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‘Not All Groups Are Teams’

A well-known phrase in leadership and management is that ‘all teams are groups, but not all groups are teams.’

What is meant by this is that a ‘group’ may be an informal collection of individuals with common characteristics, such as friendship, or a formal collection of individuals in the workplace who co-ordinate their individual efforts to carry out some specific task or to meet a shared goal. 

A ‘team’, like a group, also has a shared goal or purpose, but the difference is that members of a team work in a collaborative environment, are mutually committed to the goals and to each other, and are jointly accountable for team performance.   

This has implications for the leadership of working groups and teams: 

Working Group

  • Strong, clearly focused leader 
  • Individual accountability 
  • The group's purpose is the same as the broader organisational mission
  • Individual work products 
  • Runs efficient meetings
  • Measures its effectiveness indirectly by its influence on others (such as financial performance of the business) 
  • Discusses, decides, and delegates

Team

  • Shared leadership roles 
  • Individual and mutual accountability
  • Specific team purpose that the team itself delivers
  • Collective work products
  • Encourages open-ended discussion and active problem-solving meetings
  • Measures performance directly by assessing collective work products
  • Discusses, decides, and does real work together

Katzenbach, J. R. & Smith, D. K. (1993) ‘The Discipline of Teams’

Leaders, therefore, need to understand the different stages of development from group through to team and, secondly, the skills and behaviours demonstrated by an effective team. 

Development from Group Through to Team

Tuckman (1965) famously described the path that most teams follow to high performance as ‘forming, storming, norming, and performing’, and in later work he added a fifth stage ‘adjourning’ (sometimes known as ‘mourning’).

Tuckman's model describes how leaders change their leadership style from a ‘directing’ style through to coaching, facilitation and then delegation as teams become more mature and relationships are established between team members.

Similar required changes in leadership styles are also described in Hersey's and Blanchard's Situational Leadership® model (1977) and Tannenbaum and Schmidt’s Leadership Continuum (1958) 
 

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Skills and Behaviours Demonstrated by An Effective Team

Dr. Meredith Belbin’s research at the Administrative Staff College at Henley (now known as the Henley Business School) in the 1960s and 1970s led him to conclude that the ‘mix’, or ‘balance’ of roles that members played in a team largely determined whether or not a team achieved its objectives: 
 
The most successful companies tended to be those with a mix of different people, i.e. those with a range of different behaviours. Eight distinct clusters of behaviour turned out to be distinctive and useful. These were called “Team Roles,” and in fact, a ninth based on specialist knowledge was to emerge later. These Team Roles have been used in organisations and teams across the world ever since.” Belbin Associates (2020)
 
Brief descriptions of the Belbin® Team Roles are provided below:  Belbin Team Roles.PNG

 

References
Belbin, R. M. (1981). Management Teams: Why They Succeed or Fail Heinemann
Belbin Associates (2020). History https://www.belbin.com/about/history/
Hersey, P. et al (1977). Management of Organizational Behavior: Utilizing Human Resources New Jersey/Prentice Hall.
Katzenbach, J. R. et al (1993). The Discipline of Teams Harvard Business School Press 
Katzenbach, J. R. et al (1993). The Wisdom of Teams: Creating the High-performance Organization Harvard Business School Press
Montebello, A. R. (1994). Work Teams That Work Minneapolis: Best Sellers Publishing
Jassawal, A. R. et al (1999). Building Collaborative Cross-Functional New Product Teams The Academy of Management Executive