“Two heads are better than one.”
We’ve all heard the adage encouraging teamwork, but what does working together really do for you? Our team development programs focus on building higher levels of team performance.
Our programs use powerful talent analytics generated by SuccessFinder. The behavioural assessments of the team members find the barriers that are holding the team back. Our workshop builds the skills the team needs to self-manage their process of ongoing improvement. Especially relevant, we use a team survey before the workshop and follow-up in 90 days to measure the team's progress. Also, we offer a program for the senior leadership team and a general program for all other groups.
The Purpose of Forming Teams
The purpose of creating teams is to provide a framework that will increase the ability of employees to participate in planning, problem-solving and decision making to serve customers better. Increased participation promotes:
- a better understanding of choices
- more support for and involvement in implementation plans
- increased contribution to problem-solving and decision making
- more ownership of decisions, processes, and changes
For teams to fulfill their intended role of improving organizational effectiveness, it is critical that teams develop into working units that focus on their goal, mission, or reason for existing. They do this by effectively progressing through the stages of team development.
Stages of Team Development
The following are the five stages of team development with suggested actions to best support the team.
Forming: a group of people comes together to accomplish a shared purpose. Their initial success will depend on their familiarity with each other's work style, their experience on previous teams, and the clarity of their assigned mission.
As a sponsor, your role is to help the team members get to know each other whether you offer team building activities or just a listening ear.
Storming: Disagreement about mission, vision, and ways to approach the problem or assignment are constant at this stage of development. This struggle combines with the fact that team members are still getting to know each other, learning to work with each other, and growing familiar with the interaction and communication of the group members.
As a sponsor, once again, your role is to help the team members get to know each other whether you offer team building activities or just a listening ear. Help your team leader clarify each of these assignments so that the team succeeds.
Norming: The team has consciously or unconsciously formed working relationships that are enabling progress on the team’s objectives. The members have consciously or unconsciously agreed to abide by certain group norms, and they are becoming functional at working together.
As a sponsor, ask for periodic updates from the team. Regularly check the team's progress at agreed upon intervals and critical steps on the path to a successful conclusion.
Performing: Relationships, team processes, and the team’s effectiveness in working on its objectives are synching to bring about a successfully functioning team. This is the stage at which the real work of the team is progressing.
As a sponsor, ask for periodic updates from the team. Help solve problems and provide input as needed. Make sure that team members are communicating with all of the other appropriate parties in your workplace. You don't want the team operating in a vacuum.
Transforming: The team is performing so well that members believe it is the most successful team they have ever experienced; or
Ending: The team has completed its mission or purpose, and it is time for team members to pursue other goals or projects. (Adjourning)
As a sponsor, make sure that the team schedules an ending ceremony. Whether they debrief the project and discuss how the team could have been more successful, you will want to mark a definite ending to the team or project.
Team Development
Complete Leadership Series
We offer:
- evaluation of executive potential using SuccessFinder
- reports: interaction styles, career success, career summary dynamics, leadership behavioural competencies
- team survey
- half day workshop with team members on the interactions, attitudes, and behaviours that are at the core of the team’s culture
- development of a 90-day team improvement plan
- readminister the team survey in 90 days to measure progress
Team Development
Project Teams
We offer:
- validation of purpose and task clarity
- review of team composition using SuccessFinder
- feedback session
- team questionnaire
- half day team workshop
- follow-up in 90 days with a survey to measure team progress
Team Development
Setting up Teams
We offer
- assistance in organizing future teams to have employees working in areas where each has the best opportunity to succeed
- assessment of behavioural traits and competencies to get the right mix of team members
Team Scorecard by Competency:
In this report, we are showing the strength(s) of your individual team members across 26 unique behavioural competencies. Leaders can quickly assess individual as well as collective team styles for key insights into development and alignment opportunities.
Asking questions is especially helpful if you are considering major change initiatives or need to understand team dynamics at a behavioural level.
Questions like:
- What are the collective strengths of the group? Where are there collective gaps?
- Are gaps such that it will impact our ability to execute on our business objectives or strategy?
Learn More
How to use Neuroscience for Remarkable Business Success
How to Achieve Remarkable Business Results — Thought Diversity
How to Be A Great Manager in Today’s Environment
How to be a Remarkable Leader — Lead with Questions
Think about the benefits of a large group versus the ideal number of people. The more people you have, theoretically, the better chance you have of getting the best information to make the best decision. Research has shown that collective intelligence does exist. But, according to research reported in Science, the October 2010 issue by authors Anita Williams Woolley, Christopher F. Chabris, Alex Pentland, Nada Hashmi and Thomas W. Malone:
This “c factor” (the group’s collective intelligence) is not strongly correlated with the average or largest individual intelligence of group members but it correlates with the average social sensitivity of group members, the equality in conversational turn-taking, and the number of women in the group.
Emotional intelligence and soft skills are more important to the functioning of teams than focusing on the ideal number. Our assessment of the performance traits of the team members using SuccessFinder can create the needed diversity of thought for the team to be extremely effective.
Hackman and Vidmar (1970)
Moreover, their research on optimum group size for member satisfaction showed a similar outcome. They determined the ideal number was 4.6 members, let's call it 5. The number is just one factor. Social sensitivity and being able to read emotions are attributes of successful team decision-making. Consider the number and consider the members. Maybe they’ll need a little training in empathy and being sensitive to others as well as having a culture that allows all to fully take part.
This of career development as a journey. Your career development plan is to get you to the next milestone on your journey. SuccessFinder Career Development leads to career success and satisfaction. We encourage you to review your plan annually and adjust as needed. You need to make your way around our cycle annually.
SuccessFinder Career Development Steps
Identify your dream
- Self-reflection
- Read biographies
- Study role models
- Experiment
Identify your strengths & challenges
- List your strengths
- Performance Review
- SuccessFinder Assessment
- Test Results
Research career options
- Explore online resources; we have two on our Student page
- Look for the job on Workopolis, Monster, Canada Job Bank
- Gather labour market information
- Attend a conference — most have great rates for a student
Talk with successful practitioners
- Use the network of your parent, relatives, teachers, coach
- Cold call, most professionals will spare some to help out a student
Develop the required new skills
- Identify a specific job that uses your strengths
- Find out what the skills you are missing for the next step, online job posting boards are a good place to look
- Determine to best to get them—online, courses, self-study, volunteering, etc.
Link your education and career
- Focus on the competencies you have acquired i.e. problem-solving skills
Learn about yourself
- Self-reflection
- Approach all sorts of people for balanced feedback — What are some things that I did well? What are some things I could have done differently or better?
- Am I where I want to be?
- Where else could I use my strengths?
SuccessFinder career development is unlike other assessment approaches. We offer a single tool that can be used across the organization: for all roles and levels and at every stage in the employee life cycle. We help people discover their performance strengths and suggesting roles that optimize their potential. Our talent analytics are essential to an effective career development plan. SuccessFinder offers a predictor of success in any role.
In addition, SuccessFinder is only career assessment tool committed to meeting the rigorous APA C1 standard based on its validity for decision-making.
We offer an employee career development plan and a personal development plan.
Gallup researchers have studied human behaviour and strengths for decades. They discovered that building employees' strengths are a far more effective approach than a fixation on weaknesses.
A strengths-based culture is one in which employees:
- learn their roles more quickly
- produce more and significantly better work
- stay with their company longer
- are more engaged.
In the current study, a vast majority (67%) of employees who strongly agree that their manager focuses on their strengths and poor positive characteristics are engaged, compared with 31% of employees who strongly agree that their manager focuses on their weaknesses.
When managers help employees grow and develop their strengths, they are more than twice as likely to engage their team members. The most powerful benefit a manager can provide his or her employees is to place them in jobs that allow them to use the best of their natural talents, adding skills and knowledge to develop and apply their strengths.
Leadership
Leadership is about behaviour, regardless of a person’s title or where they fall in the company hierarchy. As organizations face new and unfamiliar challenges, success depends on increasing the frequency of leadership performance from individuals and teams across the organization to ensure that the organization can deploy the right leadership at the right moment for the right context. So instead of redefining criteria and isolating a small group of “stars,” the challenge is to understand and unleash the largest source of potential: The entire workforce.
We take a holistic view of potential — beyond simply identifying leadership potential among individuals. Instead, we aim to surface, activate, and accelerate potential in every individual, within teams, and across the full force of your organization.
Our leadership ladder provides the framework and process to develop and support the leaders in your organization from first-level managers to CEO.
Business Benefits of SuccessFinder
A bad hire is bad for business. It wastes time, and stresses the organization and the person you hired and fired. Our approach to achieving strategy of business success focuses on achieving value for the shareholder and has two necessary conditions: satisfied customers and a satisfied workforce. We drive employee success and career satisfaction.
In addition to avoiding the cost of a bad hire, you:
- Slash onboarding costs with targeted development/coaching right from point of hire
- Increase retention due to better-fit hiring and promotion
- Avoid costly litigation by hiring without bias
- Differentiate high potentials from high performers
- Increase bench strength and know who to target for accelerated leadership programs
- Decrease training costs based on highest-need performance competencies
- Increase engagement due to people operating in their strengths
- Transform your workforce into one focused on performance at every level
We use SuccessFinder in all our talent analytics used for selection, employee career development, succession planning, team development and leadership coaching.
Using performance competencies, we can provide an additional view of a candidate versus a higher performer.
In addition to technical skills, academic background and professional experience acquired, an individual’s natural behavioural tendencies are crucial elements to achieving success at work. Our goal in creating this model is to provide better ways for organizations to capture these natural behavioural tendencies and leverage them to develop the strong, resilient leaders required to drive today’s business strategies. SuccessFinder measures 85 performance traits. The 26 performance competencies consist of three to six behavioural characteristics. The competencies are grouped into five categories. They are very useful for developing a performance plan as they reflect the interaction of the traits.
How the traits combine along with a career theme in different dynamic combinations to predict business and career success. These combinations constitute the complex behavioural trait dynamics that we see in the workplace and can be measured using competencies and a readiness to influence others directly.
Performance competency is the kind of skill set that an individual should have so that he or she can meet the goals of the organization. Measuring performance competency is a tough job for any human resource manager. SuccessFinder makes it easy. Due to the increasingly complex structure of the organization, it is imperative for individuals to have a good and healthy relationships with people across departments.
In some organizations, including behavioural competencies is part of their appraisal as well.
Why do organizations need to understand performance competencies?
Understanding performance competencies play an essential role in succession planning, workforce planning, and training and development.
Executives, managers, and organization staff members universally explore ways to improve business results and profitability. Many view team-based, horizontal, organization structures as the best design for involving all employees in creating business success. Developing an overall sense of teamwork is different from building an effective, focused work team when you consider team building approaches.
No matter what you call your team-based improvement effort: continuous improvement, total quality, lean manufacturing or a self-directed work teams, you are striving to improve results for customers.
If your team improvement efforts are not living up to your expectations, this self-diagnosing checklist may tell you why. Successful team building, that creates effective, focused work teams, requires attention to each of the following.
Clear Expectations:
Has executive leadership clearly communicated its expectations for the team\'s performance and expected outcomes? Do team members understand why the team was created?
Is the organization demonstrating constancy of purpose in supporting the team with resources of people, time and money? Does the work of the team receive sufficient emphasis as a priority in terms of the time, discussion, attention and interest directed its way by executive leaders?
Read more about Clear Performance Expectations.
Context:
Do team members understand why they are participating on the team? Do they understand how the strategy of using teams will help the organization attain its communicated business goals?
Can team members define their team\'s importance to the accomplishment of corporate goals? Does the team understand where its work fits in the total context of the organization\'s goals, principles, vision, and values?
Read more about Team Culture and Context.
Commitment:
Do team members want to participate on the team? Do team members feel the team mission is important? Are members committed to accomplishing the team mission and expected outcomes?
Do team members perceive their service as valuable to the organization and to their own careers? Do team members anticipate recognition for their contributions? Do team members expect their skills to grow and develop on the team? Are team members excited and challenged by the team opportunity?
Read more about Commitment in Team Building.
Competence:
Does the team feel that it has the appropriate people participating? (As an example, in a process improvement, is each step of the process represented on the team?) Does the team feel that its members have the knowledge, skill, and capability to address the issues for which the team was formed? If not, does the team have access to the help it needs? Does the team feel it has the resources, strategies, and support needed to accomplish its mission?
Charter:
Has the team taken its assigned area of responsibility and designed its own mission, vision and strategies to accomplish the mission. Has the team defined and communicated its goals; its anticipated outcomes and contributions; its timelines; and how it will measure both the outcomes of its work and the process the team followed to accomplish their task? Does the leadership team or other coordinating group support what the team has designed?
Control:
Does the team have enough freedom and empowerment to feel the ownership necessary to accomplish its charter? At the same time, do team members clearly understand their boundaries? How far may members go in pursuit of solutions? Are limitations (i.e. monetary and time resources) defined at the beginning of the project before the team experiences barriers and rework?
Are the team’s reporting relationship and accountability understood by all members of the organization? Has the organization defined the team’s authority? To make recommendations? To implement its plan? Is there a defined review process so both the team and the organization are consistently aligned in direction and purpose?
Do team members hold each other accountable for project timelines, commitments, and results? Does the organization have a plan to increase opportunities for self-management among organization members?
Collaboration:
Does the team understand team and group process? Do members understand the stages of group development? Are team members working together effectively interpersonally? Do all team members understand the roles and responsibilities of team members? team leaders? team recorders?
Can the team approach problem solving, process improvement, goal setting, and measurement jointly? Do team members cooperate to accomplish the team charter? Has the team established group norms or rules of conduct in areas such as conflict resolution, consensus decision making, and meeting management? Is the team using an appropriate strategy to accomplish its action plan?
Communication:
Are team members clear about the priority of their tasks? Is there an established method for the teams to give feedback and receive honest performance feedback? Does the organization provide important business information regularly?
Do the teams understand the complete context for their existence? Do team members communicate clearly and honestly with each other? Do team members bring diverse opinions to the table? Are necessary conflicts raised and addressed?
Creative Innovation:
Is the organization really interested in change? Does it value creative thinking, unique solutions, and new ideas? Does it reward people who take reasonable risks to make improvements? Or does it reward the people who fit in and maintain the status quo? Does it provide the training, education, access to books and films, and field trips necessary to stimulate new thinking?
Consequences:
Do team members feel responsible and accountable for team achievements? Are rewards and recognition supplied when teams are successful? Is reasonable risk respected and encouraged in the organization? Do team members fear reprisal? Do team members spend their time finger pointing rather than resolving problems?
Is the organization designing reward systems that recognize both team and individual performance? Is the organization planning to share gains and increased profitability with team and individual contributors? Can contributors see their impact on increased organization success?
Coordination:
Are teams coordinated by a central leadership team that assists the groups to obtain what they need for success? Have priorities and resource allocation been planned across departments? Do teams understand the concept of the internal customer—the next process, anyone to whom they provide a product or a service?
Are cross-functional and multi-department teams common and working together effectively? Is the organization developing a customer-focused process-focused orientation and moving away from traditional departmental thinking?
Culture Change:
Does the organization recognize that the team-based, collaborative, empowering, enabling organizational culture of the future is different than the traditional, hierarchical organization it may currently be? Is the organization planning to or in the process of changing how it rewards, recognizes, appraises, hires, develops, plans with, motivates and manages the people it employs?
Seven Reasons to Hire Allenvision
We believe that your success growth is mutually beneficial. We offer strategic insights and process to jointly determine what needs to be done. Unlike many consultants who will tell you what to do, we work with you to show you how to do it. While we are happy to undertake the complete implementation of a project, we prefer to transfer knowledge, coach and teach your team how to do it.
From filling a short-term executive gap to the implementation of a major program of organizational structural change — hire Allenvision. We provide valuable expertise and insights to help you achieve your goals and execute a strategy.
When is the right time to hire Allenvision?
What on-going steps should you take to ensure you get the best out of a client-consultant relationship?
- External validation: Allenvision has a broad overview, understanding, and external perspective. We use an evidence-based approach in all of our work. A second opinion can provide reassurance before making a critical business decision.
- More time and cost-effective: We focus on a project and see it through on deadline, without distractions and day-to-day pressures. This often makes bringing us in much more time and cost efficient than running a project in-house.
- Specific knowledge, skills, and experience: Allenvision gives you the opportunity to bring in niche skills, without the commitment of employing someone.
- Ability to challenge: Our objective position means Allenvision can bring a fresh perspective. We are not afraid to challenge, and our unique position means we can do so without the fear of reprisals that your employees might have.
- Impartial advice: Hiring Allenvision can offer you a way to reach or justify a desired conclusion and avoid internal conflict. This can be particularly valuable in stressful situations such as job cuts and significant operational or strategic changes.
- Knowledge of best practice: Allenvision works with multiple clients and often serving various clients facing similar problems across different sectors.
- Access to information and resources: Allenvision specializes in dealing with matters related to people, money, and governance. We can bring in data and systems that may not be financially viable for your company.
Overall, Allenvision brings a wealth of strengths to your business and can deliver a full range of services. So, if you are seeking a solution to a particular business problem, developing your employees, creating succession plans, undergoing organizational change or can see new market opportunities but lack the resources to follow them up, Allenvision may be the answer you need.
Learn more about our team members and partners.
Our process work effectively with teams that have up to 10 members.