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HIGH-PERFORMANCE CROSS-BOUNDARY TEAMWORK define your organization's operating model One common approach to improving teamwork is "team-building." It assumes that teamwork fails for lack of interpersonal relationships or trust.
Another common approach to cross-boundary teamwork is "process engineering," where a sequence of tasks is mapped and assigned to groups. This has numerous problems:
A more powerful approach is based on the business-within-a-business paradigm.
Think of each group as an independent business within a business, selling products and services to peers within the organization as well as to clients. Each project is assigned to the group that "sells" that product (whether or not money changes hands). That group is considered the "prime contractor," akin to a general contract who builds houses. Like in the real world, the first job of a prime contractor is to line up any needed "subcontractors," that is, to arrange for help from peers. Subcontractors may, in turn, "buy" results from other groups in the organization. In this way, teams form spontaneously across boundaries. Teams include just the right people at just the right time. And individual accountabilities for results are clear, as is the chain of command within each team.
This is a "meta-process" -- a process for determining processes in the context of specific projects or services. That means that teamwork processes are adapted to fit the needs of each unique project, without any loss of clarity. This approach builds great cross-boundary teamwork without depending on individual's personal relationships (fragile, since people change jobs), and without making an organization a slave to rigid pre-defined processes. What can you do to implement this dynamic approach to teamwork? Consider a brief series of leadership-team workshops to define your organization's operating model (who sells what to whom). Or contact us and we'll schedule a private call to discuss your unique teamwork challenges and customize an approach.
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