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Robert Christensen

Communication Activities of High- and Low-Performing Teams - Chief Learning Officer, So... - 0 views

  • In our recent research, Rosalie J. Ocker and I found that high-performing virtual design teams differed from low-performing teams in terms of the number of messages, message length and the content profile of those messages. The high-performing teams had significantly more messages and longer messages than the low-performing teams. Additionally, the leaders of the high teams had more messages and longer messages than the leaders of the low teams. High-performing teams communicated more regarding aspects of the design. They also sent considerably more messages and longer messages that focused on summarizing their work and discussing the write-up of the report covering the project design. The high-performance teams not only communicated more, but they communicated regarding key design aspects of the project. Through their increased communication, it is not hard to conceive that they generated a greater number of high-quality and creative ideas
  • ding key design aspects of the project. Through their increased communication, it is not hard to conceive that they generated a greater number of high-quality and creative ideas. Additionally, and maybe as a consequence of the increased amount of messages, the high-performance teams spent time summarizing their work and sharing these summaries with their teammates. Although the high- and low-performance teams did not differ in the amount of messages concerning team management, the summaries served a coordination function by keeping members apprised of their teammates’ ideas and progress. These summaries also appear to be key when preparing the final design report. Inspection of the transcripts shows that much of the design reports came directly from the text of comments, many of which were summary comments. In three of the four high-performing teams, the leaders did the summarization. In the fourth team, another team member did the summarization and thus was an emergent leader. In the low-performing teams, the leaders did not do any summarization at all. Thus, it is plausible that this simple act of summarizing work, coupled with the not-so-simple act of putting forth more effort, were key aspects of the success of the high-performance virtual design teams. Article Keywords: &nbsp; technology &nbsp; 1 &nbsp; | &nbsp; Next Page &nbsp; | &nbsp; 3 Buy Birth Control Pills if(typeof(cachebuster) == "undefined"){var cachebuster = Math.floor(Math.random()*10000000000)} if(typeof(dcopt) == "undefined"){var dcopt = "dcopt=ist;"} else {var dcopt = ""} if(typeof(tile) == "undefined"){var tile = 1} else {tile++} document.write(''); Like Dislike Community Disqus Login About Disqus Glad you liked it. Would you like to share? Facebook Twitter <a
  • Additionally, and maybe as a consequence of the increased amount of messages, the high-performance teams spent time summarizing their work and sharing these summaries with their teammates. Although the high- and low-performance teams did not differ in the amount of messages concerning team management, the summaries served a coordination function by keeping members apprised of their teammates’ ideas and progress
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    My takeaway from this relates to the whole information explosion issue - just sharing info isn't what is effective. High performing groups shared more messages, longer messages, and probably most importantly, did more to summarize their work. This acts to filter irrelevant info and highlight important ideas. Effective collaboration facilitators will encourage this kind of communication.
Robert Christensen

Welcome to Talent Management - Talent Management - 1 views

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    3 tips to help leaders eliminate workplace drama (they apply to everyone). I especially like #3.
Robert Christensen

Welcome to Talent Management - Talent Management - 0 views

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    Tips for utilizing the unique strengths of different employees
Robert Christensen

Management Training & Leadership Development :: The Ken Blanchard Companies - 0 views

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    Blanchard has excellent research, articles, tools, assessments and training on leadership, trust, org development
Robert Christensen

Welcome to Talent Management - Talent Management - 0 views

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    Extend trust; boost transparency; connect and collaborate. These themes seem to be repeated on one form or another in nearly all of the literature on leadership that I see.
Robert Christensen

Bersin & Associates: Research and Advisory Services in Enterprise Learning & Talent Man... - 0 views

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    Bersin often offers free webinars and research summaries on issues related to training, elearning, HR, and org dev
Robert Christensen

They're Human Capital, Not Cattle - Talent Management - 1 views

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    "There is nothing more useless than doing efficiently that which shouldn't be done at all. "
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    Ha ha: It is much easier to count the bottles than describe the wine. love it.
Robert Christensen

A Corporate Climate of Mutual Help - 1 views

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    The Schein approach to changing a culture - and to developing better ways of helping others within organizations - is one of observation, inquiry, and leverage. This means observing the ways in which an organization's employees act; deducing (or inquiring about) the ways they think; and putting in place small behavioral changes that lead them, bit by bit, to think about things differently...... People need to be able to raise concerns, and persist in raising them, in a way that cultures like NASA, aimed at results, can accept. S+B: Are most managers capable of this? SCHEIN: Probably not. They would need a culture that rewards them for raising concerns, and in most organizations the norms are to punish it. It's the very nature of authority to say, "Don't be a squeaky wheel. You made your point, but we're going to go ahead anyway. I don't want to hear any more."
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