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When Teams Don't Work:
10 Major Reasons
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5. Not sharing job knowledge, communication. This is so important it should be in every employee's job description. Sharing of job knowledge, skills and ideas is central to a team's success. No matter how many team building exercises you engage in, your team won't be productive without this simple rule. 6. Tardiness. Is there an employee who is consistently late? What is the impact on the morale of the team? Have a personal standard in writing for what is considered “late.” This helps, too, with accountability. 7. Too many breaks (or too long). Put the number of breaks allowed, along with time frame, in job descriptions. An alternative is to have the team come up with how many breaks a team member can have in one day. Include the number of minutes. Be specific. 8. Disorganization of shared workspace. 2 common problems: 1) Shared workspace is so small it affects productivity. 2) If messy “Oscar” and clean “Felix” are sharing workspace, have them define the rules on what's considered neat and organized. Have them ask themselves, “Is this problem affecting productivity?” I love it when I go into a company's break room and above the sink it reads, “Please clean up after yourself. Your mother doesn't work here!” 9. Excessive personal use of the internet or telephone. In my seminars around the world, I frequently hear complaints from people receiving too many joke emails. Another common challenge is someone in the office talking loudly while on a personal call. Have the team define the rules. While everyone likes to socialize, what is considered to be adversely affecting the performance of the team? 10. Leaking confidential information. What is considered confidential? Be specific and put it in writing. Hold everyone accountable. Effective communication is the key to the success of any team. Gather your team together for a team building meeting. Have everyone list and discuss any potentially unacceptable team behaviors. Are there any issues or activities adversely affecting the team? What issues could impact the team in the future? Write everything down. Print it out and give everyone a copy. There will be more “buy in” because they were involved in the solutions. Hold everyone accountable. Without accountability there's no incentive to change behavior. And your team members want to see you as a team leader who takes action. Lastly, how are you performing as a role model? In thinking about how to be an effective team leader, remember your people are going to watch what you say, and more importantly, what you do. "What we prepare for is what we shall get." William Graham Sumner Article Source: http://www.articledashboard.com
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