"Teams succeed or fail one relationship at a time"
Dr Meredith Belbin
Hunter-Gatherers may be amongst mankind’s first observable sets of working relationships. From there we have progressed to more complex project teams, intellectual “think tanks” and other structures to be found in organisations today.
In every set of working relationships there is potential to work together well to achieve group objectives, to just “coast along” in neutral mode, or to be destructive and counterproductive.
THERE ARE RELATIONSHIPS AT ALL LEVELS OF AN ORGANISATION.
We all have a professional and a personal relationship with our colleagues. Some we work gladly with, others we manage to get along with, and some we dislike!
All of these attitudes have an impact on our productive effort, engagement and our morale. There are many sets of relationships in any organisation – between managers, teams and of course relationships with clients, potential clients and the community.
A set of working relationships can have a constructive, neutral, or negative effect on the morale and hence the efficiency of each group or team of people at work. These “work relationships” are what power the effectiveness of an organisation and they need to be assessed rather than as is so often the case, taken for granted!
HOW ARE THE SETS OF RELATIONSHIPS IN AN ORGANISATION ASSESSED?
At simplest level by asking the questions: “Who would you most like to work with, who would you least like to work with, and who don’t you mind working with”? This brings about the danger of ‘social relationships’ taking precedence over productive ‘working relationships. We don’t need to ‘like’ someone to have a successful ‘working relationship’.
At a much more sophisticated level, a well-researched and internationally favoured method to assess relationships in work teams, or the relationship between any pair of people in an organisation is to use the world-famous Belbin “Team Roles”. Dr. Meredith Belbin from Cambridge suggests that there are a finite number of working styles or TEAM ROLES.
These nine Team Roles can be classified into those that can be adopted naturally, adopted with some manageability, or regarded as least preferred by each individual, and their delineation pattern becomes as unique as a finger print. Belbin’s ‘Self-Perception’ Inventory helps us refine how we see ourself, however, completing only a self-report is like hiring someone based on what the person tells you about themselves, without any check with referees or previous employers.
USING COLLEAGUES TO OBSERVE AND REPORT TEAM BEHAVIOUR.
When colleagues are asked to be observers, using Team Role descriptors which the person has used in their own self-reporting, we then have a bigger picture of how that person is “projecting” themselves to the people that they work with. In other words, we have the means of describing and comparing relationships between the person and each of their observers. This is a 360 degree profile of a person’s workplace behaviour.
If one observer is the boss, two are colleagues, and one is a subordinate, we have the necessary input data to form a good impression of the sort of relationships that can be expected between the different members of a working team. This data is presented in a non-threatening way, and enables us to see at a glance how closely matched is the relationship between the person and their Observers, and thirdly by using the nine Belbin Team Roles as descriptors of behaviour.
LOOKING AT THE TEAM AND THE ORGANISATION.
Belbin and his team of researchers found that well-balanced teams i.e. teams in which members had different, but complimentary strengths significantly out-performed teams lacking such balance. From the overall distribution data for the Team Roles, we obtain a picture of the Team Role “balance” of each team in the organisation, and we can assess how these sets of relationships will help or disadvantage the organisation in the achievement of personal and corporate objectives.
We can also, by using the aggregate of Observer descriptions, obtain a picture of the behaviours that are valued or de-valued by the team, or, if a sufficient number of staff members have assessed their colleagues, even of the “corporate culture”.
CENTRES OF INFLUENCE.
Within each set of relationships in an organisation there will generally be one person who has a significant influence on the performance and morale of the group. Whilst people expect this to be the most senior member, this is often not the case, and the identification of these people who have a key influence on relationships becomes very important to management.
The individuals who demonstrate a significant influence are generally those with not only a combination of skills and attitudes, but they have impeccable timing in knowing when to make their contribution to the group. Here again, the Belbin Team Roles are a significant predictor of the type of behaviour that can be expected from any specific combination of Team Roles that are characteristic of a person.
TO SUM UP.
All the data generated can be obtained prior to an interactive workshop at which relationships within the organisation can be described and explained in a positive, supportive and non-threatening manner. IDENTIFYING the strengths and weaknesses of each set of overall organisational relationships, enables morale to be improved and assistance unbalanced relationships.
UNDERSTANDING the behaviour of each member of a working relationship, will improve both personal and interpersonal relationships. IDENTIFICATION of whom and where the “centres of influence” in their organisation can be found will assist management to assess the “balance of behaviours” within the organisation.
To find out more about how we use Belbin contact us:
T – 1300 731 381
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