A team leader needs to be both facilitator and
inspirer — a business team depends upon its leader to provide it with the
facility to make decisions and the support to grow. EVALUATING LEADERSHIP QUALITIES: The analysis of leadership qualities shown below was developed by the UK Insights consultants and is influenced heavily by the example of famous sports stars The model indicates the five internal and five external skills that should be present in a successful leader of teams. Key: Inner strengths; Outer signs. Communication, Self belief, Visibility, Integrity, Teamwork, Attentiveness, Results-focused, Vision.
LEADING A TEAM
The performance of any team depends on the quality of
its collective thinking. How good are its decisions? This reflects the quality
of the decision-making processes. The leader should strive to achieve a
positive atmosphere, free from rigidity and envy, in which people compete with
ideas — not egos. Teamwork does not function if the leader consistently puts
forward ideas before others have had the chance to speak. In the classic
Japanese method, the leader listens silently until every team member has expressed
an opinion before making the decision for the whole team. A true team leader
will facilitate, inspire, and implement rather than control.
Facilitate >> Inspire >> Implement.
GIVING INSPIRATION:
Team leaders play several roles: they are there to facilitate the making of
decisions; to inspire lateral thinking, motivation, and hard work within the
team; and to implement decisions made by the team.
UNDERSTANDING LEADERSHIP FUNCTIONS
The main task and function of a leader is to achieve
the goals of the team. If you are team leader, ensure your team goals are
achieved via these processes:
• Planning roles to be filled and selecting
appropriate individuals;
• Leading the team in meetings, starting with a
discussion of team objectives and values;
• Ensuring that targets are met and that values —
above all, the values of working collectively — are observed by the team;
• Analyzing and correcting failures swiftly and surely
— but always remembering to celebrate the successes just as enthusiastically;
• Carrying the responsibility of representing the team
loyally to others, both inside and outside the organization.
CULTURAL DIFFERENCES
Styles of leadership vary internationally Americans
are accustomed to blunt, assertive leadership, and the Japanese to a consensus,
in which unanimous agreement is reached through a laborious process. British
managers often conceal firm orders behind apparently woolly statements, while
German leaders invite the views of their teams but retain control of all
decision- making. True teamwork may bring these styles closer together.
CONSIDERING ROLES
For a team to function most efficiently there are
several key roles that should be filled. These include coordinator, ideas
person, critic, external contact, implementer, team leader, and inspector.
It is useful to bear these roles in mind when you are
considering candidates for team membership, although you should also look for
people with the ability to perform the specific tasks on which your team’s
operations depend. Never forget that the most important function of a team is
to achieve the objective of the task in hand. Remember, too, that a friendly
and open personality, and the ability and willingness to work with a group of
people, are indispensable characteristics for a team player.
QUESTIONS TO ASK YOURSELF
Do the potential team members have any relevant team
experience?
Do the candidates fit readily into any of the key
roles needed in the team?
How do candidates see their own potential within the
team?
Do the candidates show enthusiasm and understanding
for the team’s purpose?
Have any of them ever worked effectively with any
other of the potential team members?
DIVIDING UP ROLES
It does not make sense to fit anyone into a
straitjacket. You may find a perfectly equipped external contact or critic; you
may not. Try to match roles to personality rather than attempting to shoehorn
the personality into the role. It is not necessary for each person to perform
only one function. If the team has only a small number of members, doubling or
tripling up the roles is fine — as long as all the needs of the team are truly
covered and the members feel comfortable with their roles.
IDENTIFYING THE KEY ROLES WITHIN TEAMS
TEAM ROLES
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CHARACTERISTICS
|
TEAM LEADER:
Finds new team members and
develops the teamworking spirit
|
• Excellent judge of the talents
and personalities of individuals within the team.
• Adept at finding ways of
overcoming weaknesses.
• Is a first-class two-way
communicator
• Good at inspiring and sustaining
enthusiasm.
|
CRITIC
Guardian and analyst of the team’s
long-term effectiveness.
|
• Never satisfied with less than
the best solution.
• Expert at analyzing solutions to
find the possible weaknesses within them.
• Merciless in insisting that
faults be corrected.
• Constructive in pointing way to
possible remedies.
|
IMPLEMENTER
Ensures the momentum and smooth
running of the team’s actions.
|
• A born time-tabler who thinks
methodically.
• Anticipates threatening delays
in schedule in time for them to be prevented.
• Has a can-do” mentality and
loves to fix things.
• Able to rally support and
overcome defeatism.
|
EXTERNAL CONTACT
Looks after the team’s external
relationships.
|
• Diplomatic, and good judge of
the needs of others.
• Has a reassuring, authoritative
presence.
• Has an effective grasp of the
overall picture of the team’s work.
• Discreet when handling
confidential information.
|
COORDINATOR
Pulls together the work of the
team as a whole into a cohesive plan.
|
• Understands how difficult tasks
interrelate.
• Has a strong sense of
priorities.
• Has a mind able to grasp several
things at once.
• Good at maintaining internal
contacts.
• Skilled at heading off potential
trouble.
|
IDEAS PERSON
Sustains and encourages the team’s
innovative vitality and energy.
|
• Enthusiastic and lively, with a
zest for new ideas.
• Eager for and receptive to the
ideas of others.
• Sees problems as opportunities
for successful innovation, rather than as disasters.
• Never at a loss for a hopeful
suggestion.
|
INSPECTOR
Ensures that high standards are
sought and maintained.
|
• Strict, and sometimes even
pedantic in enforcing rigorous standards within the team.
• Good judge of the performance of
other people.
• Unhesitating in bringing
problems to the surface.
• Able to praise as well as to
find fault
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