Management Team Masters or Myth
by: Breezotoo
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Management Team: Masters or Myth?
Standing forward to do battle with these dilemmas and disabilities is -the management team,- the collection of savvy, experienced managers who represent the organizations different functions and areas of expertise. Together, they are supposed to sort out the complex cross-functional issues that are critical to the organization. What confidence do we have, really, that typical management teams can surmount these learning disabilities?
All too often, teams in business tend to spend their time fighting for turf, avoiding anything that will make them look bad personally, and pretending that everyone is behind the teams collective strategy and maintaining the appearance of a cohesive team. To keep up the image, they seek to squelch disagreement; people with serious reservations avoid stating them publicly, and joint decisions are watered-down compromises reflecting what everyone can live with, or else reflecting one persons view foisted on the group. If there is disagreement, its usually expressed in a manner that lays blame, polarizes opinion, and fails to reveal the underlying differences in assumptions and experience in a way that the team as a whole could learn.
-Most management teams break down under pressure, writes Harvards Chris Argyris; a long time student of learning in management teams. -The team may function quite well with routine issues. But when they confront complex issues that may be embarrassing or threatening, the teamness seems to go to pot.-
Argyris argues that most managers find collective inquiry inherently threatening. School trains us never to admit that we do not know the answer, and most corporations reinforce that lesson by rewarding the people who excel in advocating their views, not inquiring into complex issues. (When was the last time someone was rewarded in your organization for raising difficult questions about the company's current policies rather than solving urgent problems?) Even if we feel uncertain or ignorant, we learn to protect ourselves from the pain of appearing uncertain or ignorant. That very process blocks out any new understandings which might threaten us. The consequence is what Argyris calls -skilled incompetence- a team full of people who are incredibly proficient at keeping themselves from learning.
So how does your company stack up? If your company is learning from both its successes and its failures then there is no need to protect your turf, no need to accept compromise, no need for management to know anything more. In this environment the knowledge that employees have is utilized to the fullest and each member of the management team is there to support the others. They realize that everyone wins if the team succeeds and they also know that a failure is just another term for a learning opportunity.
Wouldnt you like to work in an organization where your opinion counts and where you CAN make a difference in the companies success? Where you dont have to pretend to be busy, or pretend to know everything. So how do you create such an organization? It starts with creating learning individuals in learning teams which then cascade throughout the organization.
Through an effective facilitated process team members learn to work collaboratively, learn from their mistakes and continually challenge their assumptions about reality. Above all they work together as a team to solve problems and improve results.
Take on the challenge today. The results are worth your while and your businesses longevity.
About the Author
By Graeme Nichol President of Arcturus Advisors. Please visit their website at http://www.arcturusadvisors.com. Arcturus Advisors works with business leaders to close the gap between great strategies and mediocre results. We use a process to get businesses to focus on a shared vision and agree on how to achieve results that far exceed individual contribution.
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