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What Everyone Should Know About Teamwork
http://www.forbes.com/sites/luisromero/2016/01/20/what-everyone-should-know-about-teamwork/
(via Instapaper)

We all know already that teamwork is the key to success in most realms of life 
and business. Only through teamwork can we combine different, complementary 
points of view to identify and seize hidden synergy opportunities, overcome 
difficult obstacles and achieve challenging objectives.

However, teamwork is a challenge in and of itself. It requires that people 
manage their egos, develop humility, communicate effectively, resolve conflicts 
and, above all, commit to one another and to a common goal. Anyone who has 
worked on a team knows that the only way to do so successfully is by assessing 
oneself honestly and becoming the best person one can be. In this regard, not 
only does teamwork increase performance, it also promotes the development of 
better citizens and societies.

In order for a group of people to become a high-performing team, its members 
must undergo five transformational stages, which were masterfully described by 
Jon Katzenbach and Douglas Smith in what they called "The Team Performance 
Curve," presented in their book The Wisdom of Teams. The five stages are:

   
Image by SweetCrisis / Shutterstock.com

1. Working Group

A working group is nothing more than a collection of individuals who make 
independent contributions to a common objective, thus requiring low levels of 
integration and alignment. Working groups function well in certain contexts 
where complexity is low and the objectives are straightforward. However, they 
become less and less effective as the environment becomes more complex and the 
objectives become more challenging. More specifically, when identifying and 
seizing synergies become a prerequisite for survival and long-term 
sustainability, working groups must evolve into teams or else they will drift 
away into oblivion.

2. Pseudo-Team

When the members of a working group first decide to become a real team, their 
collective performance will tend to decrease as a result. This may seem 
counter-intuitive at first, but it actually makes a lot of sense. Working 
groups do not require that their members be fully integrated and aligned 
strategically and operationally. They operate under the premise that its 
members work individually and, later, someone else, a coordinator, will be 
responsible for integrating the results of their work. Therefore, when members 
of a working group first attempt to work as a real team, they have to face 
inevitable misunderstandings and frictions resulting from the natural 
differences among their personalities, work styles and personal goals. As a 
result, climate and performance deteriorate. Despite this difficulty, every 
team member, especially the leader, must be determined and patient, and allow 
this stage to occur in its entirety while not letting it define the team's 
future. This is where effective leadership starts to play a crucial role.

3. Potential Team

Once a certain level of familiarity and camaraderie develops among the team 
members, they start to agree on preliminary objectives, work methods, 
communication protocols, etc. Also, as they start to reach agreements, they 
also start to develop a culture of their own. This allows them to feel 
comfortable with one another, anticipate each other’s moves and have a glimpse 
at what they could achieve together. This gives them strengths of untold 
potential: trust and hope. The nascent integration among them and their 
willingness to learn from one another will allow them to reach performance 
levels that were literally impossible when they were just a working group.

4. Real Team

After establishing common objectives, work methods and communication protocols, 
newly formed teams develop a culture of their own and start to function like a 
unit. They visualize a shared future, motivate each other, learn from each 
other, resolve disputes and perform their jobs in ways that strengthen the 
overall system. In this way, they finally start to identify and seize synergy 
opportunities that were previously invisible. This is the mark of a real team.

5. Extraordinary Team

When a team develops a culture based on humility, hard work, excellence and 
learning, its members become able to translate both their victories and their 
failures into inputs for continuous improvement. Additionally, each member 
starts to develop unique, specialized skills that increase the team’s inventory 
of competitive advantages. Furthermore, they periodically reinvent themselves 
and the way they work, thus quickly adapting to, and sometimes generating, 
industry trends. All this allows them to achieve extraordinary results with 
increased frequency, thus becoming an extraordinary team.

The evolution from stage 1 to stage 5 is an arduous one that only a few get to 
complete successfully. In a way, these five stages also describe the 
development of human consciousness, sustainable economies and democratic 
societies. Teamwork is one of those topics where organizational theory, 
business management, political theory and human psychology meet to reveal a 
great deal of knowledge and wisdom that applies to every realm of life.

Luis E. Romero is an MIT-trained Economist, certified coach, professional 
speaker and published author. Follow him on Forbes, Twitter and LinkedIn, and 
visit his website here.

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