Introduction
The skills related to team building pertain to the second domain of the three domain
model of leadership described in previous article.(1) The skills related to managing
self, such as emotional competencies, time management and active listening are foundational
for managing and leading teams.(2) In the hierarchy of leadership a competent and
highly skilled individual is at the first level of leadership, in the second level
of leadership s/he also becomes an effective team player while updating technical
expertise and at the third level s/he becomes an effective team leader while retaining
the skills of the first two levels.(3) The skills of team building play a pivotal
role in achieving the goals of the organization. These skills are even more important
in health sector both in clinical and public health settings. The most distinguishing
characteristic of a team is collective vision towards the accomplishment of goals.
The team is a symbiotic relationship complementing and supporting each other's skills,
communicating openly and clearly with one another and holding themselves mutually
accountable.(4) Its members respect and trust each other and strongly believe that
every member brings unique skills and strengths to the team and the right competitive
spirit to bring the best contribution. However, the structure of team differs depending
upon its purpose, its task, its setting, the mix of professions and the formal relationship
between health professionals in it.(5
6
7) The team based practice is well understood only when the distinction between team,
team work, collaboration and collaborative practices is known. In developed countries
the teamwork and collaboration in healthcare delivery has been discussed in government
reports as a key strategy in health care renewal.(8
9
10
11)
Team Building in Health Care Systems
Team work has shown improvement in performance in many aspects of healthcare in primary
health care and public health systems. The evidence suggests that quality of care,
patient safety, shortage of manpower, and stress among health care professionals is
managed better through an effective team work.(12
13) In the ‘Team Method’ in nursing care of indoor patients, all the staff members
under the leadership of a professional nurse, are assigned to a group of patients,
who assigns the tasks, supervises, instructs, guides and coaches them- the team. It
is an excellent and most desirable method but requires good team building and supervision.
It is generally preferred over ‘Case Method’ where a nurse is assigned to the complete
nursing care of a number of patients, or the ‘Functional Method’ where nurses are
assigned specific functions for all the patients in the ward.
The teamwork can significantly reduce workloads, increase job satisfaction and retention,
improve patient satisfaction and reduce morbidity. The review of health care effectiveness
literature suggests that decision making largely accounts for improvement in patient
care and organizational effectiveness and the diversity of clinical expertise involved
in a team. Collaboration, conflict resolution, participation, and cohesion are most
likely to influence staff satisfaction and perceived team effectiveness.(14
15)
In recent days organizing primary care services for acute, chronic and preventive
care is a major challenge.(16) To handle such situations successful teams and team
work always matters to accomplish the task with collaborative efforts. Many studies
have identified teamwork as an essential tool for high quality work and safe patient
care.(17
18) The teams that work together are more effective and innovative. High quality health
care is achieved if team motives are clearer. The participation level of the team
members has greater emphasis on quality and support for innovation. Hospital research
also shows working in team lowers level of stress.(15) The health care has changed
enormously in past 20 years. This rapidity of change continues to accelerate and both
clinicians and patients need to integrate new technologies into management of wellness
and illness.(19) Thus the leaders in health sector need to look beyond health sector
to address health determinants in other sectors to improve health.
Teams are Dynamic
Building effective team is necessary for creating an appropriate organizational environment.(20
21) Bruce Tuckman has described four main stages of team development: Forming, Storming,
Norming, and Performing. Later a fifth stage of Adjourning/Transforming was added.(22)
The forming is the initial phase of team building, members are uncertain about their
roles, rules, norms, and expectations from them. The next step is, storming where
members tend to get into competitiveness, defensiveness, jealousy, and conflict over
roles and personalities; members may become critical of the leader and of each other.
In norming members get to know each other, agree on the norms, working styles and
systems to follow. In performing the teams works with positive and creative attitude
to achieve the goals. Finally in adjourning, after completion of the team tasks, members
bring a sense of closure and bonding between members. Most experts in team development
agree that teams go through five different stages mentioned above but how fast a team
moves through each stage will depend on the team members, their individual skills,
the work they are expected to do, and the type of leadership available to the team.
Allan Drexler and David Sibbet's(23)"Team Performance Model"illustrates team development
as seven stages, four to create the team and three to describe increasing levels of
sustained performance which are summarized below:
Creating stages
Orientation: Why I am here?
Trust Building: Who are you?
Goal and role definition: What are we doing?
Commitment: How will we do it?
Sustaining stages
Planning: Who does what, where?
Implementation: High performance stage
Reassessment & renewal: Do we continue? Yes, why & how?
The Creating stages of Drexler A and Sibbet E correspond to Forming, Storming and
Norming stages of Tuckman B Model and Sustaining stage corresponds to Performing and
Adjourning stages. A good team leader understands the dynamics of a team and takes
it to performing stage(s) as soon as possible by actively engaging with the team members
to ensure smooth transition through creating, forming, storming and norming stages.
The proper transition through creating stages is important and has strong implications
for team performance. The teams do not necessarily pass through the above mentioned
stages and stay in the stage reached but keep moving back and forth. The various factors,
such as, new member(s) join and current members leave, new tasks are assigned, the
leadership changes etc keep the teams moving back and forth among various stages.
The leader has to remember that storming stage is a necessary evil and s/he has to
anticipate and closely observe the issues which may hinder progress towards achieving
the goal and proactively address the issues fast before it assumes self defeating
proportions.
Behaviors that Promote and Hinder Teams Work
Lencioni has described five dysfunctions of team, discussing why teams, even the best
ones, often struggle.(24) The first dysfunction he describes is “absence of trust”.
Without trust neither the team can be formed nor can they achieve results. The fear
of conflict, lack of commitment, avoidance of accountability and inattention to the
results were the other dysfunctions. In fear of conflict, the team members ignore
controversial issues that may be critical to team success, waste time and energy in
interpersonal risk management to keep harmony in the team. Lack of commitment and
avoidance of accountability, creates ambiguity in the team about direction and priorities.
The team misses deadlines and deliverables, places an undue burden on the team leader
as the sole source of discipline. Inattention to results occurs when members of the
team seek individual recognition and goals at the expense of the collective goals
and often work towards ‘saving own skin’ and pass on the blame. Ego and status can
lead to team members focusing on their individual accomplishments instead of the common
purpose. Table 1 below summarizes the qualities and obstacles of effective team work.
Table 1
Facilitative and obstructive behaviors for team work
Motivating Team Members
Motivation is accomplishing things through the efforts of others. It is important
for the team leader to keep his team motivated to achieve the desired results. Job
performance = ability × motivation × organizational support. Only motivated team members
can produce quality work. What motivates people may include money, power, attractive
position, enhanced self respect on accomplishing a task etc. A motivated team member
is able to do more and adds quality to whatever he does. Motivating employees is not
a one time or a periodic but is an ongoing activity both during bad and good time
an individual, team or an organization passes through. It requires more attention
when an individual, team or an organization is passing through a turbulent phase.
According to Maslow a person works to satisfy his needs which he described as a hierarchy.
The first need, Physiological Needs, was the basic need essential for survival like
salary, working conditions etc. Once the first need was met one worked for the next
need i.e. Safety/ Security like job security, insurance or son preference in India
followed by Social Needs like connecting with people and being accepted. Once these
lower order needs were achieved one worked for higher order needs like Self Esteem,
wherein one looked for self -respect, appreciation etc. The last stage, Self-Actualization,
was achieved when one was self -driven and worked for growth and self-fulfillment.
Thinkers came up with other theories which were similar but looked at motivating people
from different angles. Herzberg gave a slightly different perspective in his Two Factor
Theory. Not disagreeing with Maslow, he differed with the traditional view that, while
working, the opposite of Satisfaction was Dissatisfaction. So there was either Dissatisfaction
or No Dissatisfaction in work. Similarly the employees found Satisfaction or No Satisfaction
in their work. Job Dissatisfaction could be reduced by Hygiene Factors like salary,
facilities like housing, health insurance, working conditions in office. Poor hygiene
factors would make the person unhappy and irritated but their absence would not make
him enthusiastic to work, which would be determined by the work itself. Determinants
of Job Satisfaction were Motivators: The work itself, responsibility, advancement,
recognition etc. If they were absent there would be no satisfaction in the job, while
he may not be dissatisfied if the hygiene factors were present.
Motivators would increase job satisfaction while the hygiene factors would reduce
job dissatisfaction. Money as a reward would be a motivator otherwise a hygiene factor.
The leader of team should focus on Job enrichment (the work itself) as a job satisfaction
strategy when money and hygiene factors cannot be increased or no longer motivate
a staff member.
Job Enrichment
In most situations it is not possible to promote or financially reward good work for
motivating team members. In such situations job enrichment is a good practice to keep
a staff member motivated and acquire new skills. The job must be designed to provide
opportunities for achievement, recognition, responsibility, advancement growth. Designing
jobs that include a greater variety of work content requires:
A higher level of knowledge and skill.
Give employees more autonomy and responsibility in terms of planning, directing, and
controlling their own performance.
Provide an opportunity for personal growth and meaningful ful work experience.
Get due credit for the success achieved.
Five core dimensions that enrich jobs
Benefits for job enrichment for health care organisations
Job enrichment benefits both the team members and the organisation. It benefits a
team member by giving more job satisfaction, greater responsibility and authority,
the opportunity to experience more growth and development, a greater sense of achievement,
more job autonomy and a greater diversity of job experiences and more practice at
taking decisions. It benefits the organization by higher level of job performance,
imoroved quality of patient care and services, improvement in quality of decisions,
increased employee's loyalty and commitment to organisation, lesser absenteeism and
lower turn over rate.
Mentoring and Coaching
Mentoring and coaching skills are a must for leaders and managers. In formal education
of health care professionals, mentoring is considered as a fundamental tool for helping
people achieve required competencies. Formal and informal mentoring has been increasingly
encouraged as a way of supporting people's continuing professional development.(25)
Mentoring is primarily the identification and nurturing of potential for the whole
person. It can be a long-term relationship, where the goals may change but are always
set by the learner. The learner owns both the goals and the process. Feedback comes
from the mentees – the mentor helps them develop insight and understanding through
reflections, that is, becoming more aware of their own experiences and areas of improvement.(26)
However, coaching relates to performance improvement (often short-term) in a specific
skills area. The goals are typically set with or at the suggestion of the coach. While
the learner has primary ownership of the goal, the coach has primary ownership of
the process. In most cases, coaching involves direct extrinsic feedback (i.e. the
coach reports to the coachee what he or she has observed).(27) The mentor or coach
may be a supervisor or a leader. Leaders prioritize time for the ongoing coaching
that is an important element of team success.(21) 70% of the leading employers use
coaching and mentoring in their workplace to create higher organizational performance.
It increases creativity (69%), learning and knowledge management (63%) and motivates
people (57%).The study conducted by the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development
indicates that 93% of all the respondents believed coaching and mentoring is a key
mechanism for transferring training skills into the workplace.(28) Figure 1 below
gives the stages in the coaching and mentoring relationship.
Figure 1
Stages in the coach-mentoring relationship(25)
Conflict Resolution
It is important for team leader to encourage team members to bring in different opinions
to enrich the work of the team. This needs to be accepted by team members without
bringing their ego into play. The team members should look at these as differences
on issues rather with other team members. The role of the leader is to ensure that
these differences are dealt with in a healthy manner and do not lead to conflict.
Conflicts are disagreements that lead to tension within, and between people. Often
people are confused between conflict and disagreement. Conflict is a more serious
form of disagreement. When two people are having disagreement their relation is intact
and in conflict, the relation often turns sour and dialogue ends.(29) Many factors
in health care system can contribute to the escalation of conflict. It starts from
the disagreement and once the conflict escalates the focus shifts from the issues
to the person's faults leading to expansion of problem with breakdown of dialogue.
The escalation of conflict is enemy images, resulting in violence, dehumanization
process leading to open hostility and polarization where co-existence is no longer
possible. A conflict brings down the productivity of the team and vitiates the work
environment preventing members to put in their best.(29) An important skill for team
leader to have and impart to team members is negotiation skill. This will be dealt
with in a subsequent article. At an organizational level, the process of conflict
resolution is an opportunity for growth and change in a work environment. Conflict
resolution is important for the bottom line on an organizational level as well as
for personal achievement to see change in overall success.(30) Proper conflict management
contributes to higher effectiveness, trust, and openness and results in successful
conflict resolution.(31) In organizations where conflict is not viewed positively
or as an opportunity for improvement, see conflict as unproductive, unpleasant, and
a waste of time and energy. If conflict is not controlled early, it can have damaging
effects in the workplace, stifling the growth of departments and deflating employee
morale.(32)
Conclusion
Skills of team building are essential for every manager and leader. The teams are
dynamic and are created for a purpose. Only a good team player can become a good team
leader. It is important for the team leader to take them through team creation stages
and move to productive stage. In the productive stage team members complement each
other's skills and efforts to achieve common goals. In the process they trust and
respect each other's opinion, even when the views differ. Team leader and members
acknowledge each other's contribution and inputs. The team leader steps in early to
resolve conflict when it arises. S/he keeps them motivated through recognition and
coaches and mentors them when required. Job enrichment is one important way of acquiring
new skills and keeping team members motivated.