Team Building - Making the Whole Greater than the Sum of the Parts
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Title: Team Building - Making the Whole Greater than the Sum of the Parts
Word Count: 700
Author: Alan Hunt
Email: ahunt@sandstone.co.uk
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Team Building - Making the Whole Greater than the Sum of the Parts
Copyright 2006 Sandstone Limited
When was the last time that you heard the phrase "variety
is the spice of life"? In what context was it used? Was it
applied to experiences? Well - it can be. Was it applied
to teams? Well - it should be! And team building can help
it add that spice.
My definition of a team is one in which the whole is
greater than the sum of the parts. Otherwise, it is just a
collection of individuals. I find it impossible to imagine
how my definition can be achieved if the team is comprised
of clones os a single individual - no matter how good that
individual is. Making the whole greater than the sum of the
parts is about exploiting the differences between people,
not the similarities.
Yet all too often, the differences become weaknesses
instead of the strengths they should be. What is the key
symptom of this? Unproductive conflict within the team.
What is the usual remedy for this? Those in conflict keep
apart - either on their own initiative or because they
management steps in and enforces the distance.
I see this as a waste. Difference is good. It leads to more
options, better decisions and higher performance. If it can
be channelled. The hard part is in recognising the value.
Without seeing the potential, what's left are problems.
Why are even fundamental differences between individuals in
the same team collectively a positive characteristic? Let's
take an example.
Suppose Sam is an energetic "up and at 'em" kind of
character. Sam likes new things, enjoys a challenge and is
naturally extrovert. Sam doesn’t care much for detail and
always wants things done now. A colleague, Pat, is a much
quieter and infinitely more diligent individual. Pat
believes that there is a place for everything and
everything should be in its place. Attention to detail is
amongst Pat's greatest strengths and Pat doesn't like to
start something without all the resources necessary to
complete it being at hand.
Sam thinks Pat is too slow and far too pedantic. Pat
thinks Sam is slapdash and a show off. They don't much like
one another. Their relationship is a source of tension in
the team.
Enter Sam and Pat's manager. What does he or she do?
Option one is to keep them apart. Put them on different
projects if possible. Move them to opposite sides of the
department, maybe. And never, ever feed them after
midnight. With luck, the disruption to the team's
achievements will be kept to a minimum.
Option two is a harder decision for the manager - but isn't
that what he or she is paid for? While their natures
provide all the ingredients necessary for gunpowder in the
right proportions, Sam and Pat actually have highly
complementary skill sets. If the manager wants something
done well when time is not of the essence, Pat will surely
get the job. If it is new or needs to be done quickly, Sam
will be first choice.
Of course, what usually happens is that the manager needs
it done both quickly and well. A mix of the two is what is
needed. Combine Sam's natural ability to rise to a
challenge quickly with Pat's diligence and attention to
detail and the ideal combination is available. If Sam and
Pat can be helped to appreciate one another's strengths and
work with one another effectively.
That's what we call team building. A manager may choose to
blend team members into a genuinely effective team in a
number of ways and real team building doesn't have to be
done during an away day session. However, such a session is
a great way of tackling such issues in a less emotive and
independent environment and well worth considering.
Carefully choosing activities that require people with
diametrically opposed personalities to work together using
all their strengths to good effect. Creating that safe
environment to explore the benefits of such collaboration
and using a structured debriefing process to ensure that
the learning points get documented - and get transferred
back to the workplace. That really is team building.
Variety may or may not be the spice of life. But it surely
is the basis for improved team performance.
About the Author:
Alan is Managing Director of Sandstone, a leading UK team
building company. He enjoys creating innovative activities
that combine fun with genuine team development. In his
spare time, he does voluntary work for the RNIB.
www.sandstone.co.uk
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