focused effort. It's genuinely very effective,
it makes you feel that together you could achieve
anything. You probably could too!!
Why can a team be more effective than one person?
Physical laws would tend to suggest that the overall
ability of a group can be no more than the sum of
the individual team member's abilities, and could be
slightly reduced due to inefficiencies within the
grouping. Sadly this is often true for many so
called teams, because in truth they are just a group
of people suffering from a lack of motivation and
individual selfishness, not what I would define as
a team. True teams are empowered by team-spirit, the
willingness to act as a member of the group rather
than as an individual. Individuals empowered by
team-spirit benefit from much greater motivation and
therefore achieve greater success than they would
acting alone. It follows then that a whole group of
people empowered by team-spirit will achieve greater
things than all of its individuals would alone.
What motivates people to work as a team?
I'll never forget my first experience of working
with a really inspired team , it was awesome! You
could actually feel the energy it generated! I was
one member of a great team of engineers, we were all
working together to develop a petrol injection
system. Every member of that team was great! The
development engineers worked with enthusiasm to
produce ideas and solutions to solve each of the
challenges we encountered. The software engineers
quickly and accurately implemented those ideas and
solutions and turned them into practical, working
pieces of electronic engineering. The application
engineers took the software systems and made them
really work, they fettled and tuned them into real
world solutions. Every member of that team was
enormously talented and each of us was driven on by
a will to see the team succeed, which we did with
bells on!
What de-motivates a team?
I've also experienced the frustration of working in
a group that simply wasn't a team. I've discovered
that even if a group has one or two inspired
individuals it will still fail if the other members
just lay back and bask in that warm light of
inspiration. It led me to think hard about what
stops a group member from becoming a team member or
what stops an individual from developing team-spirit.
I think the most fundamental factor is the attitude
of the individual themselves. While it is possible
to make any group into a team under extreme
circumstances, escaping from certain peril for
instance, this effect is only temporary. Long
lasting teams will only work if all of the members
have the will and discipline to behave as a team,
there is little room for selfishness and no room for
laziness, these traits reduce respect for one another
and without individual respect the teams days are
numbered. I believe that some group members fail to
develop team-spirit because to do so requires some
personal growth, a willingness to put aside their own
needs and be supported by others. An individuals
background or psychological makeup may prevent them
from taking this important step, they may be able to
with regular exposure to full-on team-spirit but some
folks just never get there.
How can you create team spirit?
Survival simulations for team building - An exercise
in survival at an outdoor team building centre is a
great example of forcing a team to work together
under extreme circumstances, they have to pull
together to get through. I'm not sure how long this
sort of motivation lasts though, as an instant boost
it's certainly a great idea but must be backed up
by more regular team motivation exercises.
Workshops to improve teamwork - The internet is
littered with companies who can run motivational
team workshops to provide regular backup to bigger
exercises like the one above.
The internet - It's a great resource if you're
looking for a lower cost solution, there are
hundreds of sites offering free teamwork games and
teamwork videos.
Mentoring - This is a great way to instill personal
respect into a team. Senior members cab offer their
advice and experience to help junior members to grow
in a non-threatening environment.
Personal coaching - Yet another method of providing
individuals with a forum in which they can explore
their own motivations, strengths and weaknesses and
use what they find to grow.
Social time - I think it goes without saying that
it's important for the team to spend social time
together too. Bonds of friendship are grown here and
that is all to the good of the team in the long run.
If you want a job doing, build a team.
1. Pick the individuals carefully, the more motivated
and self-aware they are the better.
2. Keep them motivated with regular team building
events.
3. Foster respect by rewarding honesty and
integrity at all times. A blame culture will eat away
at your team-spirit.
4. Improve self-awareness of every member with
regular coaching and mentoring
5. Create team-spirit and multiply it to create an
abundance of motivation and ability!
Have fun, be all that you can be!
Chris Barnett,
October 2007.
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