iTeam: Putting the 'I' Back into Team
This is the digital version of the printed book (Copyright © 2009).

It will surprise few professionals working in software development today to read that teams and teamwork are critical ingredients of a global economy. Productivity, product development and release, and even a company's survival increasingly will depend on teams to solve business problems. What may come as a surprise -- and a wake-up call -- is that, in many businesses, teams are completely ineffective.

One reason, posits William E. Perry in iTeam: Putting the "I" Back into Team, is that most organizations put too much emphasis on joint effort, removing responsibility, ownership, and reward from individuals appointed to teams. What typically results is dysfunctional, essentially leaderless, and lacking in motivation.

Perry's call to put the emphasis back on individual responsibility among collaborating teammates is an urgent one. Decisions now made by management will more and more frequently be made and implemented by teams, making it necessary for organizations to ensure that the creativity and innovative methods of individuals be retained on teams.

Through extensive team experience and interviews with hundreds of individuals who have spent thousands of hours in team meetings, Perry has identified the attributes of great teams and great teamwork. iTeam examines the ten biggest challenges standing between most teams and excellence and explores in depth the fifty best practices teams can employ to improve performance.

Concluding that world-class teams comprise individuals who do what is right for their organization, and do what is right the right way, iTeam presents a clear, practical argument for building teams that have at their core a strong, proven leader who encourages and motivates team members to fulfill their team responsibilities.

Topics include:

Reengineering the Team Approach to Problem Solving
The Top-Ten Challenges to Effective Teamwork
Selecting a Team Leader Who Will Lead
Defining Team Entrance and Exit Criteria
Selecting Team Members for Specific Roles
Building Trust Among Team Members
Training Team Members to Accomplish Their Assignments
Listening to the Voice of the Customer
Breaking Down Silos
Avoiding Groupthink
Assuring That Team Efforts Are Successful
Rewarding Individual Team Members
Keeping Teamwork Competitive
Emerging Team Practices
and much more

 

1115274591
iTeam: Putting the 'I' Back into Team
This is the digital version of the printed book (Copyright © 2009).

It will surprise few professionals working in software development today to read that teams and teamwork are critical ingredients of a global economy. Productivity, product development and release, and even a company's survival increasingly will depend on teams to solve business problems. What may come as a surprise -- and a wake-up call -- is that, in many businesses, teams are completely ineffective.

One reason, posits William E. Perry in iTeam: Putting the "I" Back into Team, is that most organizations put too much emphasis on joint effort, removing responsibility, ownership, and reward from individuals appointed to teams. What typically results is dysfunctional, essentially leaderless, and lacking in motivation.

Perry's call to put the emphasis back on individual responsibility among collaborating teammates is an urgent one. Decisions now made by management will more and more frequently be made and implemented by teams, making it necessary for organizations to ensure that the creativity and innovative methods of individuals be retained on teams.

Through extensive team experience and interviews with hundreds of individuals who have spent thousands of hours in team meetings, Perry has identified the attributes of great teams and great teamwork. iTeam examines the ten biggest challenges standing between most teams and excellence and explores in depth the fifty best practices teams can employ to improve performance.

Concluding that world-class teams comprise individuals who do what is right for their organization, and do what is right the right way, iTeam presents a clear, practical argument for building teams that have at their core a strong, proven leader who encourages and motivates team members to fulfill their team responsibilities.

Topics include:

Reengineering the Team Approach to Problem Solving
The Top-Ten Challenges to Effective Teamwork
Selecting a Team Leader Who Will Lead
Defining Team Entrance and Exit Criteria
Selecting Team Members for Specific Roles
Building Trust Among Team Members
Training Team Members to Accomplish Their Assignments
Listening to the Voice of the Customer
Breaking Down Silos
Avoiding Groupthink
Assuring That Team Efforts Are Successful
Rewarding Individual Team Members
Keeping Teamwork Competitive
Emerging Team Practices
and much more

 

23.99 In Stock
iTeam: Putting the 'I' Back into Team

iTeam: Putting the 'I' Back into Team

by William Perry
iTeam: Putting the 'I' Back into Team

iTeam: Putting the 'I' Back into Team

by William Perry

eBook

$23.99 

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Overview

This is the digital version of the printed book (Copyright © 2009).

It will surprise few professionals working in software development today to read that teams and teamwork are critical ingredients of a global economy. Productivity, product development and release, and even a company's survival increasingly will depend on teams to solve business problems. What may come as a surprise -- and a wake-up call -- is that, in many businesses, teams are completely ineffective.

One reason, posits William E. Perry in iTeam: Putting the "I" Back into Team, is that most organizations put too much emphasis on joint effort, removing responsibility, ownership, and reward from individuals appointed to teams. What typically results is dysfunctional, essentially leaderless, and lacking in motivation.

Perry's call to put the emphasis back on individual responsibility among collaborating teammates is an urgent one. Decisions now made by management will more and more frequently be made and implemented by teams, making it necessary for organizations to ensure that the creativity and innovative methods of individuals be retained on teams.

Through extensive team experience and interviews with hundreds of individuals who have spent thousands of hours in team meetings, Perry has identified the attributes of great teams and great teamwork. iTeam examines the ten biggest challenges standing between most teams and excellence and explores in depth the fifty best practices teams can employ to improve performance.

Concluding that world-class teams comprise individuals who do what is right for their organization, and do what is right the right way, iTeam presents a clear, practical argument for building teams that have at their core a strong, proven leader who encourages and motivates team members to fulfill their team responsibilities.

Topics include:

Reengineering the Team Approach to Problem Solving
The Top-Ten Challenges to Effective Teamwork
Selecting a Team Leader Who Will Lead
Defining Team Entrance and Exit Criteria
Selecting Team Members for Specific Roles
Building Trust Among Team Members
Training Team Members to Accomplish Their Assignments
Listening to the Voice of the Customer
Breaking Down Silos
Avoiding Groupthink
Assuring That Team Efforts Are Successful
Rewarding Individual Team Members
Keeping Teamwork Competitive
Emerging Team Practices
and much more

 


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780133489125
Publisher: Pearson Education
Publication date: 07/15/2013
Series: Dorset House eBooks
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 144
File size: 2 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

WILLIAM E. PERRY is author of more than fifty books on quality assurance, and coauthor, with Randall W. Rice, of Surviving the Top-Ten Challenges of Software Testing (Dorset House, 1997). He learned and practiced effective management techniques as a consultant and contractor for Fortune-500 companies, and as founder and former CEO of Orlando-based Quality Assurance Institute. Two of his current passions are IT innovation and software forensics, subjects he looks forward to writing about, believing their effective practice will lead more organizations to world-class status.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments xi

Foreword     xiii

 

1: Reengineering the Team Approach to Problem Solving   3

 

2: The Top-Ten Challenges to Effective Teamwork   19

 

3: Challenge 1: Selecting a Team Leader Who Will Lead 25

 

4: Challenge 2: Defining Team Entrance and Exit Criteria   34

 

5: Challenge 3: Selecting Team Members for Specific Roles   47

 

6: Challenge 4: Building Trust Among Team Members  58

 

7: Challenge 5: Training Team Members to Accomplish Their Assignments  67

 

8: Challenge 6: Listening to the Voice of the Customer   78

 

9: Challenge 7: Breaking Down Silos  88

 

10: Challenge 8: Avoiding Groupthink  97

 

11: Challenge 9: Assuring That Team Efforts Are Successful   106

 

12: Challenge 10: Rewarding Individual Team Members   115

 

13: The Ultimate Team Challenge: Keeping Teamwork Competitive  125

 

 

Index     133

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