Sunday, 12 January 2020

High-Performing Teams

When it comes right down to it, you’ve got to deliver. And the key to doing this is having a high-performing project team. You can have the greatest plan in the world, but if your core project team can’t get the work done as expected, it really doesn’t matter. Conversely, a high-performing project team can go a long way to compensate for inadequate planning and other “less-than-ideal” project environments. Although effective leadership and communication skills are key ingredients of a successful project team environment, there is tremendous value in understanding the specific principles and techniques that we can apply to maximize the performance of our project team. While no two teams ever perform in precisely the same manner, and every team will have their particular strengths, we have found a core set of traits that are shared by high-performing teams:

Clarity - This trait is likely the most important. High-performing teams know where they are going, what they are doing, and why they are doing it. They understand the project goals and priorities, they have clear roles and responsibilities, and they understand their assigned work tasks and how their piece fits in with the rest.

Commitment - Members of high-performing teams are committed to the success of the project. They demonstrate a persistence and determination to get the job done. The source of the commitment is not always the same. It might be personal, to the team, to the customer, or to the organization.

Professional - High-performing teams are professional about their work. Members take individual responsibility for the quality of assigned work, personal communications, and interactions with all stakeholders.

Synergy - High-performing teams develop a synergistic force about them that allows them to accomplish more as a combined team than they could do collectively as individuals. This synergy is developed over time, but generally results when the team has the right mix of skills and experiences,
has a healthy team orientation, and has clearly defined roles and responsibilities.

Trust - High-performing teams display a great deal of trust in each other and in their project leader. Trust is earned over time, and demonstrating effective leadership and creating a collaborative team environment with an open exchange of ideas are keys to building this trust level.

Here I am ending this post. In the next post we'll review ten key management principles that are paramount to our efforts to guide our team’s performance.

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