Saturday, October 20, 2012

BOOK REVIEW: The Wisdom of Teams; Creating the High-Performance Organization


Katzenbach, Jon R. and Douglas K. Smith.  The Wisdom of Teams,     Creating the High-Performance Organization.  New York, NY:   HarperBusiness Essentials, 1994.


Summary and Discussion

This clearly reworked and marketed Harvard research project begins by defining real teams and expounding upon how they are most effectively developed.  In later chapters, the authors discuss the importance of teams, the effectiveness of teams, and practical ways executives can best utilize a team’s strength to become a better organization.  The more than thorough analysis done on close to fifty different businesses is documented to present the lessons learned from actual success and failures with regard to team building and effectiveness.
     Utilizing twelve chapters organized into three distinct parts, these researchers use the first section of this book to make sure their audience has a full understanding of the various types of teams.  There are teams that make recommendations, teams that create or produce, and teams that manage or oversee.  Each kind of team, with its unique characteristics, can contribute to a high-performance organization, whether it is through the shareholders who provide opportunities, workers who produce a good, or customers who generate revenue.  As defined on page 45, a real team is “a small number of people with complementary skills who are committed to a common purpose, performance goals, and approach for which they hold themselves mutually accountable."
Using this definition, the authors expound on each characteristic to give the reader a full understanding of what real teams look like.  Among other things they point out that the size of the team should not exceed twenty or twenty-five, because larger numbers of people are less likely to be able to develop common goals, purpose, and mutual accountability essential to becoming a real team. 
Further, technical and functional expertise, problem solving and decision-making ability, and interpersonal relationships are expounded upon at length as a mix of skills needed to effectively do the team’s job.  Additionally, the team must develop a common purpose and performance goals, creatively noted by the acronym SMART (specific, measurable, acceptable, realistic and timed).  Then, the team is able to work together to accomplish those common goals, something the authors refer to as the common approach.  This, in turn, leads to a foundation for which a team can have mutual accountability for the fulfillment of those common purposes, goals, and the agreed upon approach.
The second part of this book focuses upon the process by which a team is developed, if indeed a team is what is called for.  The team approach, which is a collective contribution, shared leadership, with a specific end product, is contrasted with a work group approach.  The later approach utilizes a centralized leader, individual contributions and no real work or product being produced.  This approach may produce decisions, make delegations, and have influence, but will not produce high-performance organizations, according to these authors.
This “high-performance” goal requires the potential teams to take certain risks and operate under some since of urgency.  Though expectations may be defined, supervisors should allow the team to develop their own common purpose, goals, and the overall approach.  A Team Performance Curve is introduced in chapter five as a chart that measures a team’s effectiveness against its performance impact.  This showed a teams development from a working group, to a pseudo-team, to a potential team, to a real team, and finally to the ultimate goal of the high-performance team.
Next, the authors give insight on the appropriate role of a good team leader.  While giving the team room to work, the team leader should strive to develop the confidence and commitment of each team member.  The leader acts as an ambassador for the team, running interference, and removing obstacles.  The team leader’s job is to listen carefully to the needs of the group and do whatever is necessary to allow them to do their jobs effectively.  Like a referee at a ball game, the team leader’s goal is provide needed boundaries and oversight, but to go unnoticed as much as possible so that the game can go on. 
Instead of approaching obstacles as a negative aspect for teams, Smith and Katzenbach teach that difficulties can make a team stronger by encouraging team spirit, confidence, and unity.  Indeed, it is the readiness of the team, not the size of obstacle that will determine the outcome of such adversities.  If the team becomes demoralized, forgetting its identity and original purpose, it is time for the leader (or in some cases a new facilitator) to refocus on the basics of what makes a real team.  It is time to readdress the purpose, remind the members of the working approach and the specific goals.  Look for the small wins and highlight any achievements of the team in reaching specific goals.  In more sever cases the team members or even the leader may need to be reassigned.
In part three, the potential of an effective team is fully developed.  For example, when an organization faces a major change the team approach can be very effective even at the top of the organization.  This can only work, according to the authors, if executives find a way to work together to tackle specific issues.  To develop teams in this environment they must be willing to determine team membership based on an individual’s skills, not position.  They must be willing to break down the hierarchical approach and require all members to contribute as equals.  If they set rules of behavior similar to teams in the workplace they have a chance to develop an effective team to guide their organization to greater success.  Because teams can be more effective than individuals, executives should consider a team based approach as a risk worth taking.

Critique
This book did make a good case for a team based organization.  The principles presented can easily be applied in a ministry setting, though the stated ultimate goal being “high-performance” would need to be reworked to match a more biblical approach.  Also, the practical questionnaires are useful, if appropriately adapted, to analyze a ministry organizations readiness for a team environment. 
On the more critical side, this book did seem cumbersome at times due to its redundancy and length.  Though some of the case studies were interesting to read, the numerous examples seemed to be an over-kill.  Where one short sample would sufficiently illustrate the point, the authors too often cluttered the flow of the book with unneeded tedious case studies.
Overall, however, the book brought many sound principles for team development and effectiveness to the forefront.  For instance, it reminded us to encourage individual responsibility and mutual accountability for the work that is produced.  If someone is given the responsibility to accomplish a task, they must be given the ability and authority from the top.  The authors instructed us to make the purpose of the team crystal clear and the role of each member in accomplishing that purpose well defined and agreed upon by everyone involved.  Leaders were taught to seek consensus, instead of collusion, to encourage discourse, instead of dictation, and to share the role of leadership, instead of leading alone.
Utilizing this book in our ministry will push us to advance beyond simply calling a group of people a “team,” then waiting to see if that will inspire them toward success.   More specifically, this helped me, as team leader, to work through my understanding of team dynamics as it relates to moving beyond a “work group” approach.  This challenged me to strive for a “real team” model, rather than settle at some lesser stage in the development process. 
For example, in my current ministry team, we have not focused on our purpose, goals, and approach, as we should.  Our purpose is often swamped in the details of event planning.  Our approach has been so developed over the years that we may have lost some connection to the reason why we do what we do.  This could cause disunity and discouragement among the team members when difficulty arises. 
We are now taking deliberate steps to keep our purpose and specific goals in the forefront.  We discussed this at our meeting three weeks ago and I followed up this past week with personal note of encouragement reminding each team member of their value in achieving our goals and fulfilling our God-given purpose.  Though this is just the beginning, I am very encouraged by the team’s initial response. 

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