How to Build a Teamwork Culture!!!

Fostering teamwork is creating a work culture that values collaboration. In a teamwork environment, people understand and believe that thinking, planning, decisions and actions are better when done cooperatively. People recognize, and even assimilate, the belief that “none of us is as good as all of us.

It’s hard to find work places that exemplify teamwork. In America, our institutions such as schools, our family structures, and our pastimes emphasize winning, being the best, and coming out on top. Workers are rarely raised in environments that emphasize true teamwork and collaboration.

Organizations are working on valuing diverse people, ideas, backgrounds, and experiences. We have miles to go before valuing teams and teamwork will be the norm.

You can, however, create a teamwork culture by doing just a few things right. Admittedly, they’re the hard things, but with commitment and appreciation for the value, you can create an overall sense of teamwork in your organization.

Create a Culture of Teamwork

To make teamwork happen, these powerful actions must occur.

  • Executive leaders communicate the clear expectation that teamwork and collaboration are expected. No one completely owns a work area or process all by himself. People who own work processes and positions are open and receptive to ideas and input from others on the team.
  • Executives model teamwork in their interaction with each other and the rest of the organization. They maintain teamwork even when things are going wrong and the temptation is to slip back into former team unfriendly behavior.
  • The organization members talk about and identify the value of a teamwork culture. If values are formally written and shared, teamwork is one of the key five or six.
  • Teamwork is rewarded and recognized. The lone ranger, even if she is an excellent producer, is valued less than the person who achieves results with others in teamwork. Compensation, bonuses, and rewards depend on collaborative practices as much as individual contribution and achievement.
  • Important stories and folklore that people discuss within the company emphasize teamwork. (Remember the year the capsule team reduced scrap by 20 percent?) People who “do well” and are promoted within the company are team players.
  • The performance management system places emphasis and value on teamwork. Often 360 degree feedback is integrated within the system.

Tips for Team Building

Do you immediately picture your group off at a resort playing games or hanging from ropes when you think of team building? Traditionally, many organizations approached team building this way. Then, they wondered why that wonderful sense of teamwork, experienced at the retreat or seminar, failed to impact long term beliefs and actions back at work.

I’m not averse to retreats, planning sessions, seminars and team building activities – in fact I lead them - but they have to be part of a larger teamwork effort. You will not build teamwork by “retreating” as a group for a couple of days each year. Think of team building as something you do every single day.

  • Form teams to solve real work issues and to improve real work processes. Provide training in systematic methods so the team expends its energy on the project, not on figuring out how to work together as a team to approach it.
  • Hold department meetings to review projects and progress, to obtain broad input, and to coordinate shared work processes. If team members are not getting along, examine the work processes they mutually own. The problem is not usually the personalities of the team members. It’s the fact that the team members often haven’t agreed on how they will deliver a product or a service or the steps required to get something done.
  • Build fun and shared occasions into the organization’s agenda. Hold pot luck lunches; take the team to a sporting event. Sponsor dinners at a local restaurant. Go hiking or to an amusement park. Hold a monthly company meeting. Sponsor sports teams and encourage cheering team fans.
  • Use ice breakers and teamwork exercises at meetings. I worked with an organization that held a weekly staff meeting. Participants took turns bringing a “fun” ice breaker to the meeting. These activities were limited to ten minutes, but they helped participants laugh together and get to know each other – a small investment in a big time sense of team.
  • Celebrate team successes publicly. Buy everyone the same t-shirt or hat. Put team member names in a drawing for company merchandise and gift certificates. You are limited in teamwork only by your imagination.

Take care of the hard issues above and do the types of teamwork activities listed here. You’ll be amazed at the progress you will make in creating a teamwork culture, a culture that enables individuals to contribute more than they ever thought possible - together.

Courtesy: Jagdish Badal, IFEN Ahmedabad. (Email: jagdishbadal@ifenindia.org)

Official e-mail? Tips to improve your writing skills...

In today’s business environment, where most of the communication happens through e-mail, it is essential to have good command over written communication and be able to put one’s ideas into words which can reflect them in exactly the same manner and tone in which the writer intends to communicate.

Today we will discuss some important aspects that one should keep in mind while writing e-mail.

Grammar
The importance of the correct use of grammar can’t be overemphasised. Reading an e-mail with incorrect usage of verbs is the biggest put-off. So be cautious about the rules of language while writing a formal e-mail.

Tone
When you speak to someone face to face, you can use eye movements, facial expressions, hand gestures and body language to set the tone of the conversation. Written communication, however, is bereft of these advantages. So the entire onus is on the choice of the words that you use in your communication, which will set the tone of the e-mail in the mind of the reader. So when you are writing a formal e-mail, use words like ‘kindly’, ‘please’, ‘let us’, ‘thank you’ etc.

Structure
A well-structured e-mail means that there is coherence among the ideas and the sentences follow each other in a logical manner. Further, all the information related to a particular context should be presented at the same place. Consider the following example for a detailed explanation:

Sample-1

Dear our sales for this month are 40% more than the actual target. Hence, we have revised the target for the next month to 5000 units from the original 3500 units. This month, we have sold 4000 units.

Sample-2

We have sold 4000 units this month which is 40% more than the actual target. Hence, we have revised the target for next month to 5000 units from the original 3500 units.

In Sample-1, the number of units sold in the current month has been told in the third sentence, whereas the comparison of sales with the target has been done in the first sentence. A better way of presenting this information is given in Sample-2 where the number of units is also mentioned in the first sentence, so that the reader of the mail gets all the information regarding current month sales in the first sentence only.

Subject of the mail

It often happens that an e-mail is sent to various employees in the organisation and their response to that mail is solicited. In such a scenario, one should be careful of the ‘Subject’ and the ‘To’ fields while sending a reply. Keep the subject the same as that of the original e-mail. You might need to change the subject in some cases where the sender has asked you to respond with a specific subject line.

Secondly, do not unnecessarily hit the ‘Reply All’ button if your response is required only by a single person. Similarly, if there is a group discussion happening through chain mails, make sure that you send your replies to all the people involved in the discussion, so that there is no information mismatch within the group.

Spelling mistakes, SMS language

Put a self-imposed ban on the use of SMS language in official e-mails. Also, make sure that there are no red underlines in the text while you are typing the e-mail. Those spelling mistakes should be corrected before you hit the ‘Send’ button.

Formatting
Just like a gift is wrapped in colorful paper, a mail should be wrapped in a nice format. The use of formatting tools like numbering, bullets, highlighting, underlining, larger font size for headings, etc make the e-mail more readable and easy to understand. However, avoid using too many colors, or too many font types or sizes, as this may rob the mail of its seriousness and formal tone.

Acknowledgement
Anyone who writes an e-mail expects a response to it. While in most cases, e-mails ask for specific information to be delivered or discussed, there are a few cases where such a requirement is not explicitly stated. See the following examples:

Sample-1

Please find attached the product brochure in accordance with your requirements. Please feel free to contact us in case you have any quires.

Sample-2

All the consignments for this week have been delivered as per their schedule. As soon as the next order sheet is received, the procurement and delivery process will be initiated.

In both the samples above, there is no immediate action expected from the receiver of the mails. However, just like we nod our head or say okay during verbal communication, it would be a good practice to acknowledge such mails by sending replies to them. One can send a single line reply, thanking the sender for the information, or telling him when the next communication from your end can be expected.

Read the mail yourself

After you have written the e-mail, read it once for yourself. This way you will know if the e-mail sounds logical enough, has any grammatical or spelling errors, and presents the entire picture in the same way as you had intended it to be.

Courtesy: Jagdish Badal, IFEN Ahmedabad. (Email: jagdishbadal@ifenindia.org)