More diversity, less hierarchy: How to build a high-performing team
Glenn Leibowitz
Senior marketing leader at McKinsey | 4x LinkedIn Top Voice in marketing & management | Inc. magazine called me "a writer you should start reading today"
Whether you're a coder or marketer at a five-person startup, or one of tens of thousands of employees at a sprawling multinational company, the one thing you can be certain of is that you'll be working in one or more teams.
Teams are the most fundamental unit around which every company is organized. When teams work well, companies design, produce, and ship great products and services. And the most successful leaders in any organization tend to be the ones who can build and motivate teams to achieve common goals.
"One of the clearest signs of an experienced leader is the attention she pays to her people and her teams," notes Lindred Greer, an associate professor of organizational behavior at Stanford Graduate School of Business. "Everything in a company is determined by the quality of team dynamics, and the ability to effectively lead teams is at the heart of managerial success."
Greer has spent her career studying teams, which she defines as "groups of three to 10 people who work together interdependently toward a common task." And, from her research she has developed a deep understanding of what makes teams effective. In a recent article on Stanford's website, Greer shared three suggestions for building and managing effective teams.
1. Build diverse teams.
Greer is mystified by the lack of planning behind many of the teams that are formed at companies, particularly startups, which have been a recent focus of her research. Companies that put some thought into the composition of their teams are likely to build ones that are more successful. And successful teams, as research demonstrates, are diverse teams.
"Members should have different ways of thinking, different backgrounds and styles of work, different expertise," she says. "Bring optimists and pessimists together; pair risk-takers with risk-avoiders; balance genders. In other words, design a team around complementary but distinct attitudes and strengths."
While encouraging diversity, Greer also cautions against the possibility of a divergence in goals among team members. That's why she suggests laying down clear goals and ground rules in advance: "Every team should take part in an orientation in which goals are stated explicitly, benchmarks are established, and responsibilities of each team member are made clear."
2. Introduce "hierarchical agility."
Every team has a leader, but bringing power dynamics into team meetings, Greer has shown, "often corrupts team interactions, stifles creativity and honesty, and ultimately diminishes outcomes." To address this issue, Greer recommends "hierarchical agility -- the ability of a team to flex its hierarchy throughout the day so that sometimes the group is flat and sometimes it follows the line."
And how to make a team flat? Greer offers a few practical ideas, like passing an object around to give everyone at the meeting a chance to say something. Body language is also important, and she suggests leaders consider leaning back from a table to signal they are handing over the supervision of the meeting to someone else on the team, at least temporarily.
And make sure conversations are rooted in data, she urges. "This helps enormously because data is a currency that everyone has access to," Greer says.
3. Spot (and fix) problems early.
Spotting and fixing problems as they arise within a team is another recommendation Greer offers. Left alone, small issues become bigger ones, and can disrupt team dynamics.
In her experience, Greer has noticed that even seemingly trivial struggles between team members could signal more serious underlying problems on the team. Team members who believe they've been passed over for a promotion or lack certain responsibilities might express their frustration in other areas. To tackle this, "stop the meeting short and go offline" with the person, Greer says. "Find what's driving the conflict and resolve that issue."
If team members aren't speaking up in meetings, managers should proactively try to address this. "Pay attention to small details, like where they (and others) sit in meetings and how this affects conversation, or how their responses to ideas influence whether people speak up," suggests Greer.
What do you think? What's your advice for building a high-performing team? Please share your thoughts in the comments.
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??People Performance Enabler ?Limitless Leadership Developer ??High Performance Team Builder - ?Organizational Culture Transformer ??Strategy Planning Facilitator ? Mindset Shifter
7 个月I'd be curious to understand more regarding impacts of the Cognitive Complexity Capacity (C3) or / IQ on building high performance diverse teams. In our REVOLUTIONARY WORKPLACE HPO team experiences in South Africa, with "diverse teams", it seems to matters a lot to have compatibility, or some sense of similarity, in C3/IQ/Mental capabilities.
Program Manager at Abundant Water
5 年Thanks a lot for sharing this wonderful article which is very helpful for those in charge as the top managers
Chief Observer at Atlas Professionals
6 年Hello Glen, in the first person. There are many companies out there so to speak, that do not really give a damn what you are saying. Ethics are just spins to them. The hire them fire them of old are pretty much prevalent in many companies be they, whatever, American, Norwegian or Saudi, etc. If you do not understand that, just look it upon your google. Where is the balance, I hate to say that is just absolute crap and yet it is so. Technical and sheer experience has lost out in many industries to mercenary bullying, never mind your so called team building. Management prevents such a thing in many companies for their own self satisfying justification, quite simply. Why do you ask, simply they have no interest unless it self serves themselves. Need I go on. Or do you need a lesson.
Leadership and team coaching for continuous improvement, adaptivity, innovation and great results. With fun, energy, and meaningful impact.
6 年When working on high-performing teams in a business context, think about how sports teams become and stay high performing. They tend to have diversity and hierarchical agility build in from the start. As is addressing problems early, respectful and openly. And, it takes courage, commitment and practice to become top-performing.