Team Troubleshooting: Balancing Tasks and People

By Eva Rykr on March 9, 2010 No Comment

A high performing team tackles to-dos yet also maintains relationships among team members that optimize collaboration. Performance and relationships; in a team setting you can’t have one without the other. Your role as a team leader is to find the perfect balance between the two.

There’s a lot going on when you lead a team. To be an effective team leader, you have to respond to the situation that is in need of your attention, and you need to leave well enough alone where your meddling is not needed. Visualizing your work through a dichotomy can help simplify things when things aren’t going well (and even if they are!).

Try looking at teamwork in terms of tasks and relationships:

Task functions

These performance-oriented activities help your team accomplish the tactical work:

Relationship functions

These relationship-oriented activities focus on maintaining the collaborative atmosphere of the team:

If there is an interpersonal issue between team members, it would be a mistake to adjust the deadline of the project. It just won’t work. The intervention needs to be aimed at the root cause of the performance issue, which in this case is a relationship issue rather than a task issue. Sometimes that’s a tough call. To make it easier on yourself, first decide if the performance issue is related to people/relationships or if it is related to tasks/things. Then consider implementing the action items in the checklist in the image above until you find a solution that fits.

What have you found that works?

This post originally appeared on the Intuit QuickBase Team Leadership Blog.

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  Copyright © 2010 Eva Rykr | Art credit for square in upper right hand corner to Michael D. Edens