Indonesian Student in RMUTT Thailand

In the framework of joint degree program

Chao Phraya River

Bangkok tour at night

Inspire in my life

Find your motivator to live more purposeful.

MAKKAH

Go to MAKKAH for exert Hajj

Relaxation

Get enjoy in the future

Friday, November 9, 2012

How We Can Understanding Team Work


MANAGING TEAMS
Working with teams, whether as leader of a single team or manager of several, is an essential part of a manager remit. Team working is repidly becoming the preferred practice in many organization as traditional corporate hirarchies give way to flat, multiskilled working methods.

Managing teams is an indispensable and practical guide to leadin teams with expertise, covering subjects such as defining the skills required to complate a project, establishing trust between individuals within a team, and maximizing the performance of team.

Managing teams willl discuss and talking about many problem in management, such as understanding team work, matching team to task  and etc.

First of the all, we will talking about “How we can understanding team work”. Chek it out.

A true team is a living, constanly changing, dynamic force in which a number of people come together to work. Team members discuss their objectives, asses ideas, make decision, and work towards their targets together. 

In this post we have 5 concise tips offer practical advice.

1.  Remember that each member has something to add to your team

Succesfull teams can be formed by 2 to 25 or more people, but much more important than size is shape -  the pattern of working inti which team members settle to perform their given tasks. Repetitive tasks and familiar work require each team member to have a fixed role, which is fulfilled independently, as on assembly lines. 





2.  Formulate team objectives carefully, and always take them seriously


Project that require some creative input require team members to have fixed roles and working procedurs, but also to work in unison, as when generating new product. Work that demands constant creative input and personal contributions requires people to work very closely as partners. This style of working is prevalent among senior management.





3.  Remember that team members must support each other

To horness and take full advantage of team –power the individual brains and per sonalities involved must be encouraged to collaborate. This procces is vital in generating results. Giving streching goals to a team will encourage it to work collectivelly and introduce a sense of urgency – potentially eliminating bureaucracy as it concentrates on getting positive results in the shortest possible time. The impact of a single team breakthrought can, by its exemple, galvanize an entire company.

4.  Break long-term aims into short-team projects.

 Achieving potential. There is no limit to the potential of a good team. Given an “impossible” task, team member will reinforce each other’s confidence as they seek to turn the “impossible” into reality. The collective ability to innovate is stronger than that of the individual becouse the combined brainpower of a team, however small in number, exceeds that any one person.
 By harnessing this power, a team can go beyond simple, useful improvements to achieve real breakthroughts. For example, in one company an engeneering team was asked to double machine reliability. They thought it impossible, but went on to produce a plan that trebled performance.

5.  Allocate a clear deadline for each of your projects

Once a team has been formed, the next major step is to establish its goals. There is a little point in having a team that is raring to go if its members are all pursuing disparate aims. Goals may well change over the course of a team’s existance; for example, if a new product is being launched on to the market, the first priority will be for the team to the concentrate on research into its competition. If the aim is to improve customer satisfaction, the first goal will be to find ways of providing a higher standard of service.

      All successful teams demonstrate the same fundamental features: strong and effective leadership; the establishement of precise objectives; making informed decisions; the ability to act quickly upon these decisions; communicating freely; mastering the requisite skills and techniques to fulfill the project in hand; providing clear targets for the team to work towards; and above all finding the right balance of people prepared to work together for the common good of the team.