11.1.2 High-performance teams
So, what is the role of the manager in building high-performance teams?
A manager works with groups and individuals towards organisational goals within the constraints of the organisation and the external environment. The role of the manager is continually to balance the requirements of the task with those of individual organisational members and of teams. A manager needs to understand that teams are at different points of development and act accordingly. One of the requirements for a successful team is a clear role for all members. A successful team requires members with different characteristics to perform different roles.
Your textbook covered three main types of roles . These were group-task roles, group-maintenance roles and self-orientated roles. When determining roles, keep in mind the following questions: What is to be done and how is it to be done?
Belbin (1981) studied the success rate of hundreds of managers working to solve management exercises in teams, considering many variations in the compositions of teams. Belbin identified eight process functions in a successful team. It is unlikely that a team will contain eight people that exactly 'fit' the eight functions. Teams of five to six are usually recommended and the functions will overlap.
Naturally, not every team needs to contain each of the functions in the same measure. Belbin holds that, whatever tasks the team is created to perform, to be successful each of the functions needs to be recognised. Conversely, an over capacity in a particular function leads to clashes and unproductive behaviour.
Table11.1 Roles that need to be filled in a team for high-performance
Role name |
Role definition |
company worker |
converter of concepts, strategy and ideas into relevant plans for action |
chairperson |
charismatic steerer from non-productive strife towards focusing resources |
shaper |
forceful person who has the task in mind and makes sure everyone else does it |
plant |
the ideas person who finds new angles and approaches to problems |
resource investigator |
the Mr/Mrs Fix-it who has contacts and runs the relevant and irrelevant networks |
monitor-evaluator |
the standard setter who knows how it was and how it should be done |
team worker |
the person wanting to get on with the job without the hassle of control issues |
completer-finisher |
the actual completer of jobs and the one concerned with fine details |
Cited in Woods (1988), page 95. From Belbin, M (1981). Management Teams . Heinemann.
Teams contain individuals who, if the team is to be successful, complete the jigsaw of roles in a way that is appropriate to the task that is to be completed. According to Belbin, teams are inefficient when roles are absent or over-represented, when the balance does not fit the task or when the style of management is unsuitable for the team composition or the task.
Look at your own patterns and those of a team of which you are a part. What are some of the good points of these teams? Can you pinpoint some of the problems? As a manager, what is your role in building high-performance teams?