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Team Effectiveness 1
Running head: Team effectiveness
Towards a typology of team effectiveness: A meta-analytic review
Stephen E. HumphreyPennsylvania State University
Elizabeth P. KaramFrederick P. Morgeson
Michigan State University
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Abstract
Words words words …
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Towards a Typology of Team Effectiveness:A Meta-Analytic Review and Measurement Development
Teams are now ubiquitous in organizations, making it imperative that organizational
scholars study teamwork and team effectiveness (Kozlowski & Ilgen, 2006). In this vein, there
has been a remarkable increase in empirical and theoretical research on teams over the last
several decades, with the published research on teams in the “top quartile” of management and
industrial/organizational psychology journals (Podsakoff, Mackenzie, Bachrach, & Podsakoff,
2005) doubling from 1980-1985 to 2000-2005. However, although researchers have focused
extensively on testing the influence (e.g., Ilgen, Hollenbeck, Johnson, & Jundt, 2005; Mathieu,
Maynard, Rapp, & Gilson, 2008) and structure (e.g., Harrison & Klein, 2007; Marks, Mathieu, &
Zaccaro, 2001) of team inputs and processes, there has been only limited research focusing on
team outputs.
This is problematic for team research, in part because a lack of clarity concerning the
nature of team effectiveness can lead to a lack of precision and potential theoretical
misspecification. For example, the lack of a consistent conceptualization of team effectiveness
has led scholars to use distinctly different operationalizations (e.g., satisfaction, learning, or
performance) of the team effectiveness construct. This lack of consensus can cause confusion in
the research literature, making it difficult to interpret conflicting empirical findings. For
example, if some studies find a significant relationship with team effectiveness but other studies
find no significant relationships, it is unclear whether such mixed findings implicate the
underlying theory or whether it reflects differences in construct measurement. As such, the
examination and clarification of the team effectiveness criterion space can result in scholars
building more precise theoretical models and testing these models using a more consistent
language.
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Other research streams have found that a focus on the criterion space propelled the
literature forward. For example, an examination of the dimensionality of Organizational
Citizenship Behavior (OCB) by LePine, Erez, and Johnson (2002) demonstrated that the five
dimensions of OCB proposed by Organ (1988) are essentially equivalent indicators of the latent
OCB construct. As another example, Borman and Motowidlo’s (1993) separation of performance
into task and contextual dimensions has demonstrated that whereas both dimensions contribute to
overall performance, they have different antecedents (Motowidlo & Van Scotter, 1994). By
turning our attention to clarifying the criterion space, we hope to aid scholars in building more
precise theoretical models that can be tested using a more consistent language, thus pushing the
team literature towards a greater consensus on what leads to effective teams.
One problem with clarifying the domain of team effectiveness is that there are many
definitions of team effectiveness. Early definitions shaped future discussions by focusing on
internal and external criteria. For example, Schein (1970) argued that the function of a team is to
meet organizational responsibilities (e.g., getting work out, generating ideas, or serving as
liaisons) while simultaneously meeting personal responsibilities (e.g., developing group identity,
backing up team members, or providing social support). Nieva, Fleishman, and Rieck (1978)
used a motivational approach by defining team effectiveness as “the goal directed
behaviors/activities/functions accomplished by the team in performing the task” (p. 52).
Hackman and Oldham (1980) expanded on this by defining team effectiveness in terms of the
team’s success in meeting (or exceeding) organizational standards of quality and quantity,
members’ needs are satisfied, and members want to continue to work together on future tasks.
Several researchers subsequently took a part of these definitions (e.g., Gladstein, 1984,
suggested that team effectiveness consisted of performance and satisfaction and Sundstrom,
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DeMeuse, & Futrell, 1990 defined team effectiveness as performance and viability), whereas
other researchers changed components of the definitions. For example, Cohen and Bailey (1997)
defined team effectiveness as performance outcomes, attitudinal outcomes, and behavioral
outcomes; Beal, Cohen, Burke, and McLendon (2003) suggested that team effectiveness as
performance behaviors and performance outcomes; and Kozlowski and Bell (2003) argued that
team effectiveness was a combination of internal (e.g., satisfaction and viability) and external
(e.g., quantity and quality) criteria.
As this selective review makes clear, although these broad conceptualizations of team
effectiveness differ, there is even less agreement as to what the specific dimensions of team
effectiveness are. For example, there have been inconsistencies on what “productivity” is. Some
defined it as the quality or quantity of work (Beersma, Hollenbeck, Humphrey, Moon, Conlon, &
Ilgen, 2003), whereas others have considered it the meeting of organizational expectations
(Hackman, 1987). Related to this, it is unclear if performance speed is the same as quantity of
work accomplished or team productivity; error rates, failure, accuracy, and quality may be
synonomous; and “backing up,” assistance, cooperative support, and cooperative behavior may
all be forms of helping. In terms of affective reactions, some have considered these as a
component of team effectiveness (Guzzo & Dickson, 1996), whereas others have placed them
outside the realm of team effectiveness (Beal et al., 2003). As another example, although Schein
(1970) discussed helping, most definitions of team effectiveness do not seem to explicitly
acknowledge it.
In this manuscript, we attempt to address this confusion in the literature by organizing
team effectiveness into three broad domains using self-regulation theory as an overarching
theoretical framework. This yields an integrative definition of team effectiveness that draws from
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traditional views on team effectiveness but also builds on insights gained from self-regulation
theory. We then identify the core dimensions of team effectiveness and provide construct
definitions. Drawing from self-regulation theory, the team effectiveness dimensions are
organized into behavioral, cognitive, and affective domains. Next, we complete several meta-
analyses of the dimensions of team effectiveness in an effort to provide an introductory
understanding of the relationships amongst dimensions. We couple this with an analysis of the
reliabilities of existing scales in an effort to identify strengths and weaknesses in the literature.
Finally, we test develop and test specific hypotheses that provide a more nuanced view of the
relationship between teamwork processes and team effectiveness, extending the recent work of
LePine, Piccolo, Jackson, Mathieu, and Saul (2008).
A Typology of Team Effectiveness
We developed our typology of team effectiveness in the following manner. First, we
reviewed the articles discussing team effectiveness in an effort to assemble a broad set of team
effectiveness constructs examined in past research. This included examining definitions of team
effectiveness to determine what researchers have considered relevant, as well as empirical
studies of team effectiveness. Second, we examined the resulting set of constructs in an effort to
determine if different variables represented unique or redundant constructs (e.g., although given
different labels, errors and accuracy reflect different ends of a continuum that captures the
quality of work). Third, after creating a list of constructs, we organized these constructs into a
structure derived from the literature on self-regulation in teams (Hinsz, Tindale, & Vollrath,
1997). This suggested potential gaps and areas needed refinement. Finally, we reflected upon the
resulting construct set and added constructs that theoretically made sense.
Teams are self-regulating entities (Hinsz et al., 1997), which means that they set goals,
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check their progress against the goals, and adjust their behavior in response to deviations from
the desired state (c.f., Karoly, 1993; Lord, Diefendorff, Schmidt, & Hall, 2010) Hinsz et al.
(1997) suggested that the extent to which information is shared (and what is shared) in a group
impacts how groups (as a collective) manage that information to produce group outcomes.
Although they present a theoretical model linking the goals of a team, the specific processing
undertaken by the team, and the output of this process, they point out how the model
retroactively fits existing models and empirical results. Hinsz et al. (1997) go on to suggest that
information processing is what teams do (i.e., how they behave), it is a function of what they feel
and how much members are attracted to a team (i.e., their affective reactions), and what they
think during the process (i.e., their cognitions). Essentially, there are three categories of
information processing: behavioral actions, affective reactions, and cognitions.
We utilize these three categories of information processing to organize team
effectiveness. It is no surprise that team activities can be grouped into these three domains, as
these are the three main research domains in the social sciences. Classic psychological research
focused on the behaviors of people, to the exclusion of all internal processes (Watson, 1913). As
noted by Ilgen, Major, and Tower (1994), cognition grew in interest (and applicability) in the
social sciences during the 1980’s and early 1990’s. This “cognitive revolution” explicitly
acknowledged the thought processes of individuals and teams in developing theory. The
“affective revolution” (Barsade, Brief, & Spataro, 2003) that followed has moved research into
the realm of moods, affect, and emotions, all in an effort to better understand the complexity of
individuals. Together, these three paradigms nearly encompass the totality of human behavior,
and thus serve as a useful organizational scheme for understanding team effectiveness.
With this as an overall theoretical framework, team effectiveness can be defined by
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expanding Mathieu et al.’s (2008, p. 412) recent definition as the behavioral, affective, and
cognitive products of team activity that are valued by one or more constituencies. Although
inclusive, this definition lacks the specificity needed to address the concerns outlined earlier. As
such, we seek to articulate the various specific manifestations of behavioral, cognitive, and
affective effectiveness indicators.
In order to organize the dimensions of team effectiveness, we placed constructs into one
of these domains. Although we recognize that these domains are not orthogonal (e.g., a
behavioral construct may have cognitive undertones), we do believe that each dimension has a
primary or predominant characteristic that enables placement within the typology. The final
structure and organization of the dimensions is presented in Table 1.
Behavioral Team Effectiveness
Behavioral team effectiveness can be defined as “the action tendencies one has to
approach or avoid an object or perform some response” (Bagozzi, 1978, p. 10). This is the
domain of effectiveness outcomes that is most commonly thought of as “performance” or
“effectiveness” because it refers to task related outcomes of specific activities conducted within
the team. We identified six behavioral dimensions of team effectiveness.
Performance quality is the accuracy or precision of team output (Jenkins, Mitra, Gupta,
& Shaw, 1998). It includes both behavioral task performance (e.g., correctly welded joints) and
decision-making performance (e.g., jury decisions). In addition to the over 100 years of research
on performance quality at the individual level (Elliot, Helsen, & Chua, 2001), team researchers
have also frequently focused on quality (Humphrey, Hollenbeck, Meyer, & Ilgen, 2002). For
example, in McGrath’s (1984) circumplex of team tasks, both intellective tasks and judgment
tasks are defined in terms of finding a correct or preferred answer. Inaccurate decisions would
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therefore indicate low quality performance and may have serious consequences. Note that
performance quality does not need to be bound solely in terms of decision-making. For example,
automotive assembly teams can be judged on the number of quality defects per car, and a
research team writing a manuscript can be judged on the number of grammatical errors.
Performance quantity reflects the amount of work produced (Jenkins et al., 1998). This
dimension is conceptually similar to performance “speed” (which reflects how quickly work is
performed). Quantity has long been considered a core component of performance, such that
quantity of performance is often a fundamental component of reward systems (e.g., piece-rate
work; Taylor, 1895). In teams, performance quantity can reflect the number of cars produced, the
speed of an Olympic relay team, or the number of mortgages approved per day.
Comparing performance quality and quantity, researchers have frequently noted the
different antecedents, and often the negative correlation between these two dimensions of
effectiveness (Elliot et al, 2001). Because of this, scholars and practitioners alike have often
considered both dimensions simultaneously when examining team performance (Beersma et al.,
2003).
In-role performance can be thought of as performance on the job-related aspects of work,
rather than an overall assessment of effectiveness. For example, this may reflect performance on
a simulation (e.g., Hollenbeck et al., 2002) or task performance (e.g., Tjosvold & Yu, 2004).
Whereas performance quantity and performance quality reflect facets of behavioral team
effectiveness, they do not reflect the totality of in-role behavior. Performance quantity and
performance quality do not inherently capture the relative importance of each of these
dimensions. That is, on one task, performance quality may be the only thing that matters (e.g.,
how quickly a jury makes a decision is essentially irrelevant compared to the quality of that
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decision), whereas on other tasks performance quantity may be significantly more important than
performance quality (e.g., the speed of a relay team is more important than the runners’ form). In
contrast, in-role performance reflects the performance of the team on a priori defined role
behaviors (thus capturing the aggregation of quantity and quality on these specific behaviors).
In contrast, extra-role performance reflects team extra-role (rather than in-role) behaviors
such as interpersonal facilitation (e.g., helping or backing up team members). As noted by
McIntyre and Salas (1995), “this skill is at the heart of teamwork, for it makes the team truly
operate as more than the sum of its parts” (p. 26). This echoes the individual level research,
which has often argued that interpersonal facilitation shapes the organizational context (and
therefore organizational performance) by supporting other’s in-role activities (Borman &
Motowidlo, 1993). Extra-role performance may manifest itself as backing up team members who
are overloaded or coaching a team member (e.g., providing verbal feedback). At the core of this
dimension is the notion that team members are going beyond their defined roles in ways that
contribute to the ability of the team to complete its task.
Goal attainment is the extent to which a team reaches or exceeds its goals, where the
goals may be set by other organizational actors or the members themselves. As suggested by
Hackman (1987), within organizations, the “absolute” level of performance may be less
important than the ability to hit goals. That is, organizational evaluations of teams (for
compensation, continuation of resource allocation, etc.) are often based upon whether a team has
achieved its goals. The focus of team goals may be those dimensions of behavioral performance
discussed already (e.g., production levels or error rates) or they may be unique from those
already discussed (e.g., customer satisfaction ratings or turnover rates).
Counterproductive work behaviors (CWBs) reflect voluntary behaviors that are
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detrimental to the team or organization (Mount, Ilies, & Johnson, 2006). This includes behaviors
such as social loafing, tardiness, sabotage, theft, sexual harassment, and verbal (or physical)
abuse (Conlon, Meyer, & Nowakowski, 2005; Ones, 1992). The extent to which teams promote
or inhibit CWBs is a matter of debate. On the one hand, self-managed teams have been proposed
as a way to reduce the incidence of CWBs (Manz & Sims, 1987), as the team context is proposed
to connect individual inputs more tightly to outputs. Moreover, teams can be a strong context
where pro-organizational norms are reinforced through socialization (Barker, 1993). Yet, that
context may also produce CWBs. For example, a team climate that supports CWBs can
encourage otherwise compliant team members to damage property, break rules, or hurt
coworkers (Robinson & O’Leary-Kelly, 1998). As noted in the Hawthorne Studies
(Roethlisberger & Dickson, 1939), workers may feel pressure from the team to avoid being a
“rate-buster” by producing too much quantity of output.
Affective Team Effectiveness
Affect is “the positive-negative emotional relationship or feelings one has towards an
object or activity” (Bagozzi, 1978, p. 10). In the teams literature, researchers have long focused
on the emotional connection members have with each other and have frequently included
affective responses as critical outcomes of teams (c.f., Hackman, 1987). Applying Bagozzi’s
definition to teams, team affective outcomes can be thought of as the aggregate of the positive-
negative emotional feelings individual team member have towards (or relationship with) the
remainder of the team.
Teams researchers have frequently focused on four affective dimensions of team
effectiveness. Satisfaction with the team represents how positively members feel about the rest of
the team. As noted by Hackman (1987), team members should like (rather than be frustrated by)
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other members or else the emotional cost to frustrated members likely outweighs the benefits of
being in a team. Not surprisingly, most models of team effectiveness have included satisfaction
with the team.
Viability is similar to satisfaction with the team, such that it represents whether team
members would like to continue to work together in the future. Thus, being satisfied with the
team is usually sufficient for a team to be considered viable. However, team members may
dislike each other and yet see the benefit in continuing to collaborate. For example, professional
sports teams frequently encounter this phenomenon, such that team members perceive that the
benefit of having a personally distasteful member on the team outweighs the costs associated
with having that member. Because the startup costs of a team are high (due to the time and effort
necessary to develop norms and determine how to coordinate with each other; Ilgen et al., 2005),
having a team that wants to continue working together can be very beneficial for organizations
and is thus a desirable component of team effectiveness.
Cohesion reflects the interpersonal attraction towards, or the bond within, a team (Beal et
al., 2003). Much like satisfaction with the team and viability, cohesion is primarily affective such
that it focuses on how positively team members feel about other members in the team (e.g., are
they friends?). Yet, it has a slightly distinctive aspect in that it represents a sense of
belongingness and morale associated with being part of the team (Bollen & Hoyle, 1990). As
such, cohesion is a dimension of effectiveness that can begin to rise almost immediately after
team formation (Turner, 1987).
Team identification is based on the organizational identification literature which is
grounded in social identity theory (Tajfel & Turner, 1979). Social identity theory says that
individuals’ identities are based in part on their social referent groups. Therefore, team
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identification involves a psychological attachment to a team, and the “emotional significance that
members of a group attach to that membership in that group” (Van der Vegt & Bunderson, 2005,
p. 33). Team identification can be stronger than organizational identification because individuals
feel more connected to their smaller group and because they tend to have more in common with
those on their team (Johnson, Morgeson, Ilgen, Meyer, & Lloyd, 2006).
Cognitive Team Effectiveness
Cognition is “the content of one’s thoughts as to beliefs of statement of fact” (Bagozzi,
1978, p. 10). At their core, cognitive team effectiveness outcomes reflect the results of specific
thought processes undertaken by team members. Whereas the two previous team effectiveness
outcome domains have been included (to some extent) in prior reviews and models of teamwork,
the cognitive dimension has frequently been ignored or, at best, relegated to meditational
mechanisms. However, it is clear that cognition has grown in importance for understanding OB
and psychological phenomena (Ilgen et al., 1994).
Three cognitive team effectiveness dimensions have been consistently discussed in the
team literature. Innovation reflects the extent to which a team has creative (i.e., inventive,
original, or unique) outputs (West, 1990). Innovative output is generally thought to have an
applied focus, meaning that in addition to it being unique, it was specifically designed to benefit
constituents (Amabile, Conti, Coon, Lazenby, & Herron, 1996). The potential for teams to
produce output that was more innovative than individuals was one of the core arguments for
supporting the development and implementation of teams in organizations. For example, the
brainstorming literature is premised upon the idea that teams could generate more ideas than
could be produced by the same number of people working independently (Taylor, Berry, &
Block, 1958). Because team innovation can help establish or maintain organization success
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(Perry-Smith & Shalley, 2003), organizations have frequently prioritized the development of
structures (such as teams) that may promote innovation (Anderson & West, 1998; Drach-Zahavy
& Somech, 2001).
Potency reflects the collective belief that a team is effective (Guzzo, 1986). This
cognition thus reflects whether team members perceive that they can succeed at a broad set of
tasks across numerous situations. Potency is thought to be conceptually similar to (though not
redundant with) collective self efficacy, though empirical results suggest that they demonstrate
similar relationships with other variables (Gully, Incalcaterra, Joshi, Beaubien, 2002) and are
highly correlated (Stajkovic, Lee, & Nyberg, 2009). Having a sense of potency is important for
teams because potency influences how much effort will be put into tasks, and the extent to which
a team will persevere in the face of failure (Bandura, 1986).
Team learning is “a relatively permanent change in the team’s collective level of
knowledge and skill produced by the shared experience of the team members” (Ellis,
Hollenbeck, Ilgen, Porter, West, & Moon, 2003, p. 822). Team learning has two components:
learning about the task and learning about the team members. That is, one aspect of learning
involves a team finding out the processes involved in performing a task (Tjosvold, Yu, & Hui,
2004), whereas determining what team members know, or the skills they hold, is a separate
component of learning (Mohammed & Dumville, 2001). Learning more about the task and team
can promote behavioral effectiveness on the specific task (Hinsz et al., 1997), as well as
influence future task strategies and behavioral effectiveness both in the current team (Quiñones,
Ford, & Teachout, 1995) and in new teams (Ilgen et al., 2005).
Overall Team Effectiveness
Whereas the previous discussion of team effectiveness outcomes has focused on placing
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dimensions into broad domains, there exists an alternative conceptualization of team
effectiveness. Rather than assess team effectiveness by specific dimensions , a global assessment
of effectiveness provides an alternative, holistic view of how a team performed. More
specifically, overall team effeciveness reflects an inclusive combination of the behavioral,
affective, and cognitive components of team effectiveness.
For many years, researchers have compared global assessments of effectiveness to lower-
level dimensions (Meehl, 1986; Sawyer, 1966). Yet, research has also suggested that global
assessments capture unique aspects of effectiveness that are not provided through the dimensions
alone (Ganzach, Kluger, & Klayman, 2000). Thus, overall effectiveness measures provide
additional insight into how effective a team is. Research Questions
Although the teams literature suggests that there are these different dimensions of team
effectiveness, there has not been a systematic evaluation of construct validity of team
effectiveness. That is, researchers primarily examine only one or two dimensions of team
effectiveness in a given study. As such, there has not been an analysis of the interrelationship
between dimensions of team effectiveness, or within a category. Thus, one goal of this study is to
examine the interrelationships among these dimensions.
Another relevant question regarding the dimensionality of team effectiveness is the extent
to which the dimensions combine to form an overall effectiveness perception. That is, although
we consider overall effectiveness to be a generalized assessment of the components of
effectiveness, raters may weigh certain dimensions of effectiveness more heavily than others in
determining overall effectiveness. For example, people may default to considering behavioral
dimensions when assessing overall effectiveness, as behavioral dimensions are easier for external
raters to assess through observation, whereas a team’s affective reactions may be particularly
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challenging to gauge.
A fundamental component of any assessment tool is the reliability of the measure. As
noted by Viswesvaran, Ones, and Schmidt (1996), “for a measure to have any research or
administrative use, it must have some reliability” (p. 557). Yet, team effectiveness has been
measured from many different sources, using a multitude of measures, without a consistently-
applied construct validation process.
Wohlers and London (1989) suggested that certain dimensions of performance are more
difficult to evaluate than other dimensions. For example, behavioral dimensions of performance
such as performance quantity (e.g., counting the number of cars produced) are fundamentally
easier to evaluate (as there tends to be an objectively correct answer1) than an affective outcome
such as cohesion, which reflects how members feel about themselves and the team. In fact, some
have argued that the difference in rating accuracy of performance dimensions is stable across
studies, samples, and formats (Borman, 1979).
This difference in ease of evaluation is particularly relevant when one considers the
source of the ratings. For example, cohesion is likely measured more easily (and reliability)
when measured by the team itself than when measured by a supervisor or client. In contrast,
innovation may be more reliably evaluated by external evaluators than team members, as the
team members may be too involved in the output to see the big picture.
Nonetheless, the important issue is determining the extent to which certain dimensions of
effectiveness have been consistently and reliably measured to date. Identifying dimensions that
are consistently unreliable (or at least less reliable) should impact the interpretation of research
findings dealing with that dimension, as well as temper conclusions about relationships between
dimensions. However, being able to identify dimensions that consistently exhibit lower
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reliability should allow researchers to focus their attention on creating better measures of these
dimensions.
Research Question 1: To what extent are the dimensions of team effectiveness intercorrelated?
Research Question 2: To what extent do the dimensions of team effectiveness differentially relate to overall ratings of team effectiveness?
Research Question 3: To what extent have measures of team effectiveness exhibited different (or similar) levels of reliabilities?
Relationships with Team Processes
Much like the literature on team effectiveness, there has been a multitude of
conceptualizations and operationalizations of team processes, which can be thought of as those
variables that reflect “members’ interdependent acts that convert inputs to outcomes through
cognitive, verbal, and behavioral activities directed toward organizing taskwork to achieve
collective goals” (Marks et al., 2001, p. 357). Recent theoretical (Marks et al., 2001) and
empirical (LePine et al., 2008) approaches to resolving this problem have produced, and found
support for, a three-factor model of team processes.
Marks et al.’s (2001) model of team processes frames teamwork as a series of
performance episodes, where teams alternate between preparing for performance, and actually
performing. Transition phase processes are “evaluation and/or planning activities [that] guide
their accomplishment of a team goal or objective” (p. 360). As teams prepare for the next
performance episode, members reflect upon how they performed in the previous performance
episode, compare performance against goals, and plan what they will do in the next performance
episode. Action phase processes reflect “acts that contribute directly to goal accomplishment” (p.
360). As opposed to the preparation that occurs with the transition processes, teams engaging in
action processes perform task-related behaviors such as monitoring progress and coordination.
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Interpersonal processes reflect how teams manage interpersonal interactions within the team.
Whereas the other two processes were proposed to occur exclusively before or during
performance episodes, interpersonal processes were expected to occur throughout the entirety of
a team’s lifecycle. Interpersonal processes include activities such as conflict management and
confidence building.
In their recent meta-analytic test of this model, LePine et al. (2008) found support for the
multi-dimensional model of team processes, as well as empirical support for the relationship
between the processes and team performance and member satisfaction. Interestingly, whereas
they found differentiation on the strength of the relationships between the facets of the team
processes dimensions (e.g., team monitoring and systems monitoring are facets of the action
process dimension) on the outcomes, they did not find much differentiation at the dimension
level. For example, for the relationships with team performance, they found that all three
processes exhibited ρ values of .29. Although one might be tempted to conclude that the
processes have an equal influence on effectiveness, another view is that there was not enough
granularity in the team effectiveness outcomes to find meaningful differences. Thus, in an effort
to constructively extend their research, we examine the relationships between three process
dimensions and the dimensions of team effectiveness discussed herein. Although we would like
to pair their granularity in team processes with our granularity in team effectiveness, the limited
empirical research makes that impossible right now.
There is reason to suspect specific relationships between certain processes and team
effectiveness dimensions. We organize our discussion of hypotheses around the outcomes of
interest, and pose relationships linking specific team processes to these dimensions of team
effectiveness.
Team Effectiveness 19
First, there is reason to suspect that transition processes will be the most important
processes for overall performance. Transition processes reflect the planning that occurs before
action – in essence, they capture preparation for the next phase of the team. If a team acts
without sufficient planning, it likely does not matter how hard they work, or how well they are
coordinated. Instead, they will be acting without a clear, shared vision of what they want to
accomplish, and how they would go about accomplishing this. Therefore, we expect that
transition processes are the most predictive processes for overall team performance.
Turning to the behavioral dimensions of effectiveness, we would expect that different
processes affect performance quality. As performance quality reflects accuracy of performance,
a team focused solely on performing without taking time to figure out how to accurately perform
(and perhaps even what constitutes high quality performance) will be challenged to produce high
quality performance. Support for this can be derived from the literature on team goal orientation,
which has found that a focus solely on performing (as opposed to learning) can be a detriment to
reaching optimal solutions (Bunderson & Sutcliffe, 2003; Vandewalle, 2001).
In contrast, we expect that performance quantity, which reflects the speed at which a
team works, is influenced most by action processes. Bunderson and Sutcliffe (2003) note that
teams that are too focused on learning and planning suffered in their ability to produce sufficient
outcomes. Given that performance quantity does not rely necessarily on good output, but rather a
greater amount of output, action processes should be more predictive of this outcome.
We expect that goal attainment is a function of both transition and action processes. To
successfully reach its goals, a team must first choose appropriate goals. Goals that are too
difficult or inappropriate for the team are ultimately de-motivating and unlikely to be reached
(Locke & Latham, 1990). Thus, specifying appropriate goals (a key element of transition
Team Effectiveness 20
processes) should be critical for goal accomplishment. Second, having a good goal is not enough
for reaching that goal; rather, the team must also progress towards that goal. In this way, action
processes are also important for goal accomplishment, as they capture team activity.
The category of affective team outcomes reflects how the team members feel about the
team. Given that interpersonal processes are theorized to encompass issues such as affect
management in teams (Marks et al., 2000), we predict that they will more strongly relate to the
affective outcomes than either transition or action processes.
Innovation reflects a unique output from a team. In this situation, two factors are
expected to matter. First, the transition processes are likely to help, as a team’s focus on planning
how to stimulate innovation (through the implementation of such activities as brainstorming and
devil’s advocacy) should influence whether they produce an innovative outcome. Second,
innovation is speculated to arise from disagreements in task or processes (Jehn & Mannix, 2001);
yet, that conflict can easily turn into relationship-focused conflict, producing low levels of
performance (De Dreu & Weingart, XXXX). Thus, the ability to manage conflict is critical for
successful team innovation (Alper, Tjosvold, & Law, 2000; Chen, Liu, & Tjosvold, 2005). We
therefore predict that transition and interpersonal processes are more strongly related to
innovation than action processes.
Hypothesis 1: Transition processes will be more predictive of (a) overall team effectiveness, (b) performance quality, and (c) goal accomplishment than action or interpersonal processes
Hypothesis 2: Action processes will be more predictive of performance quantity than transition or interpersonal processes
Hypothesis 3: (a) Transition and (b) action processes will be more predictive of goal attainment than interpersonal processes
Hypothesis 4: Interpersonal processes will be more predictive of affective outcomes than transition or action processes
Team Effectiveness 21
Hypothesis 5: (a) Transition and (b) interpersonal processes will be more predictive of innovation than action processes
Methods
Literature Search and Inclusion Criteria
We conducted a literature search to identify relevant research in the domain of team
effectiveness. The articles were identified through computer-based searches of the PsycINFO
(1887-2010) and Web of Science ISI (1970-2010) databases using the term team as the initial
key word. Because the focus of this study was to identify effectiveness criteria, we felt it was
important to confine our literature search to only those studies that used the “team” terminology.
Although the terms “group” and “team” have frequently been used interchangeably (Guzzo &
Dickson, 1996), these types of collectives have inherently different meanings. Teams are a subset
of the broader category of groups, such that although both types of collectives have multiple
members who define themselves as part of the collective and have some shared identity, norms,
and goals, teams have higher levels of interdependence than groups and are embedded in
organizations (Guzzo & Dickson, 1996; Kozlowski & Ilgen, 2006; Sundstrom, De Meuse, &
Futrell, 1990). Teams are therefore different than social groups or nominal groups (Mathieu,
Maynard, Rapp, & Gilson, 2008) and their outputs are more relevant to the study of applied
psychology and organizational behavior. This search predictably resulted in fewer studies
measuring certain dimensions of effectiveness such as cohesion, which have often been
examined in the context of nominal groups. The abstracts of the resulting list were scanned to
eliminate obvious non-group or team research, as well as obvious theoretical or review articles.
This process winnowed the list to 1,649 articles for review and potential coding. In addition, the
reference sections of the following reviews or meta-analyses on teams were examined for
Team Effectiveness 22
potential articles: Ilgen, Hollenbeck, Johnson, and Jundt (2005); Mathieu, Maynard, Rapp, and
Gilson (2008); LePine, Piccolo, Jackson, Mathieu, and Saul (2008); Hulsheger, Anderson, and
Salgado (2009); and Mesmer-Magnus and DeChurch (2009).
This list of articles was split amongst the three authors for review. We then reviewed this
list of articles using more fine-grained criteria for inclusion or exclusion. Specifically, we again
excluded any theoretical or review articles that were not eliminated in the first pass. Second, a
study had to report results from which an effect size could be calculated. Third, the study had to
include a unique sample that had not been previously included in the current meta-analysis.
These inclusion criteria reduced our final study population to 379 articles.
All three authors participated in the coding of the studies. Although the authors
independently coded each manuscript, we met regularly (as a team) to discuss the manuscripts
coded. This allowed us to clarify ambiguous coding situations and achieve consensus on the
coded data.
After coding the articles, we found that several of the dimensions had been studied
infrequently, particularly in terms of the assessment of certain dimensions in the same study with
other dimensions. Because of this, we made the decision to exclude or collapse several
dimensions. More specifically, the lack of data relating CWBs to other dimensions of team
effectiveness resulted in its being dropped from our analyses. In addition, due to very limited
data examining the relationships between viability, team identification, and other dimensions, we
collapsed these two variables into a single variable labeled satisfaction with team.
Meta-Analytic Procedures
We used the Schmidt-Hunter psychometric meta-analysis method (Hunter & Schmidt,
2004). Following Hunter and Schmidt’s (2004) recommendations, we created composite
Team Effectiveness 23
correlation values for studies with multiple measures of the same construct. This process applied
to correlation matrix, as we did not want to “double-count” a study in the meta-analytic
correlation estimates. However, we kept the measures separate for estimates of reliability.
Correlations in our study were corrected for measurement error in both the predictor and
the criterion scores using Cronbach’s alpha. Although these values were provided by the
majority of studies, when they were missing, we used the average value (for the specific
variable) from the other studies.
For the matrix of population correlation estimates, we present several pieces of
information. First, we include both the uncorrected (r) and corrected (ρ) estimates. Second, we
include the 95% confidence interval (CI) for each corrected population correlation. Finally, we
present the number of studies included in determining the correlation (k) and the total number of
participants in the studies (n).
RESULTS
Our first research question asked to what extent the dimensions of team effectiveness are
intercorrelated. To address this question, we meta-analyzed the relationships between the
dimensions, the results of which are presented in Table 2. In examining these results, the first
finding that was salient to us is the relatively low correlation between dimensions. With a few
notable exceptions (e.g., quantity and extra-role performance, satisfaction with the team and
potency, cohesion and learning), the majority of correlations between dimensions were in the
range of .10-.30. This suggests that although there may be conceptual overlap between
dimensions (as well as common source issues), the dimensions have enough differentiation so as
to be empirically separable. This finding bodes well for research interested in examining multiple
dimensions of team effectiveness, as they do not seem to halo into a single factor.
Team Effectiveness 24
Another interesting finding is that performance quality and performance quantity are
significantly positively correlated (ρ = .22). Given that individual level research has found a
consistent negative relationship between these two variables, it is interesting to speculate that
there may be something unique about teams that allow them to work both fast and accurately.
Related to this finding is the differential relationship for performance quality and performance
quantity with several other dimensions. For example, the results suggest that whereas quality is
more related to in-role performance than is quantity, quantity is more related to extra-role
performance than is quality. One reason for this finding may be that “doing more” (quantity) is a
characteristic of going outside role prescriptions.
Although we generally find universally positive relationships between dimensions, the
study-level correlations underlying these relationships are not universally positive, which has an
influence on whether the confidence interval crosses zero. In particularly, there seem to be more
uncertainty for relationships with satisfaction with the team or innovation, such that relationships
with these two variables have negative values in the lower end of the confidence interval. It may
be that certain affective reactions to behavioral performances are more nuanced, or that doing a
lot of work (performance quantity) does not necessarily result in more innovation.
Our second research question asks to what extent the dimensions of team effectiveness
differentially relate to overall ratings of team effectiveness. We examined this issue by running
an OLS regression, where overall team effectiveness was regressed on the dimensions for which
we had a full correlation matrix (i.e., overall effectiveness, performance quality, performance
quantity, in-role performance, extra-role performance, satisfaction with the team, cohesion,
innovation, and potency). The results of this regression are presented in Table 3. As shown in
Table 3, after partialing shared variance, overall team effectiveness is best predicted by in-role
Team Effectiveness 25
performance, performance quantity, performance quality, and satisfaction with team, with 43%
of the variance in overall team effectiveness explained by these eight dimensions. This result
suggests that holistic ratings of overall team effectiveness may be primarily a function of the
behavioral dimensions of team effectiveness, as well as the more salient affective dimension
(satisfaction with the team). More specifically, the ability of the team to successfully execute its
in-role responsibilities appears to be the best predictor of overall team effectiveness. Moreover,
these results suggest that extra-role performance, cohesion, innovation, and potency measure
something that is not reflected in a holistic measure of team effectiveness. The fact that the
cognitive domain is not at all reflected in overall team effectiveness is surprising, and suggests
that the field revises how we capture overall effectiveness (e.g., a greater queuing of that domain
in the scale).
Our third research question addressed the extent to which measure of team effectiveness
exhibited different (or similar) levels of reliabilities. To test this research question, we collected
the coefficient alpha reliability scores for every measure that reflected one of the dimensions of
team effectiveness. For this research question, we purposefully did not limit ourselves only to
studies where the there were two or more measures of team effectiveness, which resulted in the
production of table that provides some insight into the totality of research on team effectiveness.
For this question, we separated the information by three factors: team effectiveness dimension,
source of the team effectiveness rating, and whether the study provided a reliability estimate. The
result of this process is presented in Table 4.
The first conclusion one can make about the reliabilities is that they, in general, are above
the cutoff for “adequate reliability” (Nunnally, 1977). Yet, given the state of the teams literature,
one would expect that the measures of team effectiveness had progressed away from the early
Team Effectiveness 26
stages of research and instead reached a greater degree of internal validity. As Edwards (2008)
notes, the effect of two measures with reliabilities of .75 on a relationship is so great as to
potentially “change the results of statistical tests and alter substantive conclusions” (p. 478).
A second point of interest rests in the difference in reliabilities across sources. Across the
team effectiveness dimensions, measures rated by the teams generally have lower reliabilities
than measures rated by others. There are multiple ways to interpret this. First, it may be that team
members are less reliable raters in general. Second, the fact that there are (presumably) many
more raters involved in any given measurement when the rater is the team (i.e., all of the team
members rather than a single supervisor) may introduce more noise. A third option, and the
explanation that we believe is most likely, is that team members may actually see more nuance in
the scales when rating themselves than what other external raters perceive. Consider the measure
of helping from Podsakoff, Ahearne, and MacKenzie (1997). Two items from the scale include
whether team members “help each other out if someone falls behind in his/her work” and “take
steps to try to prevent problems with other crew members.” Notice that the first item is a reactive
item, whereas the second is a proactive item. External raters may only see that team members
help each other out (essentially haloing the items), whereas team members may actually
differentiate between proactive and reactive strategies.
A third point of interest can be derived from examining how specific dimensions are
assessed. In the case of behavioral outcomes such as performance quality, performance quantity,
and in-role performance, it appears that a vast majority of studies use objective measures. In
contrast, the dimensions within the affective domain are predominantly assessed from the team.
Immediate supervisors appear to be the primary rater of both overall team effectiveness and
innovation. Although it may make intuitive sense that these dimensions be rated by these
Team Effectiveness 27
sources, an interesting question arises as to whether “non-traditional” sources of these measures
(e.g., supervisor ratings of cohesion or team ratings of performance quantity) provide unique
information about the dimension of interest.
Turning to our specific hypotheses, we first predicted that transition processes would be
more strongly related to overall team effectiveness, performance quality, and goal
accomplishment than would either the action or interpersonal processes. As shown in Table 2,
there is some evidence supporting this hypothesis, though for all relationships, the confidence
intervals overlap to some extent. For overall team effectiveness, transition processes (ρ = .36)
demonstrates a somewhat higher relationship than does either the action (ρ = .21) or
interpersonal processes (ρ = .20). Transition processes (ρ = .45) are also somewhat more strongly
related performance quality than are the action processes (ρ = .33). Finally, transition (ρ = .22),
action (ρ = .27) and interpersonal processes (ρ =.16) all appear to be similarly related to goal
attainment. Thus, there is support for Hypotheses 1a and 1b, whereas 1c is not supported.
Hypothesis 2 predicted that action processes would be more related to performance
quantity than would the transition or interpersonal processes. There is some evidence that the
action processes (ρ = .25) are more related to performance quantity than transition processes (ρ =
.16); however, interpersonal processes (ρ = .23) are essentially equivalently related to
performance quantity. Thus, there is only limited support for part of Hypothesis 2.
Hypothesis 3 predicted that transition and action processes would be more strongly
related to goal attainment than would interpersonal processes. There is some evidence for this
hypothesis, as transition (ρ = .22) and action processes (ρ = .27) are somewhat more strongly
related than interpersonal processes (ρ = .16). Thus, there is some support for Hypotheses 3a and
3b.
Team Effectiveness 28
Hypothesis 4 predicted that interpersonal processes would be more strongly related to
affective outcomes than would either the transition or action processes. Disappointingly, we can
only test this hypothesis for satisfaction with the team. For this outcome, the results do not
support the hypothesis, as both transition (ρ = .39) and action processes (ρ = .40) are more
strongly related to satisfaction with the team than the interpersonal processes (ρ = .13). Thus,
Hypothesis 4 is not supported.
Finally, Hypothesis 5 predicted that the transition and interpersonal processes would be
more strongly related to innovation than would the action processes. For this hypothesis, we find
evidence that action processes (ρ = .20) are more weakly related to innovation than either
transition (ρ = .34) or interpersonal processes (ρ =.76). Thus, there is support for Hypotheses 5a
and 5b.
Analyses of Control Variables
We conclude our analyses by examining the relationship between team effectiveness
dimensions and the control variables of team tenure and team size. Past research has suggested
that these structural characteristics may have a direct effect on team effectiveness. Examining
Table 2, the evidence appears to be mixed on the relationship between these structural
characteristics and team effectiveness. Examining team tenure first, the results suggest that team
tenure is positively related to overall team effectiveness (ρ = .06), in-role performance (ρ = .14),
and goal attainment (ρ = .17). For team size, there is evidence that performance quantity (ρ
= .09), goal attainment (ρ = -.06), and potency (ρ = .13) all relate to team size. In all cases, the
ρ’s are rather small, though significantly different than zero. Thus, we can conclude that team
tenure and size can affect several team effectiveness dimensions, though the absolute magnitude
of these effects is limited.
Team Effectiveness 29
DISCUSSION
In this study, we developed a taxonomy of team effectiveness, organizing the dimensions
into three broad domains derived from self-regulation theory. We then meta-analyzed the
relationships amongst the dimensions, tested the relationship between the dimensions and overall
team effectiveness, examined the reliabilities of the dimensions (by rater source), and finally
tested the link between the dimensions and Marks et al.’s (2001) tripartite model of team
processes. The results of this endeavor demonstrated that although the dimensions are correlated,
there is significant conceptual and empirical differentiation between the dimensions.
The most important contribution of this study rests with its ability to organize and define
what team effectiveness is. The lack of a common definition for and clear dimensionality of team
effectiveness is problematic for theoretical, empirical, and applied reasons. Without a clear
definition, theories built towards explaining effectiveness may not actually apply to all aspects of
effectiveness. For example, recent research has argued that the literature on team compensation
promotes quality of performance, but actually hurts the quantity of performance (Beersma et al.,
2003), contrasting traditional views on productivity in teams (Aime, Meyer, & Humphrey,
2010). Essentially, the lack of understanding of what team effectiveness is can lead to a lack of
theoretical precision and the potential for misspecification of theory. To develop a richer
understanding of how inputs and processes impact effectiveness, researchers therefore need to
clearly specify which domain of effectiveness their theory applies to and identify a (several)
specific dimension(s) of effectiveness that relate to the theoretical model. Undertaking this
approach will provide better specified theories of teamwork.
On the empirical side, the lack of a consistent definition has led to the use of different
measures, some of which represent fundamentally different variables, but all of which use the
Team Effectiveness 30
same construct name. Tests of theories may be called into question, as inconsistent findings
(which often lead to the conclusion that only a limited or even no relationship exists; Bell, 2007)
may be the result of (metaphorically) comparing apples to oranges. For example, consider the
ambitious work by DeChurch and Mesmer-Magnus (2010), where the authors examined the
relationship between team cognition and team effectiveness. This study presents a clear model of
team cognition, it tests a large selection of moderators of the relationship between cognition and
team effectiveness, and presents several valuable findings about this relationship. Yet, similar to
other meta-analyses in the teams domain, this study examined only part of the team effectiveness
construct space (and in fact collapsed several dimensions together: “task performance,
completion, and proficiency” were all treated as team performance; p. 38). This is not a criticism
of that study, as it provided a great deal of insight into this issue (moreover, it is unlikely that the
authors would have had a sufficient sample to differentiate amongst all team effectiveness
dimensions); instead, we want to point out that given the differences between the team
effectiveness dimensions, as demonstrated herein, researchers lose potentially valuable
information by collapsing across the dimensions.
From an applied perspective, we know that different teams are evaluated in different
ways, using different criteria. Yet, the lack of a single viewpoint that is inclusive and integrative
may results in organizations finding that interventions developed by scholars do not work
because the dimension of effectiveness that they are interested in is different than what scholars
have tested the relationships with. Put a different way, the movement towards evidence-based
management (Pfeffer & Sutton, 2006) entails a focus on what actually makes a difference,
distinguishing between “hard facts, dangerous half truths, and total nonsense.” Hard facts are
extremely challenging to find in organizational behavior / applied psychological research and
Team Effectiveness 31
total nonsense can easily be debunked by researchers; where we, as scholars must provide value
is in clarifying what are half-truths (and when do they apply). Differentiating amongst team
effectiveness dimensions is but one step in clarifying what relationships actually exist.
Limitations and Future Research
There are several limitations of this study. First, as with all meta-analyses, we were
constrained to only be able to analyze the population of research that exists. Because of this,
there were several dimensions of effectiveness (i.e., counterproductive work behaviors and team
identification) that have been severely under-researched and therefore were not included in our
analysis, whereas goal attainment, viability, innovation, and learning have only been examined in
a limited number of studies (and thus their coefficients are less stable). Although one could see
this as a problem, we instead see this as an opportunity. These are important dimensions of team
effectiveness (in fact, viability and goal attainment have been included in most classic definitions
of team effectiveness, whereas innovation and learning have become critical outcomes for
organizations). We therefore encourage researchers to focus upon these specific dimensions of
team effectiveness in future research. Understanding the antecedents of these outcomes would
likely be valuable contributions to the literature.
One particular problem with the results from this study is that the dimensions were
measured in many different ways. Table 4 highlights the different sources of ratings; our coding
process highlighted the deficiency in standardized measures of these dimensions. In reality, each
of the dimensions was assessed via very different scales, with each scale likely measuring
slightly different constructs. Although we can learn important information from meta-analyses
where the examined constructs are measured using disparate measures, additional information
may arise from the use of consistent measures given the less noise in the measurement (c.f.,
Team Effectiveness 32
Barrick & Mount, 1991 and Hurtz & Donovan, 2000). We recommend that the field begin to
narrow down a list of construct-valid measures of the team effectiveness dimensions.
Team Effectiveness 33
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Footnotes
Team Effectiveness 43
Table 1Dimensions of Team Effectiveness
Dimension DefinitionBehavioral
Performance quality The accuracy or precision of team output
Performance quantity The amount of work produced
In-role performance Performance on the job-related aspects of work
Extra-role performance Interpersonal facilitation (e.g., helping or backing up team members)
Goal attainment The extent to which a team reaches or exceeds its goals
Counterproductive work behaviors
Voluntary behaviors that are detrimental to the team or organization
AffectiveSatisfaction with team How positively members feel about the rest of the team
Viability Extent to which team members would like to continue to work together in the future
Cohesion The interpersonal attraction towards, or the bond with a team
Team identification A psychological attachment to a team
CognitiveInnovation The extent to which a team has creative (i.e., inventive,
original, or unique) outputs
Potency The collective belief that a team is effective
Learning A relatively permanent change in the team’s collective level of knowledge and skill produced by the shared experience of the team members
Team Effectiveness 44
Table 2Correlations between Team Effectiveness Dimensions
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12r, rc r, rc r, rc r, rc r, rc r, rc r, rc r, rc r, rc r, rc r, rc r, rc
(95% CI) (95% CI) (95% CI) (95% CI) (95% CI) (95% CI) (95% CI) (95% CI) (95% CI) (95% CI) (95% CI) (95% CI)
1 Overall Team Effectiveness
k, N
Behavioral Measures
2 Performance Quality .34, .39(.26, .52)
k, N 24, 1316
3 Performance Quantity .34, .36 .21, .22(.21, .51) (.10, .35)
k, N 15, 901 25, 2165
4 In-role performance .49, .54 .31, .34 .17, .18(.42, .67) (.17, .52) (.01, .34)
k, N 15, 1350 12, 626 5, 529
5 Extra-role performance .29, .32 .24, .27 .46, .50 .26, .32(.14, .50) (.01, .54) (.29, .71) (.11, .54)
k, N 17, 1148 10, 592 5, 386 9, 523
6 Goal attainment .34, .40 .15, .18 .11, .11 .35, .42 .08, .09(.29, .51) (-.02, .39) (-.01, .24) (.23, .60)
k, N 9, 1907 7, 862 3, 253 5, 332 1, 19Affective Measures
7 Satisfaction with team .35, .41 .14, .17 .15, .17 .35, .42 .16, .19 .49, .52(.31, .51) (-.03, .37) (-.02, .35) (.07, .77) (-.06, .44)
k, N 24, 1463 6, 309 5, 326 8, 486 2, 137 1, 115
8 Viability .63, .75 -.01, .00 .19, .20 .68, .83(.60, .90) (-.41, .40) (.04, .37)
k, N 7, 310 5, 167 4, 132 1, 21
9 Cohesion .23, .27 .22, .26 .24, .27 .38, .43 .49, .55 .11, .14 .15, .17 .28, .32(.19, .34) (.20, .32) (.19, .36) (.31, .55) (.30, .80) (.01, .27) (-.20, .53) (.16, .48)
k, N 39, 3065 12, 928 5, 478 9, 957 4, 260 3, 226 4, 194 2, 125Cognitive Measures10 Innovation .27, .32 .11, .14 .18, .21 .40, .47 .50, .60 .36, .42 .25, .28 .06, .07
(.14, .49) (-.15, .43) (-.02, .45) (.07, .87) (.19, .65) (.13, .44) (-.05, .19) k, N 6, 590 4, 262 4, 309 3, 115 1, 97 5, 227 2, 169 3, 26411 Potency .37, .42 .22, .25 .40, .44 .36, .40 .21, .23 .64, .74 .44, .53 .44, .50 .14, .16
Team Effectiveness 45
(.37, .47) (.14, .36) (.33, .55) (.28, .51) (.55, .94) (.39, .62) (-.32, .64) k, N 38, 2342 7, 640 10, 639 22, 1180 1, 80 8, 478 1, 28 13, 957 2, 114
12 Learning .31, .37 .21, .25 .16, .19 .51, .62 .57, .77 .58, .66 .21, .24 .58, .70(.25, .50) (.12, .39) (.08, .30) (.48, .75) (.55, .78) (.13, .34) (.58, .81)
k, N 6, 469 3, 198 3, 330 2, 154 1, 79 3, 298 2, 302 2, 126Processes
13 Transition .31, .36 .39, .45 .15, .16 .22, .25 .41, .49 .20, .22 .33, .39 .23, .27 .30, .34 .50, .60 .38, .48(.25, .46) (.32, .57) (.06, .26) (.16, .33) (-.02, 1.00) (.08, .36) (.25, .54) (-.03, .56) (.20, .47) (.41, .80) (.27, .68)
k, N 26, 1417 7, 358 8, 509 11, 712 2, 72 3, 178 2, 143 9, 535 4, 180 4, 322 2, 72
14 Action .17, .21 .30, .33 .22, .25 .26, .29 .05, .05 .23, .27 .35, .40 .19, .21 .26, .29 .15, .20 .32, .39 .40, .51(.11, .31) (.25, .41) (.18, .33) (.17, .41) (-.59, .68) (.16, .39) (-.02, .82) (.03, .55) (.08, .32) (.21, .58) (.26, .75)
k, N 16, 1131 9, 549 8, 643 16, 956 2, 155 4, 268 4, 337 1, 74 5, 575 5, 249 11, 645 2, 171
15 Interpersonal .17, .20 .21, .23 .06, .05 -.24, -.28 .15, .16 .08, .13 .61, .76 .88, .99 -.26, -.36(.01, .38) (-.33, .42) (-.52, .78)
k, N 7, 381 1, 121 4, 350 1, 27 1, 121 3, 199 1, 56 1, 60 1, 46
16 Overall .37, .41 .63, .73 .39, .41 .22, .24 .75, .85 .42, .47 .30, .33 .67, .77(.27, .54) (.53, .93) (.24, .59) (.16, .33) (.30, .64) (.25, .41)
k, N 11, 915 2, 36 3, 91 4, 603 1, 27 4, 112 6, 482 1, 39Control Variables
17 Team tenure .05, .06 .05, .05 -.02, -.02 .13, .14 .16, .17 .11, .12 .05, .06 .13, .14 -.05, -.06 -.04, -.04(.01, .11) (-.02, .12) (-.15, .10) (.03, .24) (.04, .31) (.00, .24) (-.16, .29) (-.01, .30) (-.16, .05) (-.18, .10)
k, N 20, 2053 4, 828 3, 751 3, 574 2, 208 4, 329 3, 265 9, 724 3, 336 4, 200
18 Team size .00, .00 -.03, -.04 .09, .09 -.07, -.07 -.02, -.03 -.06, -.06 .02, .02 -.08, -.09 -.06, -.06 .05, .06 .12, .13 -.05, -.05(-.03, .04) (-.10, .03) (.01, .17) (-.17, .03) (-.13, .08) (-.12, -.01) (-.05, .09) (-.53, .34) (-.12, .00) (-.04, .16) (.05, .20) (-.15, .05)
k, N 66, 6377 18, 1787 11, 1639 14, 901 4, 370 7, 2231 10, 748 2, 86 22, 1638 19, 1528 14, 1007 5, 432
Team Effectiveness 46
Table 3Regression Results for Overall Effectiveness
β R2
Performance Quality .19 .43Performance Quantity .21In-Role Performance .36
Extra-Role Performance .03Satisfaction with Team .17
Cohesion -.05Innovation .01
Potency .03
Team Effectiveness 47
Table 4Reliability of Team Effectiveness Dimensions
Dimension Sourcek
(overall)n
(overall)k
(w/reliability)n
(w/reliability) reliabilityOverall Team Effectiveness
Immediate Supervisor 91 9043 48 3252 0.84Team 48 2936 36 2384 0.82Objective 41 5433External Evaluator 62 2805 19 938 0.88Higher level boss 11 898 8 552 0.87Customer 10 530 6 327 0.89
Performance QualityImmediate Supervisor 18 1087 6 289 0.79Team 18 917 11 660 0.85Supervisor & Team 1 71Objective 46 3940External Evaluator 18 524 4 115 0.77Customer 2 140
Performance QuantityImmediate Supervisor 10 1031 2 196 0.91Team 5 352 1 107 0.85Objective 47 4906External Evaluator 3 52 1 16 0.91
In-role PerformanceImmediate Supervisor 16 1037 6 646 0.84Team 12 624 8 449 0.83Objective 84 10978External Evaluator 12 488 2 82 0.87Customer 8 1161 1 121 1.00
Extra-role PerformanceImmediate Supervisor 10 652 8 528 0.83Team 20 21545 20 21545 0.84Objective 16 1111External Evaluator 3 132
Goal AttainmentImmediate Supervisor 10 600 3 209 0.93Team 6 251 5 230 0.76Supervisor & Team 6 113 5 86 0.78Objective 6 2603External Evaluator 3 198 3 198 0.76
Satisfaction with TeamImmediate Supervisor 1 88 1 88 0.88Team 36 2196 31 1883 0.85External Evaluator 2 139
CohesionImmediate Supervisor 2 162 1 74 0.96Team 58 4308 49 3606 0.85
ViabilityImmediate Supervisor 2 125 2 125 0.83Team 9 317 4 164 0.85
InnovationImmediate Supervisor 44 1738 16 991 0.81Team 17 1132 9 682 0.84Objective 11 617
Team Effectiveness 48
External Evaluator 14 842 4 137 0.87Customer 1 56
PotencyTeam 75 4289 41 2563 0.87
LearningImmediate Supervisor 2 133 2 133 0.80Team 18 1287 12 986 0.82
External Evaluator 1 51 1 51 0.84
Team Effectiveness 49
1 Note that we do not presume that the performance quantity construct is always measured objectively. Rather, one can still evaluate performance quantity on a seven-point Likert scale. However, we suggest that this construct is derived from an objective outcome.