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HR Management: FAQs/BasicsCareer / Self DevelopmentChange Management / CultureCommunicationEmployee RecognitionJob DescriptionsManagement / LeadershipLabor / Employment LawMotivation / Work QuotesPerformance ManagementRecruiting / HiringSalary / BenefitsTeam Building / Work TeamsBad Boss / Difficult PeopleTraining / Icebreakers | ![]() Copyright Lise Gagne Suggested Reading About Teams and Team BuildingTop 9 Team Building Books: Accelerate Your Team Building SuccessTeam Building and Delegation: How and When to Empower PeopleHow to Build a Teamwork Culture: Do the Hard Stuff Suggested Reading About Teams and Team BuildingHow to Build Powerfully Successful Work TeamsHarness the Power of an Employee Suggestion ProgramTwenty Dumb Things Organizations Do New posts to the Human Resources forums:Twelve Tips for Team Building: How to Build Successful Work TeamsHow to Make Teams EffectivePeople in every workplace talk about building the team, working as a team, and my team, but few understand how to create the experience of team work or how to develop an effective team. Belonging to a team, in the broadest sense, is a result of feeling part of something larger than yourself. It has a lot to do with your understanding of the mission or objectives of your organization. In a team-oriented environment, you contribute to the overall success of the organization. You work with fellow members of the organization to produce these results. Even though you have a specific job function and you belong to a specific department, you are unified with other organization members to accomplish the overall objectives. The bigger picture drives your actions; your function exists to serve the bigger picture. You need to differentiate this overall sense of teamwork from the task of developing an effective intact team that is formed to accomplish a specific goal. People confuse the two team building objectives. This is why so many team building seminars, meetings, retreats and activities are deemed failures by their participants. Leaders failed to define the team they wanted to build. Developing an overall sense of team work is different from building an effective, focused work team when you consider team building approaches. Twelve Cs for Team BuildingExecutives, managers and organization staff members universally explore ways to improve business results and profitability. Many view team-based, horizontal, organization structures as the best design for involving all employees in creating business success. No matter what you call your team-based improvement effort: continuous improvement, total quality, lean manufacturing or self-directed work teams, you are striving to improve results for customers. Few organizations, however, are totally pleased with the results their team improvement efforts produce. If your team improvement efforts are not living up to your expectations, this self-diagnosing checklist may tell you why. Successful team building, that creates effective, focused work teams, requires attention to each of the following.
Six more tips for team building. Three final tips for team building. Suggested Reading About Teams and Team BuildingTop 9 Team Building Books: Accelerate Your Team Building SuccessTeam Building and Delegation: How and When to Empower PeopleHow to Build a Teamwork Culture: Do the Hard Stuff Suggested Reading About Teams and Team BuildingHow to Build Powerfully Successful Work TeamsHarness the Power of an Employee Suggestion ProgramTwenty Dumb Things Organizations Do New posts to the Human Resources forums:Related ArticlesTeam Building - How to Build Powerfully Successful Work...Twelve Tips for Team Building: How to Build Successful ...Twelve Tips for Team Building: How to Build Successful ...Team Building / Teams / Employee Empowerment / Employee...How to Build a Teamwork Culture: Do the Hard Stuff for ... |
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