Teams that lead - IA Summit 2008

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Transcript of Teams that lead - IA Summit 2008

Page 1: Teams that lead - IA Summit 2008

Click to edit Master text stylesSecond level

Third levelFourth level

Fifth level

Web Technology Group

Teams that lead

IA Institute Leadership Workshop

Mags Hanley

11th April 2008

Page 2: Teams that lead - IA Summit 2008

Introduction

• Mags Hanley

• Head of Consultancy WTG in London

• Manager and leader of teams for 10 years

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Example - PIPs

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Aim of this session

• Discussion about developing teams as opposed to individuals

• What are leading teams?

• What contributes to making a leading team?

• Where are we providing leadership?

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Aims of this session

• Understand how you develop and manage leading teams

• Create the right conditions for leading teams

• Understand the pitfalls

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An exercise

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Definition of a leading team

1. Teams that develop leading products, services or concepts

2. Teams that lead organisationally – work well together, have a cohesiveness and are highly functioning

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Conditions

Skunk works - Under the radar

Vs.

High-priority projects

Strongly defined pieces of work

Vs.

Ill-defined pieces of work

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Conditions

Autonomy vs. Highly structured

OR

Why do Agile methodologies get such great press?

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Length of time

• Project vs. Operational

• Project teams– Quick project– Ongoing long term project

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Motivation

• Status– Inside the organisation– Outside the organisation

• Intellectual exercise

• Pride of the products, ownership

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Reward and recognition

• Money

• Status

• More interesting projects vs. operational work

• Intellectual freedom

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Two models

Team of equals

Leader-based team

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Team of equals

• Needs a nominal leader – final responsibility to the client or stakeholder

• Usually made up a multi-disciplinary team, each well-thought of in their area

• Works well with clear definition of roles

• The team like and respect each other, therefore work well

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Leader-based team

• One strong leader able to communicate vision and drive the project

• Charismatic leaders

• Can go wrong so easily if there are problems with the leader

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Team mix and dynamics

How do you work out the right one?

Can you plan for these successful teams?

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Team properties

• Each person feels they are contributing

• Each person is respected for their part in the team

• There is leadership – of the team; of the idea

• BUT each person is recognised for their contribution

• They do something outstanding

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Team personalities

• The Agitator - Questions the status quo, outspoken • The Wild Card - Skill and dedication, if you can find the

key to motivating him• The Leader - Execution, ability to get team on board and

invested in new ideas • The Workhorse - Focus, work ethic, dogged

determination • The Glue - Communication — the glue that brings the

team together, especially in difficult times• The Expert - Vast knowledge of a subject area, its major

players, and its most useful sources of information

http://www.bnet.com/2403-13059_23-185372.html

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Case study

• Go to your worksheet

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Discussion

• What team structure would you develop for this team?

• How would you run it?

• What are the possible pitfalls for this project?

• How would you mitigate those pitfalls?

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Exercise

• Think of a new project at work that has potential to be leading

• Using the checklist consider:– Why does it have potential?– Who would you put on it?– What’s the shape of the team?– How can you put the environment in place to

make it leading?

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Discussion

Are there two people willing to talk about their project?

Places where you want some help and discussion from the group

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Questions and discussion

Any more burning questions?

Contact details

Mags Hanley

[email protected]