1 / 29

Staff Improvement Techniques

Staff Improvement Techniques. Presented by:. Tyler Smith Allison Wiest Lisa Mathson. Conflict Discipline Energy Learning Methodology. Objectives Output Structure Mutual Support Team-Member Fulfillment. Characteristics of an Effective Team. Stages of Team Development. Testing

jana
Download Presentation

Staff Improvement Techniques

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. Staff Improvement Techniques

  2. Presented by: Tyler Smith Allison Wiest Lisa Mathson

  3. Conflict Discipline Energy Learning Methodology Objectives Output Structure Mutual Support Team-Member Fulfillment Characteristics of an Effective Team

  4. Stages of Team Development • Testing • Infighting • Getting Organized • Mature Closeness

  5. Stage 1. Testing • As the team begins to coexist, there is a gradual growth of exchange and contact. • People begin to find out about one another’s attitudes, values, styles, and readiness to be contacted. • The testing process continues until each person makes a decision concerning the nature of their involvement

  6. Stage 2. Infighting • Who controls the team? • How is control exercised? • What happens to delinquents? A team has to find the answers to these questions if it is to develop.

  7. Stage 3. Getting Organized • Tune into problems and assess the challenges presented • Explore, clarify, and set objectives • Clarify criteria for achieving success and techniques for measuring success • Collect and structure information and devise options for action

  8. Stage 3 cont. • Evaluate options for action • Develop effective plans and a strategy for carrying them out • Take intelligent and effective action • Review to learn and improve their performance

  9. Stage 4. Mature Closeness • Members of a fully established team develop rapport and closeness • Team members are willing to extend themselves for their colleagues • Team members’ roles have been identified, and each person’s contribution is distinctive and valued

  10. Motives for Team Building • A newly appointed leader wants to achieve rapid progress. • A pragmatic leader wants to use team building to further an open, problem-solving approach to management. • A leader who faces new challenges needs the creativity and commitment of all those involved to handle the task. • A leader who faces problems related to relationships, commitment, or lack of clarity; needs to break out of the doldrums.

  11. When Team Building Is Needed • Loss of production or unit output • Increase of grievances or complaints from the staff • Evidence of conflicts or hostility among staff members • Confusion about assignments, missed signals, and unclear relationships • Decisions misunderstood or not carried through properly

  12. When Team Building Is Needed • Apathy and general lack of interest or involvement in staff members • Lack of initiation, imagination, innovation, and actions taken for solving complex problems • Ineffective staff meetings, low participation, minimal effective decisions

  13. When Team Building Is Needed • Slow start-up of a new group that needs to develop quickly into a working team • High dependency on or negative reactions to the manager • Complaints from users or customers about quality of service • Continued unaccounted increase of costs

  14. Designing a Good Team Building Program • Preparation • Start-up • Problem Solving • Feedback • Action Planning • Follow-up

  15. Preparation • Have an outside person interview each unit member to identify problems, concerns, and need for change • Invite an outside speaker to talk about the role of teams in organizations and the purposes of team development • Gather data on the level of team effectiveness

  16. Preparation Cont. • Have a general discussion about the need for a team-building program • Invite a manager who has had a successful team-building experience to describe the activities and results in his or her unit

  17. Start-Up • Create a climate for work • Get people relaxed and loosened up • Establish norms for being open, for planning, and for dealing with issues • Encourage people to speak what they feel and assure that no negative action will result • Present a cognitive framework for the whole experience

  18. Problem Solving • Take action on problems identified • Present data that has been collected from the group prior to the meeting • Have the group analyze the data • What needs to be changed to gain a positive response instead of a negative

  19. Problem Solving Process • Put problems in order of priority and select the five or six most pressing problems to be addressed during the workshop • Define the problem, list alternative solutions, select alternatives to be implemented, develop an action plan, perform the action, and evaluate results

  20. Problem Solving cont. • Identify the existing level of group effectiveness, formulate a goal, identify driving and restraining forces, and develop a plan to remove restraining forces • Negotiate between people or subunits the actions needed from each other to improve effectiveness

  21. Feedback • Share data about performances so that the difficulties can be resolved • Should reflect a genuine willingness to work cooperatively • Is most helpful if it can be given a descriptive fashion or in the form of suggestions

  22. Action Planning • Each person takes time to evaluate their feedback and develops a plan of action for personal improvement • Each person summarizes what their assignments are and actions they intend to take

  23. Follow-Up • It is important to schedule follow-up meetings and to review decisions and actions • Here you want to establish a system that will ensure that actions agreed on and agreements made are, in fact, implemented • A major goal is to see that continual team building becomes a part of the ongoing activities of the work group

  24. Using Activities • Activities can be used to help members at certain stages in the development process to encourage a higher level of performance and to increase relations

  25. Quick to use Inexpensive Participative Single-focus Use props or outside material Low-risk Adaptable Activities Should be:

  26. For activities to be effective the key ingredients are: • A supportive environment • Encouragement from leaders • Members must be given the necessary skills • Working toward an identifiable goal/reward • Be able to learn from and interact with others

  27. Activity Ideas • Icebreakers- used to get to know teammates and build trust among people • Plan energetic events and super socials • Ropes course challenge and trust exercises

  28. Activity Ideas cont. • Make a creative environment- delete policies which inhibit creativity • Team brainstorm and acquire common visions • Build self-esteem- encourage positive feedback and to give and receive compliments

  29. Reference Page • Newstrom, John; Scannell, Edwad, The big book of team building games, The MacGraw Hill 1998 • Francis, Dave; Young, Don, Improving Work groups, Pfeiffer & Company 1992 • Dyer, William G, Team Building: current issues and New Alternatives, Addison-Wesley 1995 • Mears, Peter; Voehl Frank, Team Building: A structured Learning Approach , ST. Lucie Press 1994 • Funcilatators, www.funcilitators.com

More Related