Developing high-performance cross-functional teams: Understanding motivations, functional loyalties, and teaming fundamentals
Teamwork is the key to the future of effective technology management. Today`s technologies and markets have become too complex for individuals to work alone. Global competition, limited resources, cost consciousness, and time pressures have forced organizations and project managers to encourage teamwork. Many of these teams will be cross-functional teams that can draw on a multitude of talents and knowledge. To develop high-performing cross-functional teams, managers must understand motivations, functional loyalties, and the different backgrounds of the individual team members. To develop a better understanding of these issues, managers can learn from experience and from literature on teams and teaming concepts. When studying the literature to learn about cross-functional teaming, managers will find many good theoretical concepts, but when put into practice, these concepts have varying effects. This issue of varying effectiveness is what drives the research for this paper. The teaming concepts were studied to confirm or modify current understanding. The literature was compared with a {open_quotes}ground truth{close_quotes}, a survey of the reality of teaming practices, to examine the teaming concepts that the literature finds to be critical to the success of teams. These results are compared to existing teams to determine if such techniques apply in real-world cases.
Year of publication: |
2009-11-09
|
---|---|
Authors: | Miller, M.A. |
Subject: | energy planning and policy | PERSONNEL | DECISION MAKING | ORGANIZING | COMPETITION | MANAGEMENT | RESOURCES | COMMERCIALIZATION | MARKETING | TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER | PLANNING | BEHAVIOR | INFORMATION DISSEMINATION |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by subject
-
Findings: LANL outsourcing focus groups
Jannotta, M.J., (2009)
-
The role of competitive forces in integrated resource planning
Kahn, E., (2008)
-
The role of competitive forces in integrated resource planning
Kahn, E., (2008)
- More ...