Team and Teamwork

abhishreshthaa

Abhijeet S
  • The nature of teams may be changing, but the underlying nature and benefits of teams are not.
  • Teams are becoming more numerous and complex, with one person often being a member of a number of teams in an organisation. Recent discussions have highlighted:

  • In one medium sized organisation, formal management responsibilities being assigned to teams of people from different parts of the organisation.

  • Instead of having formal positions for specific functions (human resources, health and safety, etc), a committee structure has been created and successfully implemented.

  • This helps ensure that the responsibility and accountability for these important functions is shared between a number of people.

  • In one technology based company, product and system implementations for different clients require different parts of the organisation to provide services.

  • Consequently, the project team can be very different for each client, depending on the expertise required.

  • Team members may be based locally, in Australia or other parts of the world.


  • In another services company, staff find themselves working in multiple teams at the same time.

  • At any given part of the year, the number of projects can range from two to six, depending on the current client assignments.

  • These team structures are in addition to the formal organisational unit structure where team members reside.

  • They are expected to use teamwork to complete the functional aspects of their positions along with their colleagues in the same organisational unit.
 
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