10 ELEMENTS OF EFFECTIVE
TEAMS
from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER
1. Competent Leadership
 Balance between direction and control with support and
openness.
 Coaching and mentoring to meet the needs of the team and
individuals.
 Leader believes in teams, states expectations about team work
and gives praise and reprimands to support the expectations.
10 ELEMENTS OF EFFECTIVE
TEAMS
from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER
2. Clear Purpose
 Goal setting is team activity
 There is a commitment to furthering the goals.
 Teams must be clear on how they support the organization
purpose.
 Purpose provides daily guidance as well as future goals.
 Individuals should be able to see the link between their work,
their teams purpose and the organization's purpose.
 Teams need to refocus on purpose from time to time.
10 ELEMENTS OF EFFECTIVE
TEAMS
from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER
3. Internal Focus
 Focus on relationships with critical others in the organization.
 You clarify the other person's performance expectations of your
team.
 You get current feedback about your team's performance.
 You maintain a positive relationship with a critical person in the
organization.
 You strengthen your team buy having one of your subordinates
be the primary link between you and the other manager.
 Finally you help the other manager improve his/her own team's
performance which helps everyone.
10 ELEMENTS OF EFFECTIVE
TEAMS
from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER
4. External Focus
 Focus on relationships with critical others outside the
organization.
 The team develops a list of critical others.
 Recent events which may change the team's credibility are
headlines.
 An individual is identified to work with each critical other.
 The team provides advice to that individual.
 If asked, the manager assists with strategy and action steps.
10 ELEMENTS OF EFFECTIVE
TEAMS
from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER
5. Trust
 Trust is built by focusing directly on it.
 Taking risks is necessary to build trust.
 Getting supported for taking risks builds trust.
 Allowing yourself to be vulnerable increases other's trust in you.
 Caring about each other is necessary to establish trust.
 Letting go of the negative incidents in the past is critical to trust
building
10 ELEMENTS OF EFFECTIVE
TEAMS
from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER
6. Individual Performance
 It is unrealistic to expect to hire top performers for all your jobs.
 The manager must reward teamwork and eliminate divisive behavior.
 Coaching and training are made available for each team member.
 Team members must see a problem of one team member as a problem for the
entire team, and therefore as their own problem.
 High performing team members anticipate important events
 They rehearse, as a team, for the event.
 They play and learn together (i.e. a ropes course or a supervisory skills training).
 Team members teach the rest of the team skills they acquire through training.
 Social activities as a team benefit the team.
 High performing teams use non-traditional methods to develop team spirit:
(breathing in unison, songs, and pre-game huddles).
10 ELEMENTS OF EFFECTIVE
TEAMS
from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER
7. Problem-Solving, Decision Making, Meeting Mgt Skills
 Be sure you are solving the right problem.
 Have a specific problem solving process and do not rely on discussion
alone.
 Be task focused and directed, but allow new ideas to be introduced.
 Get every one's opinion and insure that everyone listens.
 Learn new problem solving methods.
 Use puzzles and games to develop problem-solving skills.
 Learn and practice various decision making practices.
 Determine which types of decisions will be made by whom.
 Learn and practice the basics of good meeting management.
10 ELEMENTS OF EFFECTIVE
TEAMS
from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER
8. Being Seen As Winners-Team Spirit
 There is team spirit, and the team has an image of winning, and
enjoying working together.
 Focusing on winning leads to a better solution than focusing on
problem prevention.
 Focusing on winning lifts a team's moral.
 Set high goals and regularly assess progress towards those goals.
 By using simple techniques, team members will feel like winners:
 give awards to all team members for accomplishments
 have team members provide gold stars for each other
 discuss other people's statements about winning
 affirm team and members with positive support
10 ELEMENTS OF EFFECTIVE
TEAMS
from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER
9. Being Seen As Winners-Image
 Deliver what you promise.
 Make others feel like they are right in what they want.
 Act positive and have a can-do attitude.
 Never talk negatively about team members.
 A team needs to market its accomplishments.
 Consult with other team members about style and dress,
materials, work areas, etc.
 Do some special activities to show that you are winners.
10 ELEMENTS OF EFFECTIVE
TEAMS
from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER
10. Regular Review
 There is regular review of individual performance and
appropriate feedback.
 There is regular review to improve (RTI) of team performance
and appropriate feedback.
 There is regular review to improve (RTI) built into meetings,
decision making processes, and at the end of an important work
cycle (such as completing the annual plan and budget).
10 ELEMENTS OF EFFECTIVE
TEAMS
from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER
The High Performance Team Ratios:
 team needs versus individual turf
 team members who volunteer versus team members who hold
back
 future focused items versus past-focused items
 anticipated events versus surprises
 issues taken care of by sub-teams versus issues brought to the
full team
10 ELEMENTS OF EFFECTIVE
TEAMS
from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER
1. Competent Leadership
2. Clear Purpose
3. Internal Focus
4. External Focus
5. Trust
6. Individual Performance
7. Problem-Solving, Decision
Making, Meeting Mgt Skills
8. Being Seen As Winners-
Team Spirit
9. Being Seen As Winners-
Image
10. Regular Review

10 elements of effective teams

  • 1.
    10 ELEMENTS OFEFFECTIVE TEAMS from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER 1. Competent Leadership  Balance between direction and control with support and openness.  Coaching and mentoring to meet the needs of the team and individuals.  Leader believes in teams, states expectations about team work and gives praise and reprimands to support the expectations.
  • 2.
    10 ELEMENTS OFEFFECTIVE TEAMS from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER 2. Clear Purpose  Goal setting is team activity  There is a commitment to furthering the goals.  Teams must be clear on how they support the organization purpose.  Purpose provides daily guidance as well as future goals.  Individuals should be able to see the link between their work, their teams purpose and the organization's purpose.  Teams need to refocus on purpose from time to time.
  • 3.
    10 ELEMENTS OFEFFECTIVE TEAMS from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER 3. Internal Focus  Focus on relationships with critical others in the organization.  You clarify the other person's performance expectations of your team.  You get current feedback about your team's performance.  You maintain a positive relationship with a critical person in the organization.  You strengthen your team buy having one of your subordinates be the primary link between you and the other manager.  Finally you help the other manager improve his/her own team's performance which helps everyone.
  • 4.
    10 ELEMENTS OFEFFECTIVE TEAMS from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER 4. External Focus  Focus on relationships with critical others outside the organization.  The team develops a list of critical others.  Recent events which may change the team's credibility are headlines.  An individual is identified to work with each critical other.  The team provides advice to that individual.  If asked, the manager assists with strategy and action steps.
  • 5.
    10 ELEMENTS OFEFFECTIVE TEAMS from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER 5. Trust  Trust is built by focusing directly on it.  Taking risks is necessary to build trust.  Getting supported for taking risks builds trust.  Allowing yourself to be vulnerable increases other's trust in you.  Caring about each other is necessary to establish trust.  Letting go of the negative incidents in the past is critical to trust building
  • 6.
    10 ELEMENTS OFEFFECTIVE TEAMS from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER 6. Individual Performance  It is unrealistic to expect to hire top performers for all your jobs.  The manager must reward teamwork and eliminate divisive behavior.  Coaching and training are made available for each team member.  Team members must see a problem of one team member as a problem for the entire team, and therefore as their own problem.  High performing team members anticipate important events  They rehearse, as a team, for the event.  They play and learn together (i.e. a ropes course or a supervisory skills training).  Team members teach the rest of the team skills they acquire through training.  Social activities as a team benefit the team.  High performing teams use non-traditional methods to develop team spirit: (breathing in unison, songs, and pre-game huddles).
  • 7.
    10 ELEMENTS OFEFFECTIVE TEAMS from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER 7. Problem-Solving, Decision Making, Meeting Mgt Skills  Be sure you are solving the right problem.  Have a specific problem solving process and do not rely on discussion alone.  Be task focused and directed, but allow new ideas to be introduced.  Get every one's opinion and insure that everyone listens.  Learn new problem solving methods.  Use puzzles and games to develop problem-solving skills.  Learn and practice various decision making practices.  Determine which types of decisions will be made by whom.  Learn and practice the basics of good meeting management.
  • 8.
    10 ELEMENTS OFEFFECTIVE TEAMS from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER 8. Being Seen As Winners-Team Spirit  There is team spirit, and the team has an image of winning, and enjoying working together.  Focusing on winning leads to a better solution than focusing on problem prevention.  Focusing on winning lifts a team's moral.  Set high goals and regularly assess progress towards those goals.  By using simple techniques, team members will feel like winners:  give awards to all team members for accomplishments  have team members provide gold stars for each other  discuss other people's statements about winning  affirm team and members with positive support
  • 9.
    10 ELEMENTS OFEFFECTIVE TEAMS from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER 9. Being Seen As Winners-Image  Deliver what you promise.  Make others feel like they are right in what they want.  Act positive and have a can-do attitude.  Never talk negatively about team members.  A team needs to market its accomplishments.  Consult with other team members about style and dress, materials, work areas, etc.  Do some special activities to show that you are winners.
  • 10.
    10 ELEMENTS OFEFFECTIVE TEAMS from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER 10. Regular Review  There is regular review of individual performance and appropriate feedback.  There is regular review to improve (RTI) of team performance and appropriate feedback.  There is regular review to improve (RTI) built into meetings, decision making processes, and at the end of an important work cycle (such as completing the annual plan and budget).
  • 11.
    10 ELEMENTS OFEFFECTIVE TEAMS from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER The High Performance Team Ratios:  team needs versus individual turf  team members who volunteer versus team members who hold back  future focused items versus past-focused items  anticipated events versus surprises  issues taken care of by sub-teams versus issues brought to the full team
  • 12.
    10 ELEMENTS OFEFFECTIVE TEAMS from THE TEN MINUTE MANAGER 1. Competent Leadership 2. Clear Purpose 3. Internal Focus 4. External Focus 5. Trust 6. Individual Performance 7. Problem-Solving, Decision Making, Meeting Mgt Skills 8. Being Seen As Winners- Team Spirit 9. Being Seen As Winners- Image 10. Regular Review