today about self organizing teams
Anja Stiedl ? CST CEC CTC
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Trainings & Coachings für Professionals im Agilen Kontext ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I reflected on self organizing teams… it got a little longer than I anticipated. I think it’s worth reading - so: have fun!
I use this picture as my guiding visualization and structure:
Perhaps it helps you follow my thoughts and elaboration on the topic. Start in the left top corner and go clockwise.
Common Goal
Important starting point in the discussion of self organizing teams is the topic of having a common goal. That is a precondition for a group of people to become a team. And not only being given one, but also aligning and committing to a common goal, which might be different from the one that was given to them. The aligned common goal gives the people the direction to aim for and meaning to contribute for.?
Communication?
People on a self organizing team have interest in communication and communication skills, they work on them, improve them. Important aspects might be:?
Your role as leaders would mean to help them learn these communication skills.?
Inclusiveness
By the term “inclusiveness” I mean openness to others, in the team and outside the team. This implies…
What you can do as a leader…
Ownership
I don’t know if I should call it responsibility or ownership. And this is what I mean: internally motivated fully taking on the ownership of a topic that matters. There never is “not my job” or “I didn’t see or know”.?
Hard to live up to this goal as an individual, even harder to achieve as a team.?
领英推荐
This is kind of recursive here: as a team taking on self organization requires ownership of the team-organization aspect, which itself includes the ownership-aspect for the team.
Clear Structures
Clear structures give simplicity in collaboration. Well, that’s wrong: collaboration between people is never simple, but defining some clear structures and rules takes out some of the complexity:
Lots to do, huh?
Continuous Learning Culture
In a self organizing team that aims for performance, or even high performance, relentless improvement and continuous learning is the standard. And it’s pursued by the team members. It is done in a various ways: attending formal trainings, informal self learning activities, team learning sessions, organization wide open-mic sessions, events and meetings for feedback, retrospectives, user group or conference attendance and contribution, open source project contribution, and more.
With the full power of an open learning and failure culture also comes the abandoning of a blaming culture in an organization. As a leader go the first step and show your failures and vulnerabilities. Show your own mindest and trust in the organization.
Supportive environment
Organizational change requires management support to build up an environment that encourages the change and helps people and teams perform it in their own way. As a leader, build up this supportive environment as the basis for great teams to grow, prosper, swell:
Trust
Simon Sinek defines a team as a group of people who trust each other. Trust is the basis for a healthy high performing team. You cannot force trust. You can only build up conditions as a leader, that trust can grow and flourish. My two cents that I offer here are…
Alternatively, on the other hand, you can always destroy trust. Be aware of you actions and impact. Choose.?
All of this is to be learned and tried out and trained and failed and clarified and adapted and tried again… to one day be accomplished to succeed! Have fun on your journey! ... and I look forward to your comments and feedback :-)
Solutions Strategist - Nordics & Baltics @ Couchbase
3 年Good one ??