1 / 14

Middlesbrough Leadership and Improvement Programme

Middlesbrough Leadership and Improvement Programme. Learning Event 3 6 th March 2013. All models are wrong but some are useful” W Deming.

virote
Download Presentation

Middlesbrough Leadership and Improvement Programme

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Middlesbrough Leadership and Improvement Programme Learning Event 3 6th March 2013

  2. All models are wrong but some are useful” • W Deming

  3. Katzenbach’s (1993) definition of a team:A team is a small number of people with complementary skills who are committed to a common purpose, performance goals and approach for which they hold themselves mutually accountable.’

  4. What Are The Characteristics of a High Performing Team?

  5. The Culture of High Performing Teams • Feeling empowered by being trusted to take decisions • Feeling actively supported in developing one’s strengths • Believing people were willing to listen to ideas • Time was made for staff to discuss problems & issues, despite the busy schedule • Feeling all staff were involved in developing the vision • Feeling involved in determining how to achieve the vision • High use of face-to-face communication Source: Alimo-Metcalfe, B., Alban-Metcalfe, J., Samele, C. Bradley, M. & Mariathasan, J. (2007)

  6. Lessons from High Performing Teams Engaged important stakeholders Shared vision of high quality user-centred services Clarity of desired outcomes – stretch goals Leadership is distributed Learning organisation culture – innovative & adaptable Team focus and support Source: Alimo-Metcalfe et al., (2007)‘The impact of leadership factors in implementing change in complex health and social care environments: Department of Health NHS SDO, Project 22/2002.

  7. The Team Performance Curve High-performing team Real team Performance impact Working group Potential team Katzenbach and Smith Team effectiveness Pseudo-team

  8. Focusing on team basics Performance results Mutual Small number of people Individual Problem solving Technical/function Interpersonal Accountability Skills Specific goals Common approach Meaningful purpose Collective work products Personal growth Commitment Katzenbach and Smith (1993)

  9. Six team basics define the discipline required for team performance • Small number – generally less than 12 • No team performs without complimentary skills • Team must have: • a common purpose • commons set of specific performance goals • commonly agreed working approach • Hold each other mutually accountable for performance • Other areas such as trust, openness, good communication etc. transcend the six basic disciplines

  10. “Nice Teams Finish Last” • Don't rock the boat. Don't make waves. Don't offend anyone - but over-politeness keeps teams from being productive. • Encourage skills such as constructive criticism, honest communication, and the kind of conflict that drives innovation and quality without hurting feelings or creating enemies. From giving clear, sharp feedback, to effectively challenging others

  11. Effective Teams • A team is not a bunch of people with job titles, but a congregation of individuals, each of whom has a role which is understood by other members. • Members of a team seek out certain roles and they perform most effectively in the ones that are most natural to them. • Dr. R. M. Belbin

  12. Belbin – Team Roles Categories Action-orientated roles shaper implementer completer/finisher People-orientated roles co-ordinator team worker resource investigator Cerebral roles plant monitor evaluator specialist Belbin (1993)

  13. Some Thoughts on Leading Teams • Genuine concern for others • Ability to communicate and inspire • Decency • Humanity • Humility • Sensitivity • Respect for others • Professor Beverley Alimo-Metcalfe summarises the seven qualities as the leader being a servant not a hero

More Related