Communicating in Teams and Groups
Adapted from S. DeWine and D. Modaff, Organizational 
Communication: Foundations, Challenges and Misunderstandings.  Los Angeles:  
Roxbury, 2002.  Ch. 12.
  
        Teams
        in organizations exist 
		
		for a variety of reasons including permanent
        functional work groups, short-term planning or functional "task
        force" groups, quality control teams, decision and planning groups,
        advisory groups and so on.  Employees often belong to
        several.  Many employees identify more strongly with their team
        than with the organization in general.
        
        I. 
        Characteristics of Groups/Teams
        (note connections to organizational culture)
        
        
          - 
            "Unique"
            Norms 
- 
            Cohesiveness 
- 
            Diversity 
- 
            Satisfaction 
- 
            Groupthink 
- 
            Stress 
- 
            Conservatism
            ("Stuckness") 
		II. 
        Effective Teams have
        
          
          
            
              | "Superb
                Teams" -- Wageman | "High-performing
                Teams" - Larson & LaFasto | 
            
              | a
                clear, engaging direction | standards
                of excellence | 
            
              | appropriately
                designed work tasks/processes | results-driven
                structure | 
            
              | team
                rewards strongly associated with team effort and outcomes | competent
                team members | 
            
              | adequate
                resources | external
                support and recognition | 
            
              | adequate
                authority | collaborative
                climate | 
            
              | the
                ability to articulate goals that fit the organizations needs | clear,
                elevating goals | 
            
              | established
                norms that promote strategic thinking | principled
                leadership | 
            
              |  | unified
                commitment |