Leading Team Building, Managing Group Dynamics and Diversity
Leading Team Building, Managing Group Dynamics and Diversity
Leading Team Building, Managing Group Dynamics and Diversity
• Free riding
• Opportunity to sit back and let others do the work (social loafing) can reduce motivation to
• perform.
• Coordination problems
• Difficulty integrating members’ contributions can lead to incomplete discussions and
premature decisions or, alternatively, dysfunctional cycling in trying to reach a decision.
• Social facilitation
• Perceived risk of being wrong in front of peers may cause members’ performance on tasks
that require experimentation and unpracticed behavior to suffer.
• Dysfunctional conflict and faultlines
• Politicized subgroups lose sight of the overarching goal of the group and instead push their
own agendas.
•
• Failure to surface all ideas and information
• Members do not adequately share new information that they would share in a
nonteam context due to:
• Self-censorship: Members privately decide their information is less original, relevant, or
important than information already shared by others; or
• Information overload: Members forget their own information has not been shared or stop
generating new ideas because they are focused on listening to others.
• Poor allocation of airtime
• Domination by one or more members skews discussion, invites power struggles,
overwhelms potential acts of leadership by less dominant members, and can
waste time by sidetracking the team.
• Premature consensus
• Overriding desire for harmony or conformity in the team (groupthink), evaluation
apprehension, social fear, or similar biases can prevent people from speaking up,
leading to incomplete analysis of the problems at hand.
• A third common path to team failure is to neglect the
emotional and relational aspects of the team by
overemphasizing the cognitive team experience.
Difficult personalities, emotional conflict, or poor
communication are only a few of the affective
obstacles that can trip up a team
Focus on three core leadership levers: team
design, team launch, and team process
1. Team Design
• The most basic determinants of team effectiveness will
be decided by its design—the why (a compelling team
purpose), who (the right team composition), what (an
appropriate team structure and role design), when (a
reasonable team timeline), and how (the alignment of
team rewards and proper access to resources).
Establishing Compelling Team Purpose (why)
Types of Team Purpose
Team Composition (who)
• Thoughtful leaders assemble or recruit team members who supply
traits and competencies across several different dimensions.
• Team Size
• Member Selection
• Group Dynamics and Diversity
• Social Sensitivity
• Familiarity
Effect of Group Size
on Productivity
Member Selection: Group Dynamics and Diversity
• For example, some members’ lack of fluency in the team’s dominant language
can lead others to underestimate their competence
• Major cultural differences
• The following cultural differences can cause destructive conflicts in a team
• Direct versus indirect communication.
• Direct versus indirect communication. Some team members use direct,
explicit communication while others are indirect, for example, asking
questions instead of pointing out problems with a project. When
members see such differences as violations of their culture’s
communication norms, relationships can suffer
• Trouble with accents and fluency. Members who aren’t fluent in the
team’s dominant language may have difficulty communicating their
knowledge. This can prevent the team from using their expertise and
create frustration or perceptions of incompetence.
• Differing attitudes toward hierarchy. Team members from hierarchical
cultures expect to be treated differently according to their status in the
organization. Members from egalitarian cultures do not. Failure of some
members to honor those expectations can cause humiliation or loss of
stature and credibility.
• Conflicting decision-making norms. Members vary in how quickly they
make decisions and in how much analysis they require beforehand.
Someone who prefers making decisions quickly may grow frustrated with
those who need more time.
Member Selection: Social Sensitivity
• collective intelligence (“c”): A battery of tests, completed early in a team’s life,
that measure a team’s capacity for logical analysis, brainstorming, coordination,
planning, and moral reasoning, can predict future team performance on a wide
variety of future tasks (just as IQ tests are intended to predict an individual’s
performance on a wide variety of future tasks). What defines “c”? Interestingly, it
is not strongly correlated with the IQ of individual members of the team or other
personality traits but instead increases with three measurable team-level
attributes:
• Team members’ average social sensitivity (ability to read emotions in another
person’s face)
• Equality in distribution of conversational turn-taking
• Proportion of women on the team
• https://s3.amazonaws.com/he-assets-prod/interactives/233_reading_
the_mind_through_eyes/Launch.html
Member Selection: Familiarity
• If possible, selecting team members who share prior positive
experiences working together may provide a team with a head start.
• Not only are team members already aware of “who knows what,” but
they also typically demonstrate more willingness to engage in
relationships, coordination, and knowledge sharing from the very
start.
• Familiarity also may encourage an immediate sense of psychological
safety and trust among new team members.
What: Team Structure and Role Design
• Nature of Roles
• One important way teams may create a division of labor for learning,
remembering, and communicating team knowledge is through a so-
called transactive memory system (TMS)—essentially a shared mental
map, built through team interaction, of where knowledge resides.
• Content of Roles
• Role Representation
When: Team Lifespan
• Teams are partially identified by the length of their intended lifespan.
Some teams seem to have no planned endpoint; others, like the
temporary teams mentioned above, last only as long as the
individuals involved share responsibility for the (short- term)
outcome. Timelines are closely tied to individual responsibilities and
accountability, so teams should try to be explicit about timelines,
even if they may change. Mutual awareness of a shared timeline can
be important for effectiveness: Ideal team design and practices may
be very different for an emergency room team that lasts for one shift
than for an executive team that may spend years together.
How: Aligned Team Rewards and Resources
• Two of the most important functions served by the larger organization
or environment in which a team operates are determining how the
team will be rewarded and providing access to resources beyond the
team’s boundaries.
2 Team Launch
a. Approaches to Team Launch
• There are many approaches to leading a team launch. At PepsiCo, team launch is also a
carefully choreographed process that includes: (1) identifying and highlighting the core
capabilities that each member will bring; (2) articulating the team purpose and inviting
responses from team members; (3) creating a sense of shared identity; (4) identifying
the resources the team will need for success and the approach to acquiring them; and
(5) putting the norms and expectations for members on the table for the team to
revise and ratify.