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/ Effective teamwork / Get dysfunctional
teams back on track
We have probably all observed performance differences between apparently
similar teams. Despite being staffed by team members with similar
backgrounds and experience, some teams develop a sub-culture which
can adversely affect performance, quality, job satisfaction or safety.
The reasons why counterproductive team subcultures develop are subtle,
complex, and can be difficult to correct. At The Keil Centre, we have
delivered a number of projects which involved diagnosing the reasons
for team dysfunction, and designing a process to get the team back
on track. For example:-
- An engineering development team tasked with overcoming technical
challenges to get a complex product to market were having difficulty.
Initial diagnosis revealed technical experts and product developers
within the same team were not co-operating, and were forming two
opposing sub-teams. A team sub-culture survey pin-pointed other
team development issues, which were addressed during a team development
workshop, and followed up by project leaders. Improvements in
team sub-culture were tracked over an 18-month period.
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