On average, we spend 37 hours a week at work (whether we work from home or from a physical workplace, or a combination of the two), which means that most of us spend more time with our colleagues than with our family and friends. And the increasingly popular hybrid work setup can accentuate some of the common team problems that are out there.
So if things aren’t amicable with the people we work with, or our teams don’t function efficiently, those 37 hours are going to be painful indeed.
We have identified 10 common problems which teams often encounter. So be proactive. Whichever of these you face, address them to ensure your team is as successful as it can be.
LACK OF TRUST
Trust is crucial to teamwork, and it is hard to trust someone you don’t know. Team members must spend time together and get to know each other if there is to be a sense of cohesion. Because if there is no trust, the team can never be high-performing nor enticing to be part of.
CONFLICT AND TENSION
Conflict, a difference of opinion, can be healthy, and if carefully managed, can trigger useful debates. Different opinions are no bad thing. It’s how we handle them that makes a difference. We can look for the creative power in the different views and use it to find better solutions.
NOT SHARING INFORMATION
Knowledge is not power, until it is shared. Effective teams share regularly and generously for the benefit of everyone. This allows the whole team’s capabilities to grow and gives the team more power. Generous sharing is a must in a team – be smarter together by pooling all your knowledge, skills, experience and insights.
LOW EMPLOYEE ENGAGEMENT
According to Gallup, less than 20 per cent of people are fully engaged at work. This is a massive waste of resources, and of employees’ time. The key to engagement is keeping people involved. When involved, it is impossible to stay detached and disengaged.
LACK OF TRANSPARENCY
Transparency is becoming the expected norm in business. Stakeholders want to know and understand how the organisation is run and that it keeps its promises. The same goes for teams; apart from transparency within the team there’s also a need to be transparent in relationship to other teams and partners, to build trust and deliver results.
LACK OF LONG-TERM THINKING
Long-term success requires long-term thinking. Businesses have to look beyond the urgent, take a holistic view, and see how all the parts fit together. In teams it’s about considering the impact of actions and behaviours – on each other, customers and financial results.
NEGATIVE PERCEPTIONS
Every team has a brand and reputation. A large part of that is driven by how well the team delivers on expectations and promises. Everyone needs to take responsibility for their role in creating the perception of the team. This includes both what is delivered and how it is done.
NOT MANAGING CHANGE WELL
Change is inevitable. All organisations go through change continuously. But it slows people down and creates uncertainty. Be proactive about how the change is handled; talk about it in a constructive way, get clarification, find solutions to make the change work.
SILO WORKING
Silo working is a reality for many teams. Working together in earnest is making the most of the fact that you are a team. Honour your time and efforts by seeing yourself as a full time member of the team, not just an individual contributor. Look out for each other and help each other succeed.
DIFFERENT DIRECTIONS
Unless your team is all going in the same direction, you are effectively pulling the potential of the team apart. To walk in the same direction, spend time clarifying what you are contributing to (vision) and why (purpose). Keep in mind that visions need to be compelling, and purposes meaningful.
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