Strong teams create strong organisations; weak teams create weak organisations. More and more organisations depend on well-functioning teams to serve customers, innovate and improve productivity. However, creating and maintaining effective teams can be a challenge. Effective teams can provide dramatic improvements over traditional work structures, but they often fall short.
Now the question arises: How can leaders ensure healthy teams?
Successful teams know their purpose – what the reason is for their existence. Teams that fail often attribute their failure to an unclear focus. For the company to be successful everybody should be moving in the same direction.
A good team mission statement should:
The most important aspect of creating your team mission is that the leader cannot do it on his own. To gain maximum buy-in and engagement (employee engagement means that employees’ hearts hands and minds should be involved in the work, not only their hands) from employees, team members themselves should develop the mission. The role of the leader is merely that of facilitator and gatekeeper.
A mission statement should include:
Without a set of measurable goals, teams can easily be distracted by issues not relevant to the success of the team, the project and the customers.
Not measuring performance is like playing a game without keeping a score. A set of clear performance measures allow the team to manage its progress and fulfil the purpose outlined in its mission statement.
Click here to view a video on guidelines on how to set clear goals for your team.
A standard is simply a statement of what will be an acceptable performance. Perfection obviously is not standard. Standards should be attainable by the average person and surpassed by superior performance.
Key questions the individual needs to ask himself concerning his job are: “What are the performance standards that need to be maintained/reached in my section?” or “How can I tell when I am performing my job to standard?”
The main requirement of the standard is that it should mean the same thing to the people who are using it. It is better to put emphasis on facts and data rather than opinions and subjective judgment. Not everything can be measured. In making some of the most important business decisions such as, “Will it sell?" or "Will he fit into his job?” or “Should we trust them?” judgment, as well as measurement, must be used. Any standard, which enables you to distinguish failure from success, is better than none at all.
Finally, it is important to apply a standard to the end result or output of the job – measure whether you have achieved what you have set out to achieve in your goal setting.
Click here to view a video that explains performance standards.
Action plans provide a method for identifying who needs to do what and when in what order to accomplish an objective. In other words, action plans outline and sequence the steps and the resources (people, finance, time, and equipment) needed to achieve the performance objective. The benefits of action plans include:
Action plans also help people to anticipate what might go wrong and to prevent potential problems from occurring again and are a valuable tool for setting up performance since they specify exactly what needs to be done and by when and help both manager and employee track performance progress.
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Clearly defining team member roles and responsibilities up front is crucial. Begin by jointly deciding what should be expected of all team members. Once in agreement on areas of common responsibility, start determining individual roles.
Each team member’s performance affects the work of the whole team. Giving feedback for improvement requires special skills. Here are three principles to use feedback as a performance improvement tool:
To function effectively, a team needs to clearly set out its expectations about behaviour and interactions.
Operating guidelines are a set of shared agreements developed by the team which define how team members will interact. For example:
Such guidelines provide a conscious alternative to unspoken norms such as ‘we will defer to management to make decisions’ or ‘we will complain about other team members behind their backs instead of talking with them directly’. Used properly, operating guideline is a powerful tool for self-regulation and team well-being.
As team members give their commitment to helping improve team relations and subsequently team efficiency, the team leader should also give his/her commitment. Remember, if your aim is employee engagement, you are not only interested in employees’ hands, but also in their heads and hearts. Although it sounds logical, it is sometimes very hard to get commitment from employees on this level.