The Relationship Between Teamwork and Effectiveness of Performance of Work
The Relationship Between Teamwork and Effectiveness of Performance of Work
The Relationship Between Teamwork and Effectiveness of Performance of Work
ASSIGNMENT ON
ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR
STUDENTS’ NAME
ASSIGNMENT ON
ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR
STUDENTS’ NAME
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CHAPTER II: THE NEED OF GROUP LEVEL DIAGNOSIS
Teamwork is a vital aspect of the functioning of any organization. Team, as a basic structural
component of an organizations’ design, should contribute to a more efficient and improved
business performance of the organization. Improperly structured and led teams can make it
impossible for an organization to work and develop; this is why it is necessary to know the
nature and characteristics of the teams in order to achieve their goals. Another highly
important issue is the level of team effectiveness, which should answer the question of
whether or not a given team is capable of achieving its goals and performances. This is
essential, especially given that more and more business processes are performed by teams and
not by individuals, and that the sustainability of organizations and corporate performances are
positively related to successful teamwork.
Many large organizations have groups or departments that are themselves relatively large.
Diagnosis of large groups can follow the dimensions and relational fits applicable to
organization-level diagnosis. In essence, large groups or departments operate much like
organizations, and their functioning can be assessed by diagnosing them as organizations.
Small departments and groups, however, can behave differently from large organizations and
so they need their own diagnostic models to reflect those differences. Such groups generally
consist of a relatively small number of people working face-to-face on a shared task. Work
groups are prevalent in all sizes of organizations. They can be relatively permanent and
perform an ongoing function, or they can be temporary and exist only to perform a certain
task or to make a specific decision.
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CHAPTER III: MODEL FOR DIAGNOSING GROUP LEVEL
I. INPUTS
Model shows that groups have five major components: goal clarity, task structure, group
composition, group functioning, and performance norms.
- Goal clarity involves how well the group understands its objectives. In general, goals
should be moderately challenging; there should be a method for measuring,
monitoring, and feeding back information about goal achievement; and the goals
should be clearly understood by all members.
- Task structure is concerned with how the group's work is designed. Task structures can
vary along two key dimensions; coordination of members' efforts and regulation of
their task behaviors. The coordination dimension involves the degree to which group
tasks are structured to promote effective interaction amonggroup members.
Coordination is important in groups performing interdependence tasks, such as
surgicalteams and problem-solving groups. It is relatively unimportant, however, in
groups composed of memberswho perform independent tasks, such as a group of
telephone operators or salespeople. The regulation dimension involves the degree to
which members can control their own task behaviors and be relativelyfree from
external controls such as supervision, plans, and programs. Self-regulation generally
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occurs whenmembers can decide on such issues as task assignments, work methods,
production goals, and membership.
- Group functioning is the underlying basis of group life. How members relate to each
other is important inwork groups because the quality of relationships can affect task
performance. In some groups, for example their providing little support and help for
each other. Conversely groups may become too concerned about sharing good feelings
and support and spend too little time on task performance. In organization development
considerable effort has been invested to help work group members develop healthy
interpersonal relations, including ability and a willingness to share feelings and
perceptions about members' behaviors so that interpersonal problems and task
difficulties can he worked through and resolved. Group functioning therefore involves
task-related activities, such as giving and seeking information and elaborating,
coordinating, and evaluating activities; and the group-maintenance function, which is
directed toward holding the group together as a cohesive team and includes
encouraging, harmonizing, compromising, setting standards, and observing.
- Performance norms are member beliefs about how the group should perform its task
and include acceptable levels of performance. Norms derive from interactions among
members and serve as guides to group behavior. Once members agree on performance
norms, either implicitly or explicitly, then members routinely perform tasks according
to those norms. For example, members of problem-solving groups often decide early in
the life of the group that decisions will be made through voting; voting then becomes a
routine part of group task behavior.
III. OUTPUTS
Group effectiveness has two dimensions: performance and quality of work life. Performance
is measured in terms of the group's ability to control or reduce costs, increase productivity, or
improve quality. This is a"hard" measure of effectiveness. In addition, effectiveness is
indicated by the group member's quality of life. It concerns work satisfaction, team cohesion,
and organizational commitment.
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CHAPTER IV: ANALYSIS
CASE: Top-Management Team at Ortiv Glass Corporation
The Ortiv Glass Corporation produces and markets plate glass for use primarily in the
construction andautomotive indulines. The multiplant company has been involved in OD for
several years and actively supports participative management practices and employee
involvement programs. Ortiv's organization design is relatively organic, and the
manufacturing plants are given freedom and encouragement to develop their own organization
designs and approaches to participative management. It recently put together a problem-
solving group made up of the top-management team at its newest plant.
The team consisted of the plant manager and the managers of the five functional departments
reporting to him: engineering (maintenance), administration, human resources, production,
and quality control. In recruiting managers for the new plant, the company selected people
with good technical skills and experience in their respective functions. It also chose people
with some managerial experience and a desire to solve problems collaboratively, a hallmark
of participative management. The team was relatively new, and members had been working
together for only about five months.
The team met formally for two hours each week to share pertinent information and to deal
with plant wide issues affecting all of the departments, such as safety procedures,
interdepartmental relations, and personnel practices. Members described these meetings as
informative but often chaotic in terms of decision making. The meetings typically started late
as members straggled in at different times. The latecomers generally offered excuses about
more pressing problems occurring elsewhere in the plant. Once started, the meetingswere
often interrupted by "urgent" phone messages for various members, including the plant
manager, andin most cases the recipient would leave the meeting hurriedly to respond to the
call.
The group had problems arriving at clear decisions on particular issues. Discussions often
rambled from topic to topic, and members tended to postpone the resolution of problems to
future meetings. This led to a backlog of unresolved issues, and meetings often lasted far
beyond the two-hour limit. When groupdecisions were made, members often reported
problems in their implementation. Members typically failed to follow through on agreements,
and there was often confusion about what had actually been agreed upon. Everyone expressed
dissatisfaction with the team meetings and their results.
Relationships among team members were cordial yet somewhat strained, especially when the
team wasdealing with complex issues in which members had varying opinions and interests.
Although the plant manager publicly stated that he wanted to hear all sides of the issues, he
often interrupted the discussion orattempted to change the topic when members openly
disagreed in their views of the problem. This interruption was typically followed by an
awkward silence in the group. In many instances when a solution to a pressing problem did
not appear forthcoming, members either moved on to another issue or they informally voted
on proposed options, letting majority rule decide the outcome. Members rarely discussed the
need to move on or vote; rather, these behaviors emerged informally over time and became
acceptable ways of dealing with difficult issues.
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I. CAUSES
The problems might be caused by the organization design. As can be seen from the case of
Otriv, the larger organization design is relatively differentiated and promotes flexibility and
innovation in its manufacturing plants. The firm makes a great effort by supporting
participative management and the team meetings. However, there does not appear to be
significant incongruity between the larger organization design and what the team is trying to
do. As a consequence, there is a serious mismatch between the plant management team and
the larger company would exist, and conflict between the two would likely result.
The issues of the organization often come from problems of various functional departments.
Those problems are generally complex and require the members to process a great deal of
information and create innovative solutions. The task structure and composition appear to fit
the nature of team issues. The face-to-face meetings help to coordinate problem solving
among the department managers, and except for the interpersonal skills, members seem to
have the necessary task-relevant skills and experience to drive the problem-solving process.
There appears, however, to be a conflict in the priority between the problems to be solved by
the team and the problems faced by individual managers.
Take the plant manager in this case as an example, his intention is hearing all sides of the
issues when attending this meeting, but actually he doesn't prioritize this solution. This leads
to the situation that he often interrupts the discussion or attempts to change the topic when
members openly disagree in their views of the problem.
Instead of running a productive meeting, the employees often gave their priority to “urgent”
stuff such as: answering the phones, replying the messages or solving some emergency
problems in their own department. In some cases, they even left the meeting hurriedly and
suddenly to respond to “urgent” calls. This led to a waste of meeting time, and unsolved
projects or issues could accumulate in the short time. Also, this indirectly caused disrespect
for those who were present at the meeting when others took turns to go out for personal
business.
2. Lack of attention
The group had problems arriving at clear decisions because members did not give the meeting
full attention. Discussions often rambled from topic to topic, or even members tended to delay
the resolution of problems to upcoming meetings. This was the reason why meetings often
lasted far beyond the two-hour limit, and the issues needed solving were still unsolved issues.
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3. Lack of team unity in making decisions
When the meeting came to the decision section, there was often disagreement between the
employees. The group decisions which some members disagreed with were made, they would
express their dissatisfaction with the team meetings and their results. This led to relationships
among team members being somewhat strained, especially when the team was dealing with
complicated issues in which members had varying opinions and interests.
II. EFFECTS
The key issue in diagnosing group inputs is the design of the larger organization within which
the group is embedded. The Ortiv Glass Corporation's design is relatively differentiated. Each
plant is allowed to set up its own organization design. Similarly, although no specific data are
given, the company's technology, structure, measurement systems, human resources systems,
and culture appear to promote flexible and innovative behaviors at the plant level. Indeed,
freedom to innovate in the manufacturing plants is probably an outgrowth of the firm's OD
activities and participative culture.
In the case of decision-making groups such as this one, organization design also affects the
nature of the issues that are worked on. The team meetings appear to be devoted to problems
affecting all of the functional departments. This suggests that the problems entail high
interdependence among the functions; consequently, high coordination among members is
needed to resolve them. The team meetings also seem to include many issues that are complex
and not easily solved, so there is probably a relatively high amount of uncertainty in the
technology or work process.
III. SOLUTIONS
The causes of the problems or acceptable solutions are not readily available. Members must
process considerable information during problem solving, especially when there are different
perceptions and opinions about the issues. Diagnosis of the team's design components
answers the following questions:
The team's goals seem relatively clear: they are to solve problems. There appears to be no
clear agreement, however, on the specific problems to be addressed. As a result, members
come late because they have "more pressing" problems needing attention.
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2. What is the group's task structure?
The team's task structure includes face-to-face interaction during the weekly meetings. That
structure allows members from different functional departments to come together physically
to share information and to solve problems mutually affecting them. It facilitates coordination
of problem solving among the departments in the plant. The structure also seems to provide
team members with the freedom necessary to regulate their task behaviors in the meetings.
They can adjust their behaviors and interactions to suit the flow of the discussion and
problem-solving process.
The team is composed of the plant manager and managers of five functional departments. All
members appear to have task-relevant skills and experience, both in their respective functions
and in their managerial roles. They also seem to be interested in solving problems
collaboratively. That shared interest suggests that members have job-related social needs and
should feel relatively comfortable in group problem-solving situations.
Group norms cannot be observed directly but must be inferred from group behaviors. The
norms involve member beliefs about how the group should perform its task, including
acceptable levels of performance. A useful way to describe norms is to list specific behaviors
that complete the sentences "A good group member should….. " and "It's okay to...."
Examination of the team's problem-solving behaviors suggests the following performance
norms are operating in the example:
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5. What is the nature of team functioning in the group?
The case strongly suggests that interpersonal relations are not healthy on the management
team. Members do not seem to confront differences openly. Indeed, the plant manager
purposely intervenes when conflicts emerge. Members feel dissatisfied with the meetings, but
they spend little time talking about those feelings. Relationships are strained, but members fall
to examine the underlying causes.
The problems facing the team can now be explained by assessing how well the group design
fits the inputs. The larger organization design of Ortiv is relatively differentiated and
promotes flexibility and innovation in its manufacturing plants. The firm supports
participative management and the team meetings can be seen as an attempt to implement that
approach at the new plant. Although it is too early to tell whether the team will succeed, there
does not appear to be significant incongruity between the larger organization design and what
the team is trying to do. Of course, team problem solving may continue to be ineffective, and
the team might revert to a more autocratic approach to decision making. In such a case, a
serious mismatch between the plant management team and the larger company would exist,
and conflict between the two would likely result.
The team's issues are highly interdependent and often uncertain, and meetings are intended to
resolve plantwide problems affecting the various functional departments. Those problems are
generally complex and require the members to process a great deal of information and create
innovative solutions. The team's task structure and composition appear to fit the nature of
team issues. The face-to-face meetings help to coordinate problem solving among the
department managers, and except for the interpersonal skills, members seem to have the
necessary task-relevant skills and experience to drive the problem-solving process. There
appears, however, to be a conflict in the priority between the problems to be solved by the
team and the problems faced by individual managers.
More important, the key difficulty seems to be a mismatch between the team's performance
norms and interpersonal relations and the demands of the problemsolving task, Complex,
interdependent problems require performance norms that support sharing of diverse and often
conflicting kinds of information. The norms must encourage members to generate novel
solutions and to assess the relevance of problem-solving strategies in light of new issues.
Members need to address explicitly how they are using their knowledge and skills and how
they are weighing and combining members' individual contributions.
In our example, the team's performance norms fail to support complex problem solving;
rather, they promote a problem-solving method that is often superficial haphazard, and subject
to external disruptions. Members' interpersonal relationships reinforce adherence to the
ineffective norms. Members do not confront personal differences or dissatisfactions with the
group process. They fail to examine the very norms contributing to their problems. In this
case, diagnosis suggests the need for group interventions aimed at improving performance
norms and developing healthy interpersonal relations.
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CHAPTER V: CONCLUSION
Group diagnostic models take the organization's design as the primary input examine goal
clarity, task structure, group composition, performance norms, and group functioning as the
key design components; and list group performance and member quality of work life as the
outputs. As with any open-systems model, the alignment of these parts is the key to
understanding effectiveness.
The model for diagnosing group level suggests that job design must fit job inputs to produce
effective job outputs, such as high quality and quantity of individual performance, low
absenteeism, and high job satisfaction. Research reveals the following fits between job inputs
and job design:
Job design should be congruent with the larger organization and group designs within which
the job is embedded. Both the organization and the group serve as a powerful context for
individual jobs or positions. They tend to support and reinforce particular job designs. Highly
differentiated and integrated organizations and groups that permit members to self-regulate
their behavior fit enriched jobs. These larger organizations and groups promote autonomy,
flexibility, and innovation at the individual job level. Conversely, bureaucratic organizations
and groups relying on external controls are congruent with job designs scoring low on the five
key dimensions. Both organizations and groups reinforce standardized, routine jobs. As
suggested earlier, congruence across different levels of organization design promotes
integration of the organization, group, and job levels. Whenever the levels do not fit each
other, conflict is likely to emerge.
When the organization's technology results in interdependent tasks, coordina tion among
members should be promoted by task structures, composition, per formance norms, and group
functioning. Conversely, when technology permits independent tasks, the design components
should promote individual task per formance. For example, when coordination is needed, task
structure might physically locate related tasks together; composition might include members
with similar interpersonal skills and social needs; performance norms would support task-
relevant interactions; and healthy interpersonal relationships would be developed.
When the technology is relatively uncertain and requires high amounts of information
processing and decision making, group task structure, composition, performance norms, and
group functioning should promote self-regulation. Members should have the necessary
freedom, information, and skills to assign members to tasks, to decide on production methods,
and to set performance goals. When technology is relatively certain, group designs should
promote standardization of behavior, and groups should be externally controlled by
supervisors, schedules, and plans. For example, when self-regulation is needed, task structure
might be relatively flexible and allow the interchange of members across group tasks;
composition might include members with multiple skills, interpersonal competencies, and
social needs; performance norms would support complex problem solving; and efforts would
be made to develop healthy interpersonal relations.
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REFERENCE
1. Vašková, R. (2007). Research on Teamwork and High Performance Work Organization,
European Observatory of Working Life (www.eurofound.europa.eu)
2. Wageman , R ( 1997) Critical Success Factors for Creating Superb Self – Managing Teas
at Xerox , Compensation and Benefits Review, Vol 29, Issue 5, pp.31-41.
3. D. Ancona and D. Caldwell (1992) , Bridging the Boundary: External Activity and
Performance in Organizational Teams, Administrative Science Quarterly 37, pp. 634-65.
6. J. Slocum and H. Sims (1980), A Typology for Integrating Technology, Organization, and
Job Design, Human Relations tt, pp. 193-212.
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