Six Teaming
Tips for Leaders
By Gregg Gregory
In 1985 Beth was a closer for a mortgage company in the very first
refinance boom. She and the rest of her team worked almost 80 hours
per week the last two weeks of each month, for most of the year. It
was “expected” of them if they were to get the loans to closing.
Her team was amazing - while there was some tongue in cheek
comments, the overall energy of the team was strong and the work got
done. If a weak link joined the team and could not handle it, they
chose to leave pretty quickly. Beth’s team was absolutely committed
to getting the job done and was at the performing stage of team
development. Was it always that way? Not a chance! Teams have to
develop and grow to a level like Beth was able to get her team to.
So how do you get a team to develop?
Here are a few tips on getting teams to move through the process.
-
Develop team goals and
communicate them plainly
- Leaders tend to forget that team members will look to them for the
basic in organizational goals. They expect those goals to be strong
and the guiding force. When the team goals are not aligned with the
organizational goals the team becomes disruptive and the storming
phase emerges.
-
Everyone must know their
roles and responsibilities
- If an offensive lineman came back to the huddle and told the
quarterback how to throw the ball we all know what would happen. So
why do we allow others to dictate how we do our positions. It is
critical that everyone knows what his or her duties are and how
their task relates to the overall team project or goal.
-
Don't allow the gossip
mill to emerge
- Without doubt someone will always want to start some kind of
gossip - maybe it is reporting on misbehaviors or a co-worker or
giving their version of communication between others on the team. If
this is allowed to happen the team is doomed before it ever gets
going. The best way to approach this is by not partaking in this
behavior yourself. Even have a talk with the team that gossip is
unacceptable and will not be tolerated.
-
Establish effective ground
rules
- Ground rules like baseball fields will differ from company to
company and even department to department. So it is imperative that
the team establish their own rules for their team. This can include
how to handle approaching someone’s cubicle when he/she is on the
phone. Or what to do if the boss' door is closed. Do you knock or
just walk in? What are your rules? By the way, if the team
establishes a majority of these rules then there is a greater
likelihood they will be followed.
-
Provide feedback
- This seems so simple yet it is the one that most leaders get
caught in a SNAFU. Feedback is not just the bad stuff. Too often
employees feel like the only time they come into the leader’s office
is when they have done something wrong. In fact why not write this
down on your to-do list: Within the next two weeks I will praise two
people in private. That’s right in private. This will begin to
raise the morale of all employees; not just the one you praise in
private. If you are praising in public do not stop - just add in the
private part.
-
Have regular huddle
meetings
- don’t get me wrong I am not saying have a weekly meeting just to
have a meeting. Be sure there is something worth discussing. In
fact some organizations have daily 15 minute huddle meetings to see
where things are and share some team successes. The more the team
shares the better the team’s accomplishments.
Team building is a process and it is always moving sometimes
forward - and yes sometimes backwards. So
your job as the leader is to keep the process moving in a forward
direction as much as possible. When you see a backward
slide, make sure to uncover what the cause is and correct it early
on. The longer you wait the more difficult the fix will be.
Read other articles and learn more
about Gregg Gregory.
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