Team Management - Programming
·Discuss the key disadvantages to an incentive pay system. Within an incentive pay system, what are the disadvantages to rewarding team members in terms of their competencies? In terms of their results?need a 1.5 page length with references. Please answer the question from attached textbook
making_the_team_a_guide_for_managers__6th_edition__by_lieigh_thompson__z_lib.org_.pdf
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Sixth Edition
Making the Team:
A Guide for Managers
Leigh L. Thompson
Kellogg School of Management
Northwestern University
330 Hudson Street, NY NY 10013
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Thompson, Leigh L., author.
Title: Making the team : a guide for managers / Leigh L. Thompson, Kellogg
School of Management, Northwestern University.
Description: Sixth Edition. | New York : Pearson Education, 2016. | Revised
edition of the author’s Making the team, [2014]
Identifiers: LCCN 2016042609| ISBN 9780134484204 | ISBN 0134484207
Subjects: LCSH: Teams in the workplace. | Performance. | Leadership. |
Organizational effectiveness.
Classification: LCC HD66 .T478 2016 | DDC 658.4/022—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.
gov/2016042609
ISBN 10: 0-13-448420-7
ISBN 13: 978-0-13-448420-4
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For my home team: Bob, Sam, Ray, and Anna
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BRIEF CONTENTS
Part 1 Building the Team
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Types of Teams 3
Designing the Team 26
Leading Teams 51
Team Cohesion and Trust
Part 2 Team Performance
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
1
82
109
Performance and Productivity 111
Team Communication and Collective Intelligence
Team Decision Making 163
Managing Team Conflict 196
Creativity and Innovation in Teams 219
Part 3 Teams in Organizations
133
249
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Subgroups and Multi-Teams 251
Team Networking and Social Capital
Virtual Teamwork 299
Multicultural Teams 323
Appendix 1
Appendix 2
Appendix 3
Rewarding Teamwork 345
Managing Meetings 361
Creating Effective Study Groups
275
371
References 374
Name Index 434
Subject Index 449
iv
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Contents
Preface
Part 1
xvii
Building the Team
Chapter 1 TYPES OF TEAMS
1
3
Teams vs. Groups 4
Why Should Organizations Have Teams?
Information Technology 5
Competition 6
Globalization and Culture 7
Multigenerational Teams 7
Task Focus 8
Tactical Teams 8
Problem-Solving Teams 9
Creative Teams 9
Types of Team Autonomy 12
Manager-Led Teams 12
Self-Managing Teams 13
Self-Directing Teams 15
Self-Governing Teams 15
5
Observations About Teams and Teamwork 16
Teams Should Be the Exception, Not the Rule 16
Managers Fault the Wrong Causes for Team Failure 17
Teams Require Attention 17
Experimenting with Failures Leads to Better Teams 17
Conflict is Not Always Detrimental 18
Strong Leadership is Not Always Necessary for Strong Teams 18
Good Teams Can Still Fail Under the Wrong Circumstances 18
Retreats Will Not Fix All the Conflicts Between Team Members 19
What Leaders Tell Us About Their Teams 20
Most Common Type of Team 20
Team Size 20
Team Autonomy versus Manager Control 20
Team Longevity 20
The Most Frustrating Aspect of Teamwork 20
v
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vi
Contents
Developing Your Team-Building Skills 22
Accurate Diagnosis of Team Problems 22
Evidence-Based Management 23
Expert Learning 24
A Warning 24
Chapter Capstone
25
Chapter 2 DESIGNING THE TEAM
26
Team Design 27
Define the Goal 27
Ends vs. Means 27
Performance vs. Learning Goals 28
Promotion vs. Prevention Goals 29
Goal fit 29
Pre-Planning vs. On-line Planning 30
Timelines and Time Pressure 30
Capacity Problems vs. Capability Problems
Selecting Team Members 32
Member-Initiated Team Selection 33
Optimal Team Size 33
Skills, Talents, and Abilities 35
Roles and Responsibilities 35
Diversity 38
Processes: How to Work Together 43
Task vs. Outcome Interdependence 43
Transition and Action Processes 45
Structure 45
Norms 46
Team Coaching 48
Chapter Capstone
Chapter 3 LEADING TEAMS
32
50
51
Leadership Versus Management 52
The Leadership Paradox 52
Leaders and the Nature–Nurture Debate 54
Trait Theories of Leadership 54
Incremental Theories of Leadership 57
Leadership Styles 58
Task Versus Person Leadership 59
Transactional Versus Transformational Leadership
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Contents
Autocratic Versus Democratic Leadership 62
Leader Mood 65
Expectations of Leaders 66
Implicit Leadership Theories 66
Prototypicality 66
Status & Uncertainty 66
Leader–Member Exchange 68
Attributes that Influence Differential Treatment
Advantages of Differential Treatment 69
Disadvantages of Differential Treatment 70
Power 70
Sources of Power 71
Power Distance 72
Using Power 73
Effects of Using Power 73
Participative Management 74
Task Delegation 77
Parallel Suggestion Involvement 77
Job Involvement 79
Organizational Involvement 79
Chapter Capstone
68
81
Chapter 4 TEAM COHESION AND TRUST
82
Team Identity 83
Group Entitativity 83
Group Identity 83
Identity Fusion 84
Common Identity and Common Bond Groups
Relational and Collective Identity 84
Self-verification vs. Group-verification 85
Team-Member Exchange 85
Group-serving Attributions 87
Group Potency and Collective Efficacy 87
Team Efficacy and Performance 87
Group Mood and Emotion 88
Group Affect and Performance 90
Emotional Contagion 90
Behavioral Entrainment 91
Emotional Nonconformity 92
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viii
Contents
Emotional Intelligence 92
Leadership and Group Emotion 92
Group Cohesion 94
Cohesion and Team Behavior 94
Cohesion and Performance 94
Building Cohesion in Groups 95
Fear of Social Exclusion 96
Group Trust 96
Trust vs. Respect 96
Trust & Monitoring 97
Trust Congruence 98
Propensity to Trust 98
Types of Trust 98
Repairing Broken Trust 100
Psychological Safety 100
Group Socialization & Turnover 101
Group Socialization 102
Phases of Group Socialization 102
Old-timers’ Reactions to Newcomers
Deviant Opinions 106
Newcomer Innovation 106
Turnover and Reorganizations 107
Chapter Capstone
Part 2 Team Performance
105
108
109
Chapter 5 PERFORMANCE AND PRODUCTIVITY
111
An Integrated Model of Team Performance 112
Team Context 112
Organizational Context 113
Team Design 113
Team Culture 113
Essential Conditions for Successful Team Performance
Expertise 115
Engagement 118
Execution 126
Performance Criteria 128
Productivity 128
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Contents
Cohesion 129
Learning 130
Integration 130
Team Performance Equation
Chapter Capstone
ix
131
132
Chapter 6 TEAM COMMUNICATION AND COLLECTIVE
INTELLIGENCE 133
Collaboration 134
Uneven Communication 134
Knowledge Specialization 135
Knowledge Sharing and Knowledge Hiding 135
Transforming Knowledge into Solutions 136
Experienced Community of Practice 136
Adaptive Capacity 137
Monitoring and Talking to the Room 137
Team Mental Models 137
Reflective vs. Reflexive Mental Models 138
Representational Gaps 138
Accuracy 139
Correspondence 140
Transactive Memory Systems 141
Centralized vs. Decentralized TMS 142
Differentiated vs. Integrated TMS 142
Tacit Coordination 143
Routine vs. Nonroutine Tasks 143
Resilience to Team Member Loss 144
Reaction to Free-Riding 144
Developing a TMS 144
Common Information Effect 148
Hidden Profile 151
Ineffective Strategies 153
Effective Interventions 154
Team Learning 158
Environment 158
Newcomers and Rotators 158
Vicarious vs. In Vivo Experience 159
Threat, Change, and Failure 159
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x
Contents
After-Action Review (AAR) 159
Routinization vs. Innovation Trade-Offs
Chapter Capstone
159
162
Chapter 7 TEAM DECISION MAKING
163
Team Decision Making 164
Individual Decision-Making Biases 164
Framing Bias 165
Overconfidence 165
Confirmation Bias 167
Decision Fatigue 168
Individual Versus Group Decision Making 168
Demonstrable versus Non-Demonstrable Tasks 168
Groups Out-Perform Individuals 168
Group to Individual Transfer 169
Minorities versus Majorities 170
Group Decision Rules 170
Refusal to Make Decisions 172
Groupthink 172
Learning from History 174
Reducing Groupthink 174
Escalation of Commitment 178
Project Determinants 180
Psychological Determinants 180
Social Determinants 181
Structural Determinants 181
Minimizing Escalation of Commitment to a Losing Course
of Action 182
Abilene Paradox 183
How to Avoid the Abilene Paradox 184
Group Polarization 185
The Need to be Right 187
The Need to be Liked 187
Conformity Pressure 188
Unethical Decision Making 190
Rational Expectations Model 190
False Consensus 191
Vicarious Licensing 191
Desensitization 191
Chapter Capstone
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Contents
Chapter 8 MANAGING TEAM CONFLICT
196
Relationship, Task & Process Conflict 197
Relationship Conflict 197
Task Conflict 199
Process Conflict 199
Impact on Performance 200
Personality & Conflict 202
Team Identification 202
Power & Conflict 202
Organizational Climate and Conflict 203
Global Culture and Conflict 203
Types of Conflict 204
Proportional and Perceptual Conflict 204
Conflict States vs. Conflict Processes 205
Conflict Contagion 205
Distributive vs. Procedural Conflict 205
Equity, Equality and Need 205
Minority and Majority Conflict 207
Work–Family Conflict 209
Organizational Culture Conflict 209
Conflict Management 209
Conflict Modes 209
Contingency Theory of Task Conflict and Performance in
Teams 211
Investment Model of Conflict 212
Wageman and Donnenfeld’s Conflict Intervention Model
Interests, Rights, and Power Model of Disputing 216
Chapter Capstone
xi
214
217
Chapter 9 CREATIVITY AND INNOVATION IN TEAMS
219
Nature vs. Nurture 220
Creativity Versus Innovation 221
Convergent versus Divergent Thinking 221
Radical versus Incremental Innovation 223
Creative Realism 224
Fluency, Flexibility, and Originality 226
Exploration versus Exploitation 227
Brainstorming Versus Brainwriting 228
Brainstorming 228
Brainstorming versus Nominal Group 229
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xii
Contents
Brainwriting 230
Speedstorming 231
Electronic Brainstorming 232
Threats to Team Creativity 233
Social Loafing 233
Conformity 234
Production Blocking 234
Performance Matching 235
What Goes on During a Typical Group Brainstorming
Session? 236
Best Practices for Enhancing Team Creativity 236
Motivational Methods 236
Cognitive Methods 238
Facilitator-Led Methods 241
Leader and Organizational Methods 244
Chapter Capstone 247
Part 3 Teams in Organizations
249
Chapter 10 SUBGROUPS AND MULTI-TEAMS
251
Intergroup Relations 252
In-Groups and Out-Groups 252
Social Comparison 252
Team Rivalry 253
In-group Bias 254
Transgression Credit 254
Subgroups 254
Size 255
Identity, Resource, and Knowledge Subgroups 255
Number of Groups 256
Impact on Performance 256
Faultlines 257
Status 259
Deference 261
Intragroup Deviance 261
Team Boundaries 261
Underbounded versus Overbounded Teams 261
Founding Teams 262
Informing, Parading, and Probing Teams 262
X-Teams 263
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Contents
xiii
Teams in Matrix Organizations 264
Cross-functional Teams 264
Multi-team Systems 264
Integration Between Teams 265
Integration Across Multiple Teams and Components of a Business
Unit 266
Teamwork in Reorganizations & Mergers 267
Reorganizations 267
Mergers 267
Improving Interteam Relationships 269
Perspective Taking 269
Superordinate Identity 269
Contact 270
Apology 272
Assistance and Help 273
Affirmation 273
Chapter Capstone
274
Chapter 11 TEAM NETWORKING AND SOCIAL CAPITAL
275
Taskwork and Teamwork 276
Taskwork vs. Teamwork 276
Taskwork and Teamwork Network Structures 276
Factors that Affect Networks 277
External Leadership 277
General vs. Differential 278
External Roles of Team Members 278
Organizational Networks 280
Sharing Knowledge 280
Insider vs. Outsider Knowledge Valuation 280
Human Capital and Social Capital 282
Boundary Spanning 284
Boundary Loosening Versus Boundary Tightening 285
Cliques Versus Entrepreneur Networks 285
Team Social Capital 287
Friendship, Trust, and Advice Ties 288
Leadership Ties 290
Increasing your Social Capital 292
Analyze your Social Network 293
Identify Structural Holes 293
Expand the Size of the Network 294
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xiv
Contents
Diversify Networks 295
Build Hierarchical Networks 296
Recognize Gender Scripts in Networks
Reputation Management 297
Chapter Capstone
297
298
Chapter 12 VIRTUAL TEAMWORK
299
Place–Time Model of Social Interaction 300
Face-to-Face Communication 301
Same Time, Different Place 303
Different Time, Same Place 305
Different Place, Different Time 306
Information Technology and Social Behavior 309
Reduced Status Differences: The Weak Get Strong Effect
Equalization of Participation 310
Increased Time to Make Decisions 310
Information Suppression 311
Risk Taking 311
Disinhibition and the Negativity Effect 312
Task Performance and Decision Quality 312
Trust and Rapport 313
Virtual, Hybrid, and Traditional Teams 313
Prevalence 313
Advantages 314
Identification 315
Leadership 315
Attention and Problem-Solving 316
Conflict 316
Geographic Faultlines 316
Enhancing Virtual Teamwork 317
Team Formation 317
Technology 317
Shared Mental Models 318
Boundary Objects 319
Initial Face-to-Face Experience 320
Objective Self-Awareness 321
Integrity 321
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Contents
xv
Cave and Commons Flexibility 321
Coaching the Virtual Team 322
Chapter Capstone
322
Chapter 13 MULTICULTURAL TEAMS
323
Challenges of Cross-Cultural Teamwork 324
Multinational Teams 324
Stereotypes versus Prototypes 324
Cultural Values 325
Defining Culture 325
Iceberg Model 325
Hofstede’s Model 325
Dignity, Face and Honor Cultures 331
Tight versus Loose Cultures 333
Cultural Intelligence 333
CQ Model 333
Cultural Metacognition 335
Fusion Teamwork 336
Multicultural Engagement 336
Work Ways 337
Multicultural Teamwork 337
Creative Innovation 337
Relationship Orientation 338
Networks 338
Egalitarian Values 338
Status Perceptions 339
Emotional Display 339
Multicultural Collaboration 340
Ethnocentrism 340
Cultural Relativism 340
Managing Multicultural Teams 341
Change and Adaptation 341
Transactive Memory Systems 342
Language Barriers 342
Cultural Change 342
Integration 343
Assimilation 343
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xvi
Contents
Separation 343
Marginalization 344
Chapter Capstone
Appendix 1
Appendix 2
Appendix 3
References 374
Name and Author Index
Subject Index 449
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344
Rewarding Teamwork
Managing Meetings
345
361
Creating Effective Study Groups
371
434
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PREFACE
Making the Team has two audiences: leaders and team members. For leaders, the book
provides direction about how teams can be designed to function optimally; for team
members, the book focuses on the skills necessary to be productive.
Since the publication of the first five editions, many advances have occurred in
team and group research. Every chapter has new information, new research, updated
examples, and more. Specifically, I have made the following major changes to the sixth
edition of Making the Team:
1. Revised chapter structure: The order of the chapters is slightly changed to reflect
the revised three-part structure of the book: Building the Team, Team Performance,
and Teams in Organizations. The book still contains 13 chapters (suitable for semester or quarter-length courses). Rewarding Teamwork is now an appendix. And Virtual Teams and Multicultural Teams are each separate chapters.
2. Internal structure of chapters: Most of the chapters have new subheads that
reflect new theories, research, and topics.
3. New, updated research: True to the book’s defining characteristic—providing
managers with the most up-to-date research in a digestible fashion—I have included
the latest research about teamwork and group behavior, thus keeping the book true
to its strong research focus and theory-driven approach.
4. Surveys of managers and executives: The updated research also reports on the
survey of executives that we have conducted at Kellogg for the past 17 years. The
survey in the first edition reported the responses of 149 managers and executives;
the sixth edition has a database of more than 1,200 team managers.
5. New research studies: More than 220 new research studies have been cited.
6. More case studies: I have included more examples and illustrations of effective
(as well as ineffective) teamwork. More than 160 new case studies and examples
of actual company teams have been added. And, each chapter has a new, updated
opening example.
7. Illustrations and examples: Many of the concepts and techniques in the chapters
are supplemented with illustrations and examples from real teams, both contemporary and historical. I do not use these examples to prove a theory; rather, I use
them to illustrate how many of the concepts in the book are borne out in real-world
situations.
New exercises, cases, and supplemental material: The supplemental material and
teaching support materials have been greatly improved so as to complement the text.
This allows students to have a more integrated experience inside and outside of the
classroom. The book strongly advocates experientially based teaching, and the instructor now has even more options for making the concepts come alive in the classroom.
All of the supplements are available on Pearson’s Instructor’s Resource Center; instructors should contact a Pearson sales representative to be assign ...
Purchase answer to see full
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effect relationship becomes more difficult—as the researcher cannot enact total control of another person even in an experimental environment. Social workers serve clients in highly complex real-world environments. Clients often implement recommended inte
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One thing you will need to do in college is learn how to find and use references. References support your ideas. College-level work must be supported by research. You are expected to do that for this paper. You will research
Elaborate on any potential confounds or ethical concerns while participating in the psychological study 20.0\% Elaboration on any potential confounds or ethical concerns while participating in the psychological study is missing. Elaboration on any potenti
3 The first thing I would do in the family’s first session is develop a genogram of the family to get an idea of all the individuals who play a major role in Linda’s life. After establishing where each member is in relation to the family
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Note: The requirements outlined below correspond to the grading criteria in the scoring guide. At a minimum
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Read Connecting Communities and Complexity: A Case Study in Creating the Conditions for Transformational Change
Read Reflections on Cultural Humility
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Use the bolded black section and sub-section titles below to organize your paper. For each section
Losinski forwarded the article on a priority basis to Mary Scott
Losinksi wanted details on use of the ED at CGH. He asked the administrative resident