Archive for the ‘Teams’ Category

The Benefits of Patting Yourself on the Back

Monday, April 6th, 2009

The pace of work often feels like an endless flood of tasks and interactions, with no time to pause to acknowledge completion of a thing, other than checking off an item on your to-do list as you move on to the next task. In fact, you probably go through most days without stopping to acknowledge achievement, whether by you or others.

These unacknowledged accomplishments in your busy day are actually opportunities to improve your mood and make better decisions.

A new study in the Journal of Consumer Research shows that positive moods can increase our ability to understand the big picture.

“A positive mood enhances efforts to attain future well-being, encourages broader and flexible thinking, and increases openness to information,” write the study’s authors Aparna A. Labroo (University of Chicago) and Vanessa M. Patrick (University of Georgia).

The researchers investigated the scientific basis for the simple practice of surrounding oneself with positive things. The first study presented identical statements to study participants. The statements in each set were preceded by either a smiley face or a frowny face.

“The results revealed that simply associating a smiley with a statement resulted in the statement being construed at a higher, more abstract level.”

In follow-up studies, the authors induced positive and negative moods by asking participants to describe either the happiest or unhappiest days in their lives. They then filled out three different questionnaires to determine the level of abstract versus concrete thinking. All three questionnaires showed that people in a good mood thought more abstractly.

The authors explain that being in a good mood allows people to step back emotionally. “The research demonstrates that by signaling that a situation is benign, a positive mood allows people to psychologically distance themselves from the situation,” the authors write.

“Those in a positive mood not only adopt higher-order future goals and work harder toward attaining them, but also reduce their efforts when goals are proximal or concrete,” they conclude.

How does this apply to our workday? When you finish a task, take 5-10 seconds to positively acknowledge completion (”Hooray! Good Work! Another order complete) – reach around and pat yourself on the back. If you’re a manager, seek out opportunities to acknowledge good work by your team members.

And take a moment at the end of the day to highlight three good things you accomplished during the day. Acknowledging your wins is one way you manage your mood into a more positive space.

IBM Human Capital Survey

Monday, January 26th, 2009

IBM interviewed over 400 HR executives at organizations from 40 countries to find out how they were addressing key workforce challenges. Highlighted are key areas of focus that require the immediate attention of not just the HR function, but senior executives across the organization. Here are the top four:

Leadership

The report highlights how addressing these key focus areas can help transform your workforce and take its performance to the next level.

link to IBM PDF

Virtual teamwork on the rise

Sunday, September 14th, 2008

From Friday’s Globe and Mail

September 12, 2008 at 10:54 AM EDT

With more telecommuting, global work forces and rising travel costs, more than two-thirds - 67 per cent - of employers expect to rely more on “virtual teams” in the future, a new survey finds.

The benefits (according to the survey from the Institute for Corporate Productivity):

  • 75 per cent of the 278 respondents said such teams facilitate information-sharing
  • 70 per cent said they encourage diverse thinking
  • 62 per cent said they result in higher productivity and facilitate cross-training

The detriments:

  • they are too difficult to manage, according to 35 per cent
  • problematic to co-ordinate schedules, according to 31 per cent
  • As well, 31 per cent felt their company’s technology tools are inadequate for holding virtual team meetings.

No More Heroes

Sunday, March 23rd, 2008

According to a new book from Hay Group directors and Harvard academics, today’s leadership challenges require tight top teams, not heroic chief executive officers (CEOs.)

“Senior Leadership Teams: What It Takes to Make Them Great” recommends three essential conditions for creating such effective management teams:
1. a real team
2. a compelling direction
3. the right people.

The book, based on field research with management teams, make the case that the responsibilities of leading today’s complex organizations are too broad for just one person. Instead, there’s a growing role for senior leadership teams, who can share the responsibilities, whether in terms of coordinating activities, providing advice or actually taking responsibility for making key decisions.

On top of the essential conditions are three enabling conditions that help ensure the best possible results from the team:
• a sound structure, based around a small number of people (ideally no more than 10) and almost a code of conduct for how team members work together.
• a supportive context, so that the team has the skills and resources it needs to operate effectively. Paradoxically, most executive teams are better at providing resources for their front-line teams than for themselves.
• expert coaching – The most effective teams are coached as entities, developing together.

Amazon Link

Welcome to the 5D Leadership Blog

Friday, February 8th, 2008

Leadership in today’s world is living in an environment of cross-matrixed and team-oriented structures hopefully designed to meet, beat and often cooperate with competitors in a global marketplace increasingly flattened and interconnected by technology.

Our goal is to provide thought leadership, through our insights and research of leadership issues, to help you as a leader bring out the best in your teams and do it in a “win-win-win” way that enhances:

  • business performance
  • personal growth
  • work-life balance

We look forward to keeping you updated with our posts - please add this blog to your newsfeeds by clicking on the top right RSS feed of your choice.

All the best from the 5D Leadership Team.