Effective Ways to Manage a Productive Team

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Building teams might seem like a very difficult task even for a well-seasoned manager. However, building teams in a competitive, stressful or high-pressure field can seem almost insurmountable. We see this most often in competitive field such as sales, production or where an organization might have more than one business unit competing for recognition such as hospitality. When organizations run into issues with the lack of or insufficient teamwork it can hurt the organizations image, profits or will inhibit the company growth by lack of sharing best practices, missed opportunities, higher cost or loss of labor.

When creating a team, many factors must be analyzed before an organization starts to put the people together. Organizations want to first define a goal that the team is working to achieve. As with any goal, the organization will want to make sure that the goal is clearly defined. Next it is important to determine how many people the organization will need to accomplish the goal, as well as what skills these people might need to help contribute to the team.

However, sometimes managers cannot create a team; sometimes the manager inherits a team from a former manager who has since moved on. A manager cannot always just start from scratch, firing or otherwise removing works, when employees might have been with the company for years before the manager arrived. Not only would that be counter productive, you will be losing experience and maybe highly skilled workers before you even start. Also the cost of such a foolish in devour will do more harm than good in most cases. What does a manager do if they become a leader of an already established dysfunctional team? What if that team is highly competitive where individual p...

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...spect of an effective team will help organizations to complete the task, but understanding how each part works together as a whole will help the organization to make a great team.

Works Cited

American Psychological Association Practice Organization. (2010). Phycological Health and Workplace Program. Fact Sheet . American Psychological Association Practice Organization.

Milkovich, G. T., Newman, J. M., & Gerhart, B. (2011). Compensation (10th Edition ed.). New York, New York: McGraw-Hill Higher Education.

Rosch, P. J. (2001, March). The quandary of job stress compensation. Health & Stress (3), p. 1.

Rubin, R. S. (2002). Will the Real SMART Goals Please Stand Up? The Industrial-Organizational Psychologist , 39 (4), 26-27.

Thompson, L. L. (2011). Making the Team: A Guide for Managers (4th Edition ed.). Saddle River , New Jersey : Pearson Education Inc.

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