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Summary Teamwork - Theories, Design and Dynamics

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Summary of the four lectures of Teamwork - Theories, Design and Dynamics. Lecture 1: Team Theories Lecture 2: Team Membership Lecture 3: Team Composition Lecture 4: Team Dynamics

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Lecture 1 Team Theories
Work teams = interdependent collection of individuals who share responsibility for specific outcomes
for their organization

Why are teams popular? (Hackman) Benefits of teams:
“teams offer the potential for synergy, that wonderful state when a group “clicks” and members
achieve something together that no one of them could possibly have accomplished alone”

- Teams bring more resources
- Diversity in background and expertise
- Flexibility, keep the work going

Interdependence = “The dependence of two or more people or things on each other.”
Example: If I grow apples for a living, I am depended on people buying apples.

Interdependence in work teams: Determined by features of the team (i.e., the task and required
output) that define interconnectedness of team members.




Pooled interdependence: The team technically is a team but members don’t really depend on each
other. (Low interdependence)

- Individual tasks are pooled at the end as group output.
- Individual contributions are valued (rewarded) more than collective contributions.
- Redundant individual resources / expertise etc.

Sequential interdependence: First person works on the assignment first, second person improves
the assignment and hands it in.

Reciprocal interdependence: Team works on a complex project/product. Constantly working
together to create output.

- Individuals work simultaneously on all aspects of the task.
- Rewards are based on the collective output/end product.
- Members differ in their type and quantity of resources.

,Task interdependence = The degree to which members (a) depend on another for access to critical
resources and (b) create workflows that require coordinated action.

Example: Medical team:
Corona IC → Low task interdependence
Complex treatment → high task interdependence

Outcome interdependence = The degree to which goals are formulated and outcomes are rewarded
in terms of collective rather than individual contributions.

Example:
Red bull racing team is a team, however both drivers are competing with each other. And when one
of them wins, he gets the trophy as an individual, not as a team.
When a soccer team wins they get one trophy as a team.

What do work teams need to be effective?

➢ Task
- Do not use a team for work that is better done by individuals.
- Some projects turn out better when performed by one talented individual on behalf of a
group than by the group as a whole working in lockstep.

Example: Writing a book (is better done alone). An orchestra requires a lot of coordination and is
very complex, but as a team it can achieve perfect synergy.

➢ Structure
- To reap the benefits of teamwork, one must actually build the team.
- Set boundaries, define relationships, divide tasks, form relationships with stakeholders, etc.

Example: An orchestra is very structured, all the instruments are positioned at a specific place.

➢ Leadership and support
- Leaders need to give direction to avoid ambiguity.
- The organizational context needs to provides support that is specifically tuned to the needs
of work teams.
- It is important to reward collective outcomes.

Example: the conductor in an orchestra is very important, it makes sure the orchestra sounds good.

IMOI model (Ilgen et al., 2005) Allows for feedback loops!




Input:

➢ Team design
- Composition (e.g., KSAs; size, stability; week 3)
- Interdependence (task, outcome; Courtright et al., 2015)
- Leadership and authority (see Hackman, 2002)
➢ Task factors (e.g., complexity; requirements; task type)
➢ Context (e.g., organizational culture, resources; also Hackman, 2002)

, Potential performance (Steiner, 1972): performance that a team could achieve

▪ Is high when teams have the resources (composition, context) that are required by
the task.

Task types and potential performance (Steiner, 1972)



Pooled interdependence




Actual performance (Steiner, 1972)
Actual performance = potential performance – process loss (mediator)

Process loss = Coordination loss & Motivation loss

Mediator: (Marks et al., 2001)

➢ Team processes: “members' interdependent acts that convert inputs to outcomes through
cognitive, verbal, and behavioral activities directed toward organizing taskwork to achieve
collective goals”
- Example: Information sharing and elaboration, conflict management, decision making and
problem solving, physical activities, relational activities, ….
➢ Emergent states: “constructs that characterize properties (not behavior) of the team that
are typically dynamic in nature and vary as a function of team context, inputs, processes, and
outcomes”
- Example: (shared) emotion and cognition, cohesion, climate, transactive memory, shared
mental models, …

Cohesion (emergent state) = The force that binds members to the team and induces them to stay in
with the team.
- Task cohesion: shared commitment to the team task (I find the task important/interesting).
Correlation with performance: .27 (not very strong)
- Interpersonal cohesion: attraction to the team (I like the people in the team).
Correlation with performance: .14 (less strong then task cohesion) → we can hang out and do
something else instead.

Causality between cohesion and performance:
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